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How to write a math plan for sophomore students
The second grade plan is written like this:

First, study?

1. Listen attentively in class, review and preview carefully after school, take the initiative to study, finish your homework on time, and don't dawdle. ?

2. Read 1 hour every day and read ancient poems every day. ?

Don't be ashamed to ask questions, and digest the knowledge taught by the teacher in time. ?

4. Do your own thing, do what you can do today, and do things well from beginning to end. ?

5. Practice reading and writing pictures every week. ?

6. Practice oral calculation, reading comprehension and writing every day. ?

Second, life?

1, watch less TV, don't play mobile phones, and read more. ?

2, keep exercising every day, enhance physical fitness, and jump rope 600 times a day. ?

3, daily necessities, books should be neatly placed, put in a fixed position, put back after use. ?

4, eat more fruit, eat less meat, not picky eaters, not partial eclipse, three meals seven points full, to avoid excessive. ?

5. Respect teachers, unite classmates, be helpful, and greet teachers, elders and classmates warmly. ?

6. Help parents do housework as much as they can. ?

7, in public * * * occasions to maintain elegant manners, speak appropriately, don't make any noise, don't play.

The importance of making a study plan;

"Everything is established in advance, and if it is not planned, it will be abolished." At the beginning of the new semester, a good new semester plan will make students full of confidence and expectation for the whole semester.

Learning plan is a blueprint to achieve learning goals. The first practical action of every student who wants to study well is to make a feasible study plan. When you finish your study plan, you will feel that it is only a matter of time before you achieve your study goals.

Doing things according to the study plan for a long time will make the study life very regular and even gradually form a "conditioned reflex." At that time, there was no need to make any mental efforts to get up, sleep and study.

Study and life have completely reached the "automatic" state: you can't sleep without getting up, you are sleepy without sleeping, and it seems that you are missing something without studying. This shows that the cultivation of good study habits can not be separated from scientific study plans, and it can also be said that good study habits are the product of long-term combination of study plans and tenacious will.