Stat 1000: Tips on How to Do Well in this Course
Published: Tue, 09/13/11
Hi ,
You are receing this email because you indicated when you signed up for Grant's Updates that you are taking Stat 1000 this term. If in fact, you do not want to receive tips for Stat 1000, please reply to this email and let me know.
Throughout the term I will send you all sorts of tips to help you study and learn the course. You probably already have done so, but, if not, I strongly recommend you purchase my Basic Stats 1 Study Book. You will find it a great resource to learn the course. I pride myself in explaining things in clear, everyday language. I also provided numerous examples of all the key concepts with step-by-step solutions. You can order my book at UMSU Digital Copy Centre at University Centre at UM campus. They make the book to order so please allow at least one business day. The book is split into three volumes (each volume covers about a third of the course) and each volume costs $33+ tax or you can buy the whole set of three at once for $90+tax.
If you ever want to look back over a previous tip I have sent, do note that all my tips can be found in my archive. Click this link to go straight to my archive:
Tips on How to Do Well in this Course
Here are four important suggestions I have on how you should approach learning this course.
(1) Do not treat your hand-in assignments as "open book", and do not start working on them too soon. That is a ticket to disaster in this course. I suggest you don't even start working on your assignment until two or three days before it is due. Prior to that, focus on studying the appropriate lesson in my book, or the appropriate material from your class notes and textbook if you do not have my book, trying to achieve a full understanding of the concepts. Treat your assignments as a test of your knowledge. Your goal is to be able to do 80% or more of an assignment without any assistance whatsoever. If you achieve this goal, you will build confidence. In addition, you will find you often need no more than an hour or two to do the assignment. Students who, instead, decide to "learn" how to do the questions while working on the assignment will frequently spend 10 to 15 hours doing the assignments, and will actually learn very little. Instead, they have temporarily learned it just to get the assignment over with. A constant refrain I hear in this course is, "I don't get it. I was getting such good marks on my assignments, but I bombed the exam." That is because students have never treated the assignments as tests of their knowledge and have papered over the cracks in their understanding.
(2) Set yourself clear goals each week. For example, decide what lesson in my book you are going to study and attempt to master each week (I will also direct you each week in my tips as to what lesson you should study in order to prepare for a current assignment). If you have a goal, then you can devote the time to achieve the goal. Maybe you end up thoroughly learning the lesson in one day of study, and you can reward yourself with a few days off from stats. If the lesson is proving difficult to learn, you can parcel it out over a few days of study. It is better to take a break if the information is evaporating the minute you read it because you just can't think straight, than wasting another hour or two getting nowhere. Often, after a rest or diversion, something makes a lot more sense than it did initially.
(3) Pick a day in the week that will be your Review Day and stick to it. On that day, go through all of your old assignments (starting with the most recent and working backwards) and test yourself. Do you still know how to do the questions? Maybe even redo some of the questions if you think they will be a good workout. Obviously, if you don't remember how to do a question, go back and learn how. Also, re-read the summaries I include at the end of each lesson in my book to remind yourself of all the key concepts you should know at this point and, if necessary, go back to the appropriate sections in my book to solidify your understanding. If you review on a weekly basis, you will not have to cram in a bunch of info a couple of days before your exam.
(4) Purchase the Multiple-Choice Problem Set for Stat 1000 by Smiley Cheng at the UM Book Store or get a used copy somewhere like Archives. That has lots of old exams and additional questions. The appendices of my study book includes step-by-step solutions to everything in that book. If you have been doing a weekly review, when an exam is approaching, sit down and go through as many old exams in the Cheng book as you possibly can to polish your skills and increase your experience.
Join Grant's Tutoring on Facebook www.facebook.com/grantstutoring or follow Grant on Twitter @GrantsTutoring or go to www.grantstutoring.com and click the Facebook and/or Twitter icons.