- bkw
- Master | Next Rank: 500 Posts
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- Joined: Sat Mar 20, 2010 9:34 pm
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I have a directory of 10-20 A4 pages of problems I have got wrong.
For every problem I get wrong in a CAT or any other problem, in e.g. OG/Verbal/Quant Review/KnewtonQuestionBank, I log it in a word document so it can be reviewed later.
However, the number of log pages has grown. And I have long backlog which I need work with to not fall behind pre-assessments, lesson preparation, homework, videos, extra OG practice, CAT-practice etc.
All this kind of work "ahead" has postponed the walk through of all the logs I have created. Now, I am planning to walk through all the logs at once when I am finished with all the Knewton ordinary sessions.
And finally the problem is to know how the logs themselves are best reviewed to not fail with a similar problem again. I guess it is not sufficient to just redo a failed problem once, maybe redo it once per week? And what if I failed on a problem because of I had to stress through the problem, and now I can get it night? :S
Anyone who keep logs and can tell from experience what works, and what does not?
What is a bit worrying is that it feels like I have never a chance to go back and look into why I failed on a specific problem...
For every problem I get wrong in a CAT or any other problem, in e.g. OG/Verbal/Quant Review/KnewtonQuestionBank, I log it in a word document so it can be reviewed later.
However, the number of log pages has grown. And I have long backlog which I need work with to not fall behind pre-assessments, lesson preparation, homework, videos, extra OG practice, CAT-practice etc.
All this kind of work "ahead" has postponed the walk through of all the logs I have created. Now, I am planning to walk through all the logs at once when I am finished with all the Knewton ordinary sessions.
And finally the problem is to know how the logs themselves are best reviewed to not fail with a similar problem again. I guess it is not sufficient to just redo a failed problem once, maybe redo it once per week? And what if I failed on a problem because of I had to stress through the problem, and now I can get it night? :S
Anyone who keep logs and can tell from experience what works, and what does not?
What is a bit worrying is that it feels like I have never a chance to go back and look into why I failed on a specific problem...












