3 secret recipes ❗️ that 90% of engineering honors children use the same.⚙️
When talking about "honors kids," many people think of good people, tight basics, good brains, fast learning, which... is not entirely wrong.
But you know, since you've had the opportunity to talk to more than 30 A-students in each semester at each university, "almost everyone uses very similar techniques," and more importantly... these techniques don't have to be very good, they just have to be "disciplined."
Today, be-engineers. Let me tell you.
Formula 1: Understand the theory in depth. A good student will not start by remembering the formula, but by "understanding the big picture" and "the origin of the formula." If you don't read the sheet enough, open the textbook.
Understanding why this formula works is what makes us do difficult problems in the field, because the field does not ask if we can recite it, but whether we can understand it and apply it.
Formula 2: Make a summary in your own language. A good summary is not to copy, but to change from "what you learn" to "what you understand."
Good students have their own conclusions that may not look pretty, but open whenever they read and understand, and often come back and fill in all the time when they encounter interesting problems.
Finally... it will become a secret weapon before the exam that no one can copy.
Formula 3: Complete the 4-Step Problem. The honors are not only "diligent" people, but those who "practice the problem strategically," and these are the 4 steps you find most often:
Let's start with the Lecture problem where the teacher completes his homework or Assignment. Do not copy! Do the problem in the most common be-engineer or textbook (there are many answers on the internet). End with the old exam (if it matches the teacher who takes the exam, the better).
All this is done. It requires discipline and "starting from today," not waiting for the exam.
Because finally, academic performance may not be everything in life, but it is a testament to "we can do our best."
If you feel this post is useful, share it with your engineering friends. We grew up together.






































































































