Eve wrote:Akonyl wrote:breva wrote:[quote="Akonyl"]
[quote="breva"]
I had a social test today, forgot to do my homework and lost my homework sheet...

Tomorrow I have another social test, English test from the movie "shawshankredemption" that I didin't understand at all

Then a phisics test+its homework and finally math homework to do and another test >:( what days!! >:( I hope wednesday won't be that bad
shawshank's a pretty good movie, if you didn't understand it maybe you should watch it a few more times

I liked what I could understand but don't have time to watch it again since the test is tomorrow

do you know approximately what the test's gonna be about? Like is it an essay or will it just have random questions like "what was Andy's occupation before going to prison"? If an essay, you could probably just read a summary online or something to get most of what you didn't catch
[/quote]

desperate times call for desperate Measures:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Shawshank_Redemption [/quote]
That's not a desperate measure, that's the first source I have always used for works in school (mostly in junior high school, cause in high school I stopped doing homework and the teachers didn't give much work anyway, and if they did, they didn't check it). Even when in the instructions it said "Don't use wikipedia", I still used it.
Once, the english teacher gave us a project to do about the solar system (english - solar system. Get it? Neither do I!

). So I and my friends did the work together and we simply coppied full articles from wiki. The most hillarious thing was that some links (blue words with lines) still remained in the text, and yet we still got an A.
In tenth grade, when I had to do a book report, I didn't read the book (that was before I was interested in books), I just looked in the wiki article and memorized what it said, and I got an A.
I personally think this system works perfect, since at the end of school, I was one of the top three in english in my class (maybe even top 1

)