Good tip, thanks!GoofyFoofer wrote:One way to study is to use the topics and such listed in the rules and study from that.Justsomerandomperson wrote:Does anyone have any good studying tips?
If you are just beginning, you can watch Khan Academy, Bozeman Science, etc. to get an introduction to the event.
Anatomy & Physiology B/C
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Milankovitch1
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Re: Anatomy & Physiology B/C
Play Hard - Have Fun
Re: Anatomy & Physiology B/C
What counts as the ¨Basic Anatomy of the component parts of the skin¨ for Division B?
A creative man is motivated by the desire to achieve, not by the desire to beat others. -Ayn Rand
States: Anatomy 5th, Can't Judge a Powder 7th, Simple Machines 2nd, Road Scholar 1st
States: Anatomy 5th, Can't Judge a Powder 7th, Simple Machines 2nd, Road Scholar 1st
- Unome
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Re: Anatomy & Physiology B/C
Anything. Literally. If it's in the skin, it's fair game.claudius wrote:What counts as the ¨Basic Anatomy of the component parts of the skin¨ for Division B?
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pandora_9999
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Re: Anatomy & Physiology B/C
The green "Check Question" button only tells me if the my answer is right or wrong. However, if I tried hard on the question, such as a fill in the blank , and I want to know the answer, is there a button to press to access it?Unome wrote:You can just press the green "Check Question" button.pandora_9999 wrote:So if you get a question wrong in quizzing, is there no way to find out the right answer?
- bernard
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Re: Anatomy & Physiology B/C
I don't think so. Someone who worked on developing quizzing would know for sure. What is the question you are trying to find the answer to?pandora_9999 wrote:The green "Check Question" button only tells me if the my answer is right or wrong. However, if I tried hard on the question, such as a fill in the blank , and I want to know the answer, is there a button to press to access it?Unome wrote:You can just press the green "Check Question" button.pandora_9999 wrote:So if you get a question wrong in quizzing, is there no way to find out the right answer?
"One of the ways that I believe people express their appreciation to the rest of humanity is to make something wonderful and put it out there." – Steve Jobs
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Milankovitch1
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Re: Anatomy & Physiology B/C
Disease is the hardest part for me. Cardio, Immune, Skin not too bad. I do like it when the test is balanced between all areas. Hope regionals are that way.
Play Hard - Have Fun
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slytherin
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Re: Anatomy & Physiology B/C
Honestly, I like it when the test is mainly over Integumentary because we did that last year lolMilankovitch1 wrote:Disease is the hardest part for me. Cardio, Immune, Skin not too bad. I do like it when the test is balanced between all areas. Hope regionals are that way.
State:
Anatomy: 2nd
Meteorology: 2nd
Simple Machines: 2nd
Solar System: 2nd
Notice a pattern
Anatomy: 2nd
Meteorology: 2nd
Simple Machines: 2nd
Solar System: 2nd
Notice a pattern
- boomvroomshroom
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Re: Anatomy & Physiology B/C
I know some people who write tests that have questions that TECHNICALLY have something to do with the year's current systems but are mostly something else, since a lot of systems work together. For example, if you're doing cardiovascular, they might ask stuff specifically pertaining to the blood vessels in the small intestine. Once again, depends on the test writer. Generally the Anatomy test writers know what they're doing...some of them a little too much. They like to troll students with general knowledge.John Richardsim wrote:I don't see any rules that specify the weighting of the scoring of the three different systems, so it would just depend on the test writer. Some (hopefully most) will write a test with the points evenly distributed, while others may leave one or two of the systems in the dust.gxah wrote:Does anyone know how the three systems are weighted? Like are the going to be more cardiovascular system questions... or which system will the test cover more???
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Re: Anatomy & Physiology B/C
The people who write those tests make me consider reading my entire Anatomy textbook (which I probably should do since I can't understand some sections without reading another section). It definitely helps to have an understanding of all of the systems in the body (of course some would help more than others).boomvroomshroom wrote:I know some people who write tests that have questions that TECHNICALLY have something to do with the year's current systems but are mostly something else, since a lot of systems work together. For example, if you're doing cardiovascular, they might ask stuff specifically pertaining to the blood vessels in the small intestine. Once again, depends on the test writer. Generally the Anatomy test writers know what they're doing...some of them a little too much. They like to troll students with general knowledge.John Richardsim wrote:I don't see any rules that specify the weighting of the scoring of the three different systems, so it would just depend on the test writer. Some (hopefully most) will write a test with the points evenly distributed, while others may leave one or two of the systems in the dust.gxah wrote:Does anyone know how the three systems are weighted? Like are the going to be more cardiovascular system questions... or which system will the test cover more???
"One of the ways that I believe people express their appreciation to the rest of humanity is to make something wonderful and put it out there." – Steve Jobs
- Unome
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Re: Anatomy & Physiology B/C
Yes; for the past two years (and probably before that as well, but I wasn't there) the Regionals supervisors had a tiebreaker about relating a system on the rules to other systems.bernard wrote:The people who write those tests make me consider reading my entire Anatomy textbook (which I probably should do since I can't understand some sections without reading another section). It definitely helps to have an understanding of all of the systems in the body (of course some would help more than others).boomvroomshroom wrote:I know some people who write tests that have questions that TECHNICALLY have something to do with the year's current systems but are mostly something else, since a lot of systems work together. For example, if you're doing cardiovascular, they might ask stuff specifically pertaining to the blood vessels in the small intestine. Once again, depends on the test writer. Generally the Anatomy test writers know what they're doing...some of them a little too much. They like to troll students with general knowledge.John Richardsim wrote: I don't see any rules that specify the weighting of the scoring of the three different systems, so it would just depend on the test writer. Some (hopefully most) will write a test with the points evenly distributed, while others may leave one or two of the systems in the dust.
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