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Note: this section was prepared for the old qualifying exam system. It is not relevant anymore as the new qualifying exam does not include a written portion anymore. But we put into effort developing this page so I am not quite ready to delete it entirely yet.... maybe just another year and I will be ready!

 

A number of graduate students who took the qual Feb 1 2013 agreed to share their experience and tips for preparing for the exams.

A high-level summary:

  • Plan ahead. e.g., make a schedule, and keep track of your progress.
  • Know thyself! Identify your strength and weakness, and develop a strategy (e.g., comprehensiveness vs. efficiency, see Lulu's response).
  • Balance group study time with individual study time.
  • Make summary sheets as you study, so that you have a condensed version of the most important concepts to go through for the last week or so!
  • Take practise exams seriously (see John's and Mareena's responses).
  • Take advantage of the senior grad students (esp. the ones in your group!) and ask plenty of questions.

The following is a list of questions and responses that will hopefully give you an idea of what to expect in the next couple of months. I do want to note that people studied very differently, and this is by no means a representation of everyone!

1. How long did you study for? e.g., how early did you start, and how intense was the studying. Would you recommend more or less studying?

Pun

0-1 month before quals around 8-12 hours a day; 1-6 month before quals around 10 hours a week average

Becky

Started in the summer to try not to lose what was learned from 211 and 106. Meet about once a week to go over 106 and 101 during the summer for a couple hours. We started a little late as a group doing review for 211 and 312 and ran out of weeks before exams in the fall semester to get through the last couple topics.  For those two each person was the lead for a topic and brought study guides. It worked well for some things and not so well for others but doing practice problems was always good. It was good to review early, get your mind refreshed, get organized. That way in January every thing feels more like a review because hopefully anything you needed to relearn or learn in the first place was done before xmas break. I think I studied about the right amount because I feel like I reached saturation and couldn't absorb/learn/memorize any more at the end.

John

I basically studied intensely for the month of January, but I had started reviewing in the months leading up to the test.

Mareena

I started studying for the qual about 8 months before, in July. During the summer, my studying consisted of rereading notes and looking over problems. I found it difficult to keep focused while I was away on internship and reviewing by myself so I consider my summer the time I got myself into the right mindset.             

The real studying started that fall before the qual. Literally day one, my office mates and fellow study group partners came up with a weekly study schedule that we stuck very close to. Having the schedule helped keep our momentum up and keep us accountable for the material. We would review the lecture notes, in depth! The main goal of studying is to plug the holes in our understanding and make sure we see the larger picture each course is trying to tell us. 

During that fall, our studying was pretty intense but we were still taking classes so we had to divide our time. Once IAP started, all we did was review for quals. Literally starting for 8AM to 10-11PM, we reviewed old homeworks, old exams and all the old quals multiple times. I think seeing all the possible ways someone can ask the same question really helped drill the point home. Even with all this studying, they still found a new way to ask it.

Some of my study partners made note cards for each class. I made post-it notes that I stuck them all over my office and also made QuickRead guides for each class that summarized the main points.
In terms of more or less studying, it's person dependent. The important thing is that you are honest with what you do and do not know, swallow your pride and fill the holes. Everyone taking the qual is a potential resource, whether for material or a different type of explanation of a concept. Working as a team toward learning the material helped me stay focused and acquire a comprehensive review packet.

Lulu

Very light study over the summer; listen to classes + cleanup notes + read books (recommend Reuss, Hebert, and Stacy) + weekly group meetings in the fall; full-time study in January.

2. Did you study with people? Would you recommend studying alone, small group, large group etc?
Pun
I studied alone mostly and join study group weekly. I would recommend studying alone then sharing answers and asking questions in group.

Becky
Practice problems with others is great. If the group is large make sure you volunteer to go to the board. Otherwise stick with a smaller group so you can't just slide by nodding your head.

John
I typically study alone, and that is what has worked for me up to this point. For the quals though I really did find that studying with a group was helpful. This is particularly true during the early stages, before January, when it is hard to get motivated to do it on your own, and having a group to be responsible to helps you get started. I also found it to be really useful for the late stages when you are spending so many hours at a desk studying that you start to miss just being around other people. Having group study sessions that remind you that you aren't alone studying for this thing is very helpful. It sounds bad but knowing others are suffering too makes it better for sure, even if you spend half the group study session just complaining about things.

Aside from the group stuff I spent most of my time just sitting at my desk in my room studying.

Mareena
I did study with people and I know it was one of the main reasons I passed. Personally, I like smaller groups (at most 4) where the people have a mutual respect and are equally committed to the goal of passing. It takes these things to not go off on each other while in this high stress situation. Also, every one in the group needs to bring their A game. Its not productive if everyone waits until the day of the study session to review and identify holes. Everyone needs to come to the study session with their questions already identified and an outline of the session needs to be nailed down. There's a lot of temptation to stop early or clown around, but no one really has time for that. An outline helps everyone stick to the script and come prepared.

Lulu

Fall: a big group meets every week to go through concepts. A schedule was made to cover all the major topics, and each person took one topic to prepare notes and lead the discussion on that day. We didn't have much in-depth discussion happening in the fall as everyone was busy, though it was a good refresher on the material.

IAP weekday mornings: a small group to go over concepts and answer each other's questions on

A number of graduate students who took the qual Feb 1 2013 agreed to share their experience and tips for preparing for the exams.

A high-level summary:

  • Plan ahead.
  • Know thyself! Identify your strength and weakness, and develop a strategy.
  • Balance group study time with individual study time.
  • Take advantage of the senior grad students (esp. the ones in your group!) and ask questions.

Here is a list of questions and responses that will hopefully give you an idea of what to expect:

1. How long did you study for? For instance, how early did you start, and how intense was the studying. Would you recommend more studying, less studying?

Pun

0-1 month before quals around 8-12 hours a day; 1-6 month before quals around 10 hours a week average

Becky

Started in the summer to try not to lose what was learned from 211 and 106. Meet about once a week to go over 106 and 101 during the summer for a couple hours. We started a little late as a group doing review for 211 and 312 and ran out of weeks before exams in the fall semester to get through the last couple topics.  For those two each person was the lead for a topic and brought study guides. It worked well for some things and not so well for others but doing practice problems was always good. It was good to review early, get your mind refreshed, get organized. That way in January every thing feels more like a review because hopefully anything you needed to relearn or learn in the first place was done before xmas break. I think I studied about the right amount because I feel like I reached saturation and couldn't absorb/learn/memorize any more at the end.

John

I basically studied intensely for the month of January, but I had started reviewing in the months leading up to the test.

Mareena

I started studying for the qual about 8 months before, in July. During the summer, my studying consisted of rereading notes and looking over problems. I found it difficult to keep focused while I was away on internship and reviewing by myself so I consider my summer the time I got myself into the right mindset.             

The real studying started that fall before the qual. Literally day one, my office mates and fellow study group partners came up with a weekly study schedule that we stuck very close to. Having the schedule helped keep our momentum up and keep us accountable for the material. We would review the lecture notes, in depth! The main goal of studying is to plug the holes in our understanding and make sure we see the larger picture each course is trying to tell us. 

During that fall, our studying was pretty intense but we were still taking classes so we had to divide our time. Once IAP started, all we did was review for quals. Literally starting for 8AM to 10-11PM, we reviewed old homeworks, old exams and all the old quals multiple times. I think seeing all the possible ways someone can ask the same question really helped drill the point home. Even with all this studying, they still found a new way to ask it.

Some of my study partners made note cards for each class. I made post-it notes that I stuck them all over my office and also made QuickRead guides for each class that summarized the main points.
In terms of more or less studying, it's person dependent. The important thing is that you are honest with what you do and do not know, swallow your pride and fill the holes. Everyone taking the qual is a potential resource, whether for material or a different type of explanation of a concept. Working as a team toward learning the material helped me stay focused and acquire a comprehensive review packet.

Lulu

Very light study over the summer; listen to classes + cleanup notes + weekly group meetings in the fall; full-time study in January.

2. Did you study with people? Would you recommend studying alone, small group, large group etc?
Pun
I studied alone mostly and join study group weekly. I would recommend studying alone then sharing answers and asking questions in group.

Becky
Practice problems with others is great. If the group is large make sure you volunteer to go to the board. Otherwise stick with a smaller group so you can't just slide by nodding your head.

John
I typically study alone, and that is what has worked for me up to this point. For the quals though I really did find that studying with a group was helpful. This is particularly true during the early stages, before January, when it is hard to get motivated to do it on your own, and having a group to be responsible to helps you get started. I also found it to be really useful for the late stages when you are spending so many hours at a desk studying that you start to miss just being around other people. Having group study sessions that remind you that you aren't alone studying for this thing is very helpful. It sounds bad but knowing others are suffering too makes it better for sure, even if you spend half the group study session just complaining about things.

Aside from the group stuff I spent most of my time just sitting at my desk in my room studying.

Mareena
I did study with people and I know it was one of the main reasons I passed. Personally, I like smaller groups (at most 4) where the people have a mutual respect and are equally committed to the goal of passing. It takes these things to not go off on each other while in this high stress situation. Also, every one in the group needs to bring their A game. Its not productive if everyone waits until the day of the study session to review and identify holes. Everyone needs to come to the study session with their questions already identified and an outline of the session needs to be nailed down. There's a lot of temptation to stop early or clown around, but no one really has time for that. An outline helps everyone stick to the script and come prepared.

Lulu

During fall semester a big group meets every week to go through concepts. A schedule was made to cover all the major topics, and each person took one topic to prepare notes and lead the discussion on that day. We didn't have much in-depth discussion happening in the fall as everyone was busy, though it was a good refresher on the materials.

During IAP weekday mornings I studied with a small group to go over concepts and answer each other's questions on practise problems (again we had an agenda for what we cover each day).

Weekend IAP weekend mornings we had : a big group study where we checked answers for past quals & exams. All

IAP afternoons and nights were reserved for : going through notes & practising myself.

3. Any good strategy you want to share?

Pun

Probably heard this too many times, but prepare well and eat well and sleep well before quals. Write up notes of stuff that are hard to remember, and spend your last two days on it.

...

If any quals-takers would like some envelopes to put tests in, or would like to borrow/take my note cards, first ones to come ask me for them have dibs. With the notecards I'd recommend making your own, because just making them is a good learning process, but if you want to see what I did or would rather just study mine I'd be happy to help.

Mareena

BE ORGANIZED AND MAKE A SCHEDULE! This is not something you just jump into. There is a lot of material to learn and a lot of room to be stressed. You can prevent a lot of unnecessary stress if you are organized and prepared. Sounds cheezy but color coding things helps with organization.

Also, DO EVERY PRACTICE PROBLEM YOU CAN GET YOUR HANDS ON! If only for peace of mind, doing the problems multiple times helps drill the points home and also shows you where you need more work. The worst feeling is being on the qual and seeing a problem you chose not to review. You want to bite your tongue off in that moment! So don't let that happen and do all the problems.

Also, these professors love derivations on the quals (at least that's the impression I got). Make sure you know all the milestone derivations, backwards and forwards. A lot of this is understanding but you can get a long way with simply remembering a derivation and reasoning through the meaning after.

Another thing I don't think I expected was how emotionally draining studying for the qual is. Know yourself and make sure you work in a scheduled time to recharge. It has to be worked into the schedule or else it wont happen. Whether its working out, going on a date with your hunny, or reading a chapter in a book for leisure, you've got to recharge. This is a marathon of studying, not a sprint (okay, maybe for some people it was a sprint, but definitely not for me. I worked my butt off studying!) Do the things you need to do to keep your endurance up and your mind at peace. It can be done.

4. Things that did not work for you?
Becky
wish I started a few days or a week earlier to leave more room for down time, especially because my oral was early and I would have like to be able to rest my brain a bit more, so about 5 weeks before really get going

John
I think the main thing was not taking advantage of the practice tests.

In terms of taking the test, the thing that doesn't work is to panic. You will miss some questions. You will probably see something on 101 that you have never heard of before in your life. Don't worry about it. Like I said earlier, if you can write a bit about the concept. Maybe make a simplifying assumption. If you can't even do those things (101) just cut your losses and move on. 211 is going to be a LONG test, use the extra time you have saved to really knock that one out of the park, etc. "Don't panic" is a pretty cliche piece of advice, but it is surprising how easy it is to panic if you don't take advantage of the practice tests.

them have dibs. With the notecards I'd recommend making your own, because just making them is a good learning process, but if you want to see what I did or would rather just study mine I'd be happy to help.

Mareena

BE ORGANIZED AND MAKE A SCHEDULE! This is not something you just jump into. There is a lot of material to learn and a lot of room to be stressed. You can prevent a lot of unnecessary stress if you are organized and prepared. Sounds cheezy but color coding things helps with organization.

Also, DO EVERY PRACTICE PROBLEM YOU CAN GET YOUR HANDS ON! If only for peace of mind, doing the problems multiple times helps drill the points home and also shows you where you need more work. The worst feeling is being on the qual and seeing a problem you chose not to review. You want to bite your tongue off in that moment! So don't let that happen and do all the problems.

Also, these professors love derivations on the quals (at least that's the impression I got). Make sure you know all the milestone derivations, backwards and forwards. A lot of this is understanding but you can get a long way with simply remembering a derivation and reasoning through the meaning after.

Another thing I don't think I expected was how emotionally draining studying for the qual is. Know yourself and make sure you work in a scheduled time to recharge. It has to be worked into the schedule or else it wont happen. Whether its working out, going on a date with your hunny, or reading a chapter in a book for leisure, you've got to recharge. This is a marathon of studying, not a sprint (okay, maybe for some people it was a sprint, but definitely not for me. I worked my butt off studying!) Do the things you need to do to keep your endurance up and your mind at peace. It can be done.

Lulu

Strategy: depend on what your goal is, your strategy can be dramatically different! For instance, if your goal is comprehensiveness (i.e., learning as much as you can in a given amount of time), then you should probably allocate a good amount of time, and start from reviewing books and notes, and follow the flow of the theories etc. However there is always a point of diminishing return, and it is perfectly understandable that you have more important things to do in your life (say research), so if your goal is efficiency or effectiveness (say, pass qual with minimum time spent), then you might want to skip the book-reading and start from the most important topics.

Theories vs. practise problems: for 101 and neutronics (106, 211) going through the theories (definitions, derivations, equations, concepts etc) worths your time, as you will soon find out that the available problems (quals, past midterms and finals) are very similar, and if you don't have your theories all figured out, rushing into practise problems is just a waste of time and a waste of resources (I highly recommend saving the problems to when you are ready to take them seriously without the help of notes or books so you get a somewhat realistic assessment of where you are). On the other hand I felt like for 22.312 practising problems are a lot more helpful than spending too much time on going through the theories.

Summaries: I enjoyed summarizing/condensing material as I go through my notes. It was easy to do with Latex notes as I just start a new section at the end of a chapter and start copying and pasting. It felt great every time I did a round of editing of my notes or added in more material! More importantly, you realize as it gets closer to the qual dates, it is much more efficient to go through your condensed summaries a couple of times, than wasting a ton of time flipping through your entire notes!

Realistic practise: John and Mareena have already stressed the importance of practise exams. I practised going 4-6 hours straight using 312 past exams (there were a ton of 312 past problems), so on the exam day going 3 hours in the morning and 3 hours in the afternoon were not physically or mentally exhausting.

Be positive: make qual prep into a positive experience by staying organized and having a support group. Use whatever tricks you need to make yourself happy! I tried printing out a schedule with check boxes, and checking items off with a giant red marker, and it seemed to help me stay motivated. Also don't forget that the reason you are doing this in the first place is to learn stuff!

4. Things that did not work for you?
Becky
wish I started a few days or a week earlier to leave more room for down time, especially because my oral was early and I would have like to be able to rest my brain a bit more, so about 5 weeks before really get going

John
I think the main thing was not taking advantage of the practice tests.

In terms of taking the test, the thing that doesn't work is to panic. You will miss some questions. You will probably see something on 101 that you have never heard of before in your life. Don't worry about it. Like I said earlier, if you can write a bit about the concept. Maybe make a simplifying assumption. If you can't even do those things (101) just cut your losses and move on. 211 is going to be a LONG test, use the extra time you have saved to really knock that one out of the park, etc. "Don't panic" is a pretty cliche piece of advice, but it is surprising how easy it is to panic if you don't take advantage of the practice tests.

Mareena
Working in large groups. I found those setting were less focused and tended to break into smaller subgroups anyway. Four max was my limit.

Lulu

Oral exam: I spent way too much time during the fall semester preparing for the oral portion. I definitely enjoyed all the material I learnt and the meaningful discussions I had, though I feel like most of them did not directly contribute to my oral exam performance. Check out old oral exams to see for yourself.

312: I spent a good amount of time going through theories and struggled with the-seemingly-countless-number-of-equations. As soon as I started going through practise problems, it turned out there were really a couple types of problems, and for each type you use a very small subset of the equations learnt in class. Mareena
Working in large groups. I found those setting were less focused and tended to break into smaller subgroups anyway. Four max was my limit.

5. Any other feedback?

I saved Dave’s response to this section -- enjoy!  -- Lulu

...

Also, for the oral exam, no matter what they ask you, and no matter what you think about how you are doing remain confident.  Imagine you are giving a talk at a conference.  You wouldn't be there if you hadn't earned your place.  Prepare, give it your honest best, and don't worry about it.

 

Credit:

  • Becky Romatoski
  • Mareena Robinson
  • Lulu Li
  • David Allan Bloore
  • John Hanson
  • Pun Dumnernchanvanit Ittinop