Whilst many of my TM129 peers received their module materials yesterday, I’m still (sort of) waiting for mine. I’m only sort of waiting, because A) the James May show on the DVD is on YouTube, B) I already have an e-copy of the Microsoft Networking Essentials book, and C) the I, Robot book was a favourite of mine in junior high school. As these are the only three things in the box, I can probably stop worrying.
I’ve looked a bit at the TM129 online materials, which starts on the Robotics block, but I’m not really bothered by it. My studying will be very similar in style to TU100 (active reading through bullet-point notes, combined with activities stored in a OneNote notebook on the cloud), so while I probably will start the study a bit early, it’s not really necessary.
MST124, on the other hand … I can’t really figure out how to study this. The first half of the module or so is going to be revision. (That’s “review” to any other Yanks in the audience.) I’ve spent a few hours this weekend trying to “study” it, but all I’m really doing is glancing over the descriptions, then working on the activities. As it’s all review, I haven’t come across anything that I can’t do, yet, so I don’t know what to do when that happens.
I’ve got two weeks to study each unit, more or less, and there are twelve units. In that time, I need to get through around 100 pages of text, a few hundred exercises (or at least several dozen), possibly sit through a tutorial, and get through either half of a TMA or an iCMA. There’s probably more than a few exercises in Maxima thrown in, as well. It’s not bad at all, it’s just not obvious where to put my time, especially when I’ll have to split it with TM129. (Thank goodness there isn’t much actual learning to do in TM129.)
I think the first thing I’ll do is hope for recorded online TMAs. If I can watch a recorded online TMA, I skip the roughly 30% of the time that the tutors give over to sitting around waiting for people to work on examples. I watched two revision boot-camp tutorials this week, and easily saved 40 minutes on each of them by skipping over empty sections, and more time skipping parts not relevant to me. The only questions I ever ask during tutorials anyway are those to do with policy. I mostly sit in because I know the tutors will drop TMA-specific hints.
Next, until I get to differentiation, I’m going to work backwards when necessary. I’d like to do all the activities in the books to make sure there are no blindspots, and because practice is the best way to retain maths skills. If there is a blind spot, I’ll back up and run through it, encorporating external resources as necessary.
Finally, once I get to and past differentiation, I think I’m just going to wing it. Read without notes, try exercises, and practice, practice, practice. Taking notes just doesn’t make sense to me with maths. The closest I’ll come is following along the examples with a pen in hand. I may alternate weeks between MST124 and TM129, as splitting days may throw off my rhythm.
We’ll see how it goes. My intent is to stay one unit ahead throughout the module. I’ve fallen afoul of getting too far ahead before, and the motivational issues that causes. It can also make it a headache for revision.