quiz atomic number

How do I learn the elements of the periodic table?
Well, I do a course at home with science .. wonder and testing different properties (atomic number, mass, symbol) of certain elements. As he did not tell me that I need to know for the exam .. I am a bit overwhelmed trying to learn all. Any tips or tricks you guys know? I'm terrible with remembering them, especially those who use their Latin name for their symbols! Thank you! For the record, it is a course HOME so I have no teacher. sufficient textbooks. Each lesson a test at the end. My Quiz asked for the characteristics of four specific elements. I do not know, since I had not tried to learn whole table. Thusly, I'm not sure what the exam questions will answer me.
I'd rather be safe than sorry. Thank you for the suggestions to date. Also, I do not know if the review let me look at the book or not. So the reference can not be an option.
I know someone they learned in fifth grade, no kidding, he could prove it. (Maybe it took two weeks) The stuff that I can give you are those who are just for memorization and study of the plain stuff. Firstly, done in groups. List of elements by atomic number and try to go 8 at a time. Take a blank sheet of paper (or my preferred method, tapping WordPad) and try to list all 8 on the command order. If this does not work, erase and start over until you can do. Then go to the next 8. Try, for example, 4 groups 8. When you are finished with the last, just go back and repeat all four groups, starting with the first. It is also important for rhythm and memorization you separate into smaller chunks of time. 20 minutes per day for six days is better than two hours a day, twice a day, is even better. Memorize a certain amount, then stop, do everything, and somehow during sleep, it's better. The next day, try considering what you have done the previous day, and tack on a little more. Finally, skip the freakin lanthanide series, actinide series, and any elements with atomic numbers above 103. If this is not a very advanced science courses, it is unlikely that you'll need them. (Even with advanced science, jumping anything over # 103)
Free study aid for learning atomic number, atomic symbol, periodic table position
|
|
The Research Methods Knowledge Base $48.01 Thoroughly updated, the third edition of The Research Methods Knowledge Base provides coverage of quantitative methods and enhanced coverage of qualitative methods. It can be used in a variety of disciplines and is ideal for an introductory comprehensive undergraduate or graduate level course. Through its conversational, informal style it makes material that is often challenging for students both … |