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#1
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Re: reference manuals
hmm i see pros and cons here.
I think back to Apollo 13 and how much information had to be recalled and couldn't be simply referenced to. In this situation, I'm glad the astronauts and people down on Earth behind the mission had the majority of their information at hand and not in a book somewhere. But I have noticed that some jobs do have this convenience. I guess it depends on what your job is and how important spontaneity is. $0.02 |
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#2
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Re: reference manuals
When I was in college, for mechanical engineering, we were able to use our books/notes/cheatsheets for almost all our upperclass (2nd yr +) subjects. The reason was simple - it's better to know how to apply the materials you've been learning than to cram it into memory the nite before an exam and forget it afterwards. The reasons were very similar to what you were given - in industry (for engineering) you should know where to go find the information if you don't have it in memory, you have access to reference materials in industry and should focus on application during school vs straight memory.
I found myself many times not remembering the exact formula, but remembering what chapter, and what side of the page it was on. I think that happens a lot, so it's nice to have use of reference materials. I always created cheatsheets regardless if we were allowed to use them. I found that just by writing the information out, formulas, constants, etc, that I remembered them better when I got into the test and didn't need the cheatsheet so much. Plus, I covered more material looking for what I should put on my cheatsheet, so it's a nice review. During tests you don't have much time to flip through pages looking for information - so you need a combination of memory and ability to locate info quickly. But like others have said, it depends on your job function and the info that needs to be recalled. |
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#3
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Re: reference manuals
Even in HS, I find a great variation in how tests are given. One teacher had a closed-book policy, however he allowed one test to be open-book because we didn't have enough time to learn the chapter very well. Another teacher said absolutely no open-book tests, we should know this stuff. (In that class, the textbook author gave us some information that he said we didn't need to know for the test. He also gave study sheets in the book.
) A third teacher declared all tests to be open-book, including finals and midterms.If you don't know something, and you can use a reference book/CD, you use it. If you think you know it, but aren't sure, use the reference anyway. If you know it asleep, don't bother. As has been said in this thread and others, If you use something a lot, you will learn it; if you don't use it a lot, why waste time memorizing it when you have a reference book? |
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#4
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Re: reference manuals
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#5
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Re: reference manuals
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I kept it down to a single backback. I think it was 6 books. Most important was my PE reference manual, by Lindberg. It has a touch of everything and lots of data and tables on things like pipe sizes. I also brough one thermo book, one statics book, a structures book that also had good materials data (mostly for the data), and a calculus book (Thomas 4th ed). I had a book I liked better as a text book for calculus, but in Thomas I could "remember the sides of the pages" for things I felt I was likely to need. I was not nearly as familiar with the other book. Oh and I almost forgot, Mechancal Design by Shigley, an absolute classic. All sorts of little problems, like stress on a hook, neatly solved. If I could only keep one of my reference books it would be Lindberg, it is especially good at bringing back all the stuff you used to know. In fact during the first three weeks of build, when we are doing our design work, Lindberg is rarely far from my side, in spite of weighing something like 10 lbs. If you have too many references, you spend too much time looking for things. Knowing where to find key items quickly is much better. But Dave is right too, there are certain things you should just know. Like stress=Mc/I or F=ma |
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#6
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Re: reference manuals
I don't see a problem with it, because researching skills and the ability to find critical knowledge quickly are much more marketable than hordes of information stored on the hard drive of your brain.
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