I did v well on the day But I did all the past papers (about a dozen) available and got strictly increasing scores from below 40 to above 80 (i graphed it out somewhere) - so preparation is literally the most important thing desu.
I won't say the college bc there's only like six of us lmao. But I will confess I only so Maths and Philosophy not straight maths.
Blake Cruz
Distinct variables. I'm thinking about just going into some numerics.
Matthew Cook
oh and i never asked for feedback but my tutor might still have it on the system so might ask him.
id probs do each past paper twice actually (unless you are getting consistently very very high first time). value per effort the mat is far more important than a levels
Matthew Moore
Which book is this from?
Julian Reed
>I won't say the college bc there's only like six of us lmao Smart idea, I wouldn't want to expose myself to the normies either.
>I did v well on the day Which section was hardest for you, if you remember? I've done tests A, B, and 2007 so far, (getting ~49, ~55, 60 on each) and I always get 3 marks max on #4 (the geometry questions). My gap in geometry knowledge is so large that I don't even know where to start in order to improve. Do you have any tips for that, or is it just a matter of needing to git gud?
Why even use math when you have physical intuitions?
Jaxson Cox
>I'm prepping for the Oxford interview, Underage B&
Sebastian Adams
Tbf I am a normie. Otherwise I'd've gone Cambridge. I never had to do geometry lmao but suspect just practice. Look at the tricks and just memorise them. Pray that the plasticity of a young brain will just retain the techniques. Maybe just brush up on basic geometry - but they won't use anything that EXPLICITLY uses more than c2
Xavier Reyes
you are in your senior year of high school when at the age of 18