In my four years of teaching Math for our UPCAT
Review
and in my entire existence as a student (yes, I still consider myself a student
at 31), most of my students expect a nightmare going through the Math part of
the UPCAT. Last time I checked, they still tend to make it the first part of
the exam. As a smart student, you should remind yourself that this is a game. A
torturous game that you just need to put up with. They are trying to break you
down.
As most students dread
the Math portion of the UPCAT, the point of putting the Math part first is to
make test takers curl up into a ball and start weeping like a five year old. So
don’t. You are bigger than that. Plus, I’ve made it my new year’s resolution to
give free reviews online by posting Math exercises before our UPCAT Review this
summer starts. Yey freebies! (Note: Short Math exercises for UPCAT will be posted on this blog starting next week until our website gets constructed this January.)
Math is believed to
have the largest standard deviation of all the four parts of the UPCAT (Math,
Reading Comprehension, Language Proficiency and my personal nightmare, Science —
yes, I am human and I have my own personal demons to deal with) – thus, our
reviews spend almost half of the review teaching Math, not because it takes
about half the score but it tends to weaken the test taker’s confidence, which
is what I personally think accounts for the largest proportion of why students
fail.
So how do we, at Excel
Tutorials and Review Center, deal with Math for our UPCAT Review? Here are our
five guiding principles:
1.
First, we deal with the emotional aspect
of Math. In Batangas City and Lipa City, our strategy last year was to show
students how big their improvements are
by doing pre and post tests. It is amazing to see students’ eyes light up after
being almost zero in a non-multiple choice exam to getting 60-80% after an hour
of lecture. This gives them hope and determination that if they put in the
work, they will keep improving.
2.
We always remember that some of the
students are scarred by Math. After years of having not-so-good, ehem, bad
teachers, most of my UPCAT Reviewees are scared of Math. Some don’t even try.
So last year, we instituted an addition small group tutorial for our students
who are struggling with Math. The result of our little experiment was very
encouraging – about half got over their fear of Math after a week of private
tutoring after the review session.
3.
Teach in sections so as not to overwhelm
the students. At Excel Tutorials, our book has 16 chapters of Math and we only teach
one to two sections per session depending on the level of difficulty.
4.
Divide and conquer – separate the
fearful from the confident. How about those that you can’t seem to identify
between fearful and confident? Put them in the confident pile. I am super proud
of one particular student that I had last year, Ivy Hernandez, who passed the
UPCAT with a slot in UP Diliman to take Political Science. She was one of those
who kept asking me if Math was really necessary. Of course, my answer was it is
necessary as it will be a quarter of the result. The 15 year-old girl was very
doubtful but when I kept throwing Math questions her way, she gets most of them
right, and I kept reminding her that she keeps worrying when she’s scoring
consistently above the class average, she started being confident. The lesson
is: reward students who do the work but keeps worrying with confidence-boosters
and they will succeed.
5.
Cater to the confident as you would
cater to the fearful. As an UPCAT Review teacher, it is easy to fall into the
trap of helping those who are fearful first and forget about the needs of those
who you are sure to pass. There would always be students that you’d bet your
annual salary on that they will pass like Khimi Nopre, Novaya Dolor, Quio
Saludo and Kimberly Litargo, my students from Batangas City and Lipa City. It
is a struggle to remind myself that they need my help, too. So I had an alarm
one day that they top 20% of each class will get a 30-minute discussion with me
after class. I ended up giving them additional materials and my personal number
so they can ring me when something pressing avoids them from getting a good
night’s sleep. Next year, we will have separate classes for struggling and
advanced students. It is hard for a teacher to teach when the advanced are
bored but those struggling can barely keep up with the pace.
As this is my first
entry after the 2014 UPCAT results came out,
I’d like to take the chance to thank the wonderful parents who supported
their kids during the review, our students for doing the work and for all my
co-teachers for doing all they can for our students. We did better than last year -- our passing rate is 33% (about double the national passing of 17%, apologies at the time the picture was made, we had an incomplete list of passers.) Thanks to all of you, we
have expanded to 9 confirmed centers this coming year and I can’t be more
excited. I will see all of you again for our 2014 Summer UPCAT Review in
Manila, Batangas, Antipolo, Lingayen, Bulacan
(Pulilan and Baliuag), Lipa, Naga, Iloilo
and Dagupan.
Here is our partial list of passers:
To receive more tips, the latest
updates on our UPCAT Review and this blog, like our page, UPCAT Review Page.
Pictures taken from Mathfail and Mathjokes.
For more reviewers, visit MORE FREE UPCAT REVIEWERS . For more study tips on Statistics and Probabilities, go MORE STATISTICS AND PROBABILITIES EXAMPLES.
Pictures taken from Mathfail and Mathjokes.
For more reviewers, visit MORE FREE UPCAT REVIEWERS . For more study tips on Statistics and Probabilities, go MORE STATISTICS AND PROBABILITIES EXAMPLES.