Twenty years ago, I got a perfect score of 120 in the senior high school entrance examination, and I ranked first in the county with 1 18. When the teacher asked me to talk about my successful experience, I took out a set of 16 wrong questions. Thank you very much for my wrong problem set.
That set of 16 wrong questions includes all the wrong questions in my junior high school for three years. There are 4 math books in Grade One, 4 math books in Grade Two and 2 math books in Grade Three. The remaining six books comprehensively sort out the math problems that are easy to make mistakes in the past three years. Error-prone questions are extracted from exercise books, test papers and extracurricular books. 16 What is the wrong set of questions in this book? Gold content? The highest additional question in the senior high school entrance examination is in the extracurricular book, which is a geometry question and a strange question. Strangely, people feel that the given conditions are insufficient and it is difficult to make three auxiliary lines. When I first met this question, there was no answer in the book. I racked my brains but couldn't come up with a solution. Later, I found the answer in another math extracurricular book, which made me feel enlightened.
Books 1 1 and 12 have the thickest set of wrong questions, which were collected by classification in junior high school for three years and then repeatedly made mistakes. The number 13 has been diluted, and there are only six inNo left. 16, so there really isn't an error-prone problem. These six questions are all from extracurricular books, which are complex and difficult, and can be said to be the six peaks in junior high school mathematics.
In the examination room, faced with four math papers, I realized? Reading is like breaking thousands of volumes, and writing is like a god? It's an honor. Those topics smiled at me warmly like old friends, and I never met a stumbling block from beginning to end.
I know the exam was a great success. I have been wandering in books for three years, and I am familiar with many difficult problems that are easy to make mistakes. I read the story of Mao Yisheng, a famous bridge expert, in a book. He did very well in math. It is said that one of the reasons for his success is to establish a number of wrong problem sets to realize that everyone in life has gone the wrong way and done something wrong. Wrong, to get out of the cycle of self-blame, and if you can't get out of this cycle, you will make mistakes again and again.
Cherish mistakes, which are as important as success, and are valuable experiences in our lives. Unfortunately, many people are not good at using mistakes and waste them in vain.