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.....chemistry solutions

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Chemistry Pages:
A level Reaction catalogues, exam tips, spectra, worksheets, articles and much more...

Chemistry Pages: GCSE
Extraction of metals, reaction catalogue.

Learning to Learn
Learning is not instinctive - learn how to learn.

Westminster School

Remember:

  1. If you are aiming for scholarship, you can never know too much - be ambitious!

  2. As you study science try to develop it into the way you experience the Universe, rather than just seeing it as a description of the Universe.

  3. The examination syllabus is there to tell you what will be examined, not the totality of what you could learn.

  4. Understanding is everything - insist on explanations, not just facts. Don't be fobbed off by 'you don't need the explanation for the exam' - that isn't the point of scholarship.

  5. People who tell you that you don't need facts are wrong - unless you have facts you can't build patterns of knowledge, and without patterns of knowledge you can't build understanding.

  6. Don't just stick to your set exam text - read as widely as you can in books and periodicals.

  7. You can never know too much.


Web site content  © JRG Beavon 1997-2016
unless otherwise credited. All rights reserved.

First edition: 18 July 1998. This edition: 11 March 2016.
Formerly www.rod.beavon.clara.net


Title portraits: Nobel Prize
Winners in Chemistry
1955-1962:

1955 Vincent du Vigneaud
1956 Sir Cyril Hinshelwood
        Nikolai Semenov
1957 Lord Todd
1958 Frederick Sanger
1959 Jaroslav Heyrovsky
1960 Willard Libby
1961 Melvin Calvin
1962 Max Perutz
        John Kendrew

Further details are on the Nobel website.
Title bar photos
© Nobel Foundation.
 

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