Description
How to Study Physics
By
Seville Chapman
A university is not a place where education is forced into you, but rather a place where the faculty have tried to make your learning process as efficient as possible. It is our obligation to provide you with a good return for the effort you put in, but you yourself must make that effort and keep your mind open and alert.
Now you may say, "Yes, I agree with your ideas on how to study," and then you may proceed to forget all about them. In that case neither of us is better off than if you had never read this handbook. A good plan is for you to put the volume where you may review it occasionally. You will be interested to see how your own ideas change as you get further along. Ten years from now you will wish you had done things differently while you were in college. Probably most of the thoughts in here on what you should do in college would have come to you sooner or later anyway, but it is my hope that from studying this manual you will get these thoughts soon enough for them to be helpful to you.
This is a reproduction edition from a scanned copy of the following original edition:
Title
How to study physics
Author
Seville Chapman
Publisher
Addison-Wesley, 1955
Length
34 pages
Find more reproduction works from Stanford University Press at QOOP.com
Tags:
stanford, university, press, angle angular momentum angular velocity Assume atoms average axes axis ball Carnot cycle centripetal acceleration cm/s coefficient collision components conservation cord corresponding curve cycle defined, density, disk, displacement, distance downward, earth, elastic, collision engine, equation, Find, flow fluid force, exerted force, F forces, acting, frictiona, l force