I had not thought this through beforehand, but somewhere along the line I fell into the pattern of completing a whole unit of one of my courses at a time. No one day one one course, the next day the other, then repeat, nor a bit of each course every day. Nope, I work right through one unit of a course for however many days it takes, then work right through the corresponding unit in the other course (though that's not strictly true, as I'm not at the stage of "corresponding units" any more; not since I cut my losses on M381 and accepted that I'd be behind until the end, but you get the idea).
Pro: I get to keep my mind on one area of maths, e.g. Complex Analysis, for a few days without disrupting my flow by having to get my head around Church's Thesis slap-bang in the middle. Then, within Complex Analysis itself, I get to cover an entire unit, which basically equates into a single topic, residues, Laurent series, or whatever, to its conclusion before switching to something completely different. And these courses are different! Psychologically, this way also helps me feel like I'm getting somewhere, you know? Because I can tick off another completed unit fairly quickly. I'm well aware that this is silly, because technically, I should progress at the same pace either way, but it feels effective at least. A schedule placebo of sorts.
Con: I am prone to not remembering diddly when I get back to one course after maybe a week on the other one. This is worse with M381 because of the fact it alternates Logic / Number Theory / Logic.. It could be three weeks by the time I get back to number theory after our last encounter. That can't be too helpful for driving the material home, can it? Would I have had to look up Euclid's Lemma what seems like a hundred times already, if I were chip-chip-chipping away at M381 every day? Who knows?
Anyway, why am I telling you this? I don't know. It just strikes me as curious, that beavering away in the solitude of our homes, we've probably all fallen into patterns of study quite unique to ourselves. I assume they vary wildly. I'd certainly not be surprised to find that any of my fellow OU students are doing a couple of hours of each course per day. But it doesn't work for me. I'm fairly sure that I started off with the intention of doing it that way. And I didn't make a conscious effort to stop either; but it clearly happened at some point.
Until this year, I'd not had two courses at the same time, so I've never had to tackle differing topics concurrently. I opted to do MST121 and MS221 with an overlap, starting one in the autumn and the other in February, but it wasn't quite the same. Not only were there long periods of one course only, but they also complemented each other in terms of content. Then of course, M208 was a 60-pointer, so it was not an issue there either. In fact, that's the one thing I find attractive about the upcoming level 3 pure maths course; at least in terms of scheduling, there'll be no need to work out how to go about it. Though, I'm not interested in any other way than that, and I'm so glad I started with the OU when I did, so I'm still on for M338 Topology next year before it goes bye-bye.
Neil H
Can identify with the dilemma for me it's one TMA then another so I've totally despite my good intentions neglected Complex Analysis for the past 3 weeks, Hope to get the current one finished this weekend then it will be a mad panic for the next TMA for Complex analysis and on it goes. Doing something sensible like 1 question from each TMA per week alternating just doesn't seem to work
ReplyDeleteThe best laid plans, eh?
ReplyDeleteThey really keep us on our toes with the TMA schedule don't they? I'm hoping to make a big dent in the current ones next weekend, when I have the house to myself. I'd be so much better if I wasn't so good at putting it off, or convincing myself I'd do much better if I did a bit more of the textbooks beforehand; true though that is as far as I'm concerned, it never fails to leave me with a mad rush at the last minute. I have to do it differently this time.
Neil H
Neil,
ReplyDeleteLooking ahead towards the end of M381; is the stuff on Godels Incompletness etc, as exciting as it sounds? Also, how are you finding the course in general terms. Is it a big step up from Level 2 maths and are there any pre-requisites that are a must, in your view?
I am probably missing M381 and going onto M303 when it launches in 2013, but want to make sure that missing M381, doesn't end up haunting me.
Hi Neil hope things are Ok how are you finding the last part of M337 1 week to go and I've only done D1. Seems to me the units are making Conformal transformations quite mysterious any thoughts
ReplyDeleteChris
Congrats on the wedding Neil. Good luck for the future.
ReplyDelete