I remember that in the third grade, I was not very good at math, and I kept getting 90 or 9 1. Either there is a calculation error or the problem is not clearly seen. In order to improve my math performance, my father bought me a "dictation card" and a "draw inferences from others" and asked me to write two pages of dictation cards every day. Besides, my father often asks me questions. If I don't get one right, I have to do ten questions of this type.
Dad says there is no trick to learning math, just do more problems. So, I asked my father to buy me some paper and meet the questioner.
Another exam is coming. This time, because many questions were done in training, I did well in the exam and got 95 points.
Through this exam, I tasted the sweetness of diligence. At this time, my father told me that although I did well in this exam, I will make persistent efforts and work harder to achieve better results next time.
From then on, I understood that only hard work can yield something, and I began to take positive actions. I don't need my father to remind me. I do my homework as soon as I get home from school every day. After I finished my homework, I did it consciously. In the evening, let my parents ask me what I learned that day to deepen my memory. If I can't, I must understand it, I must understand all this kind of problems. At the same time, preview what you will talk about tomorrow and mark the questions you can't, so it will be much easier to attend class the next day. Slowly, I learned faster than the teacher said, and I learned a lot of things that the teacher had never said before.
Many things happen, and I got good grades in the final exam. Moreover, there is a particularly difficult question on the paper, and only a few students and I in the class can do it right.
This incident made me understand the method of learning. There is no trick to learning. If there is a trick, it is diligence!