Practice
Dock
Guided drills for when the theory is already clear and the remaining job is execution: hint ladders, dissection, weak-topic replay, and copy/download revision packs.
Paper structure,
not paper clutter.
Move from normal drills to mock exams, flashcards, and notes without losing the course thread. The dock keeps the question, the trap, the hint ladder, and the cleanup tools together.
One question.
One ladder.
One clean answer.
Guided drills that borrow the paper structure: prompt, trap, answer shape, and a clean next action. Notes, flashcards, and weak replays stay stitched to the current question.
Week 1 - Graded Assignment 1
A survey was conducted on pollution of 525 ponds across some cities. It was found that 230 ponds are polluted by fertilisers , 245 ponds are polluted by pesticides and 257 ponds are polluted by pharmaceutical…
Start with the topic family: Set / relation logic.
Missing the exact property definition or domain constraint.
Set / relation logic
Definition match plus the right symbolic form.
Name the concept in plain language. Walk the method step by step and justify each move. Cross-check the result against the problem statement.
Start with the topic family: Set / relation logic. Ask what the question is actually testing before you calculate or code. Write the smallest valid method first, then check for traps.
Definition / rule: Set / relation logic. Use the canonical method that your notes repeat across weeks. Keep the final answer shape aligned with the assignment style.
Start with the topic family: Set / relation logic.
Copy or download a compact, course-aware revision bundle for the current drill. It gives you the question, the trap, the answer shape, and the most relevant notes without splitting the workflow into extra panels.
A compact bridge from theory to recall
Open with the concept family, then reveal the hint ladder one step at a time.
Turn the problem into a step-by-step explanation and verify each move.
Use rule-first revision with definitions, formulas, and answer shape.
Mark anything sticky and keep it in a small weak-topic queue for later.