<p>Hi guys thanks for your advice on my last question. I am trying to study for spring classes and need some help. How do you get A's in 7.013, 18.03, 8.02, and 6.00? Do you know any good extra books or websites?? Anything else I can do? I am ready to spend a lot of time on this, so please tell me anything you think would be helpful!!
Thanks so much</p>
<p>Hello??? I still need the help!!! Someone please respond!!</p>
<p>6.00: practice coding, more coding more practice… gonna be time consuming (6.01 course notes might be helpful). Project Euler has lots of cool problems you can work on in your free time. Download a python interpreter.</p>
<p>7.013/8.02/18.03 should not be particularly difficult courses: Do more problems. When you are done, find harder problems to do. There are plenty of problems for 18.03 in the course notes, and they all have solutions. Halliday Resnick/Serway/Giancoli… have plenty of problems for 8.02. 7.013… There’s a white problem solving book that is pretty helpful.</p>
<p>Good luck, and remember that there is a lot more to learning than grades. Even at MIT, getting an A does not mean you have mastered the material. Don’t let your schooling interfere with your education. Don’t half-ass your courses because it might come back later and hurt you. TA’ing classes here definitely made me realize how some people get A’s and assume they know sth well, only to realize 2-3 courses down the road they had very weak foundations.</p>
<p>There is no magic formula, that’s probably why no one responded. Generally, going to class, doing your work, and asking questions about things you don’t understand works pretty well.</p>