These exercises, called Spindles, aim to help students with heavy extracurricular workloads, high-performance athletes, and musicians through more efficient study methods.
The first principle is that one learns by doing. The secret of learning lies in doing and redoing until mastery is achieved. Therefore, making mistakes in learning is not a bad thing. Mistakes should lead you to consider correct alternatives. For this reason, the exam content has been synthesized into a series of questions where, if the answer is unknown or incorrect, an explanation is shown of how it should have been answered. That same question is then put back in the queue to verify later that the concept has been consolidated.
However, doing for the sake of doing, if we already know it, is a waste of time! That's why I present you with the great contribution of learning: once the first round of questions is finished, two buttons will appear. One to restart, and the other, which I believe is more interesting, to review only the questions you got wrong. This way, the second round will help consolidate the concepts that were not initially known.
The goal is to achieve less than 5% errors in the first round to ensure a great exam result.
Lastly, my recommendation is not to leave these types of exercises for the day before the exam but to do them regularly, even in small chunks and during downtime, like waiting for the bus, at traffic lights when driving, or any other 10-minute period you can dedicate to them. These Spindles are a great complement to help children follow teachers' explanations in class and consolidate all the concepts more quickly and effectively.
The game consists of correctly answering all the proposed questions.
Each time you make a mistake, we will show you the correct answer. Incorrect answers will be put back in the queue, so they appear again, and you can answer correctly.
You can ask for help by clicking on the light bulb, only for those questions that have an explanation. In these cases, the question will not count and will appear again randomly later on.
The question round will stop once you have correctly answered all the questions.
Once you have finished the round of questions, you can either restart or load only those questions you got wrong during the previous round to reinforce your learning.
You don't have to complete the round all at once. You can reload the page as many times as needed, as your answers will be saved in memory so that you can complete all the questions at your own pace.
We hope you enjoy it and learn quickly and easily!
The best way to get a perfect score on any exam, try it and see.