<p>Did you just do the practice test and then go to another source to figure out how to do the problems or did you make flash cards of the problems and learn how to do them that way? S is taking a test, finding out what he missed, making flash cards of the missed problems and then doing them until when he knows how to do them all he goes on to the next test, is that they way people used Barron’s? He plans on doing the same with Chung’s book.</p>
<p>What subject is he studying? I think the studying method depends on the subject being studied. I used Barron’s for Math II, physics, and chemistry. I actually had to study the content for chemistry because I only had honors chem. But for all three, I did practice problems at the ends of chapters to check understanding. Like your son, I went over missed problems from practice tests. I would also recommend using more than one source for studying a subject. Usually one source (like Barron’s) will miss something that another source addresses, so it’s good to have multiple dimensions. </p>
<p>Thank you. I thought I mentioned it was for Math II </p>