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Final exams from previous years have been given to the library by professors for use by students. This collection is currently not comprehensive or complete. Old exams should be used as study aids only and may not reflect changes in course content from year to year.
U Of T Past Exams Library
Instructions on setting up wireless printing from your laptop. If you have problems with this, please stop by the IT Desk, which is located at the end of the Library Services desk at the entrance to the library.
The U of T wireless network supports wireless b, g and n and does not require a browser-based login each time you connect. For devices capable of wireless n, it is faster and has increased range. If you have problems setting up and/or connecting to this network, please stop by the IT Desk, which is located at the end of the Library Services desk at the entrance to the library.
The library provides a number of desktop computers for use by students. They are located across from the Library Services Desk at the entrance to the library. You can log into the computers using your UTORid and the computers print to the main printer/copier/scanner located by the washrooms on Level 2.
Exams are searchable by professor and by course. If we have exams for your professor, you'll see the course name followed by EXAMS. In the example below, Father O'Brien has exams for Family Law and Trusts & Estates. He also has books on course reserve for both classes. Course reserves are listed under non-EXAM entries.
New exams are added approximately twice per year as submitted by professors. The library retains 10 years of past exams for current faculty in the online database. If you have questions or have trouble downloading files, please contact Angela Wang.
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Edited: Wow, it's amazing that so many people shared their opinion here. I'd just like to clarify my question here cuz I see my question mislead few people, my apologize. Say, I am taking some course this year, and the professor would usually post some pasts term tests with answers and the past exams from previous years(with no answers, or sometimes they just post a link to the library website, where answer-free version of past exams can be found) on the course web-page.
I'm sceptical about the value of providing solutions to past exams for studying purposes. From my experience the temptation to look at the solutions instead of struggling through the questions is often irresistible for students, especially those who are struggling. This leads to the false impression of knowing how to solve the problems. Of course past exam solutions can be used effectively to study, for example by only using the solutions to check answers after completing the entire exam as practice. But I have rarely seen students do this.
I think this totally depends on the course or more importantly, the advisor. I've had courses where the final exams of previous years were discussed in the next years so that students learn from them.
For what it is worth, I disagree with the idea to keep solutions secret for exams, homework, etc. If people can learn from drilling the materials, they should be allowed to. This is an area where things have actually become much more restrictive, less open than several decades ago when it was normal to post solutions after tests or have texts with answers to every single drill problem (not just the odds!) I have the discipline to decide how much effort to spend on problems before checking a solution (am a big boy).
Dentistry Library124 Edward St., Room 267Toronto, ON, M5G 1G6416-864-8211library.dentistry@utoronto.caMapAbout web accessibility. Tell us about a web accessibility problem.About online privacy and data collection.
Please note: for many courses the provision of exams in Spring 2020 differs from previous years due to the Covid-19 outbreak. The relevance of previous exam papers will vary greatly between courses so please contact your course organiser or programme administration team to find out if consulting previous exam papers will be helpful to you as a revision study aid.
New College students have access to all the materials in the University Library System including departmental and other branch libraries across the campus. The University of Toronto Library system is rated among the top 4 academic library systems in North America, containing over 15 million items.
Effective revision begins at the start of your course with the notes you make and the methods you use to follow up on lectures and tutorials. This will lay the foundations of your learning. Closer to exams, you will need to spend more concentrated time on the process.
Exam papers database - this links through to the database of past examination papers for all subjects. You may need to log in with your university username and password to access the database if you are off campus.
Revision Teqniques - Here is a collection of revision related videos, that may help aid your preparation for your exams. Key elements include creating a study plan, reviewing your notes and taking rest breaks.
Machine learning is a set of techniques that allow machines to learn from data and experience, rather than requiring humans to specify the desired behavior by hand. Over the past two decades, machine learning techniques have become increasingly central both in AI as an academic field, and in the technology industry. This course provides a broad introduction to some of the most commonly used ML algorithms. It also serves to introduce key algorithmic principles which will serve as a foundation for more advanced courses, such as CSC412/2506 (Probabilistic Learning and Reasoning) and CSC421/2516 (Neural Networks and Deep Learning).
Find guides to help you find resources and learn about research in various subject areas, in certain jurisdictions, for specific law school courses, or to help prepare for specific events (e.g. exams and OCI).
The Law Library maintains an online collection of past exams. The exams are added to the collection only at the request of individual professors. To access the exams, go to the College of Law website, click the drop-down box under "Resources," and select "Intranet." On the new page that comes up, click on "Student Intranet" and log in with your Net ID and password. At the top left of the new page, select "Documents" and next "Library." Open the folder "Law Library-Sample Exams."
You can access past exam papers for both undergraduate and postgraduate courses, to give you a sense of the structure and format of exams and to aid your revision. You will need to log in using your Birkbeck username and password when prompted.
If the new library and project work as expected, you've isolated the cause of your issue to the original library or project. Try to restore a previous version of the original library from a Time Machine or other backup.
This tutorial will effectively be extra office hours. But if there are recurring questions, or solutions to past exams you'd like to see gone over, we can discuss those as a class. Tutorial will be held in the main lecture hall.
The programming assignments will all be done in Python using the NumPy scientific computing library, but prior knowledge of Python is not required. Basic Python will be taught in a tutorial. We will be using Python 2, not Python 3, since this is the version more commonly used in machine learning.
We strongly encourage you to search HOLLIS Catalog to get more information about the items you think you will want to use. The catalog records will indicate whether items are stored off-site, restricted, or closed. If the item(s) in which you are interested are stored off-site and/or restricted, or if you are having difficulty searching the library holdings, please contact us for further assistance.
All reading room users are required to register upon their first visit and to show one form of photo identification. Reception staff will assign a locker for any bags, cases, or valuables that you bring into the library. Once you have registered, proceed to the second-floor reference desk, where staff will assist you with filling out call slips and finding the materials you need.
The Frisco Landing Library is the UNT Libraries newest library located on thesecond floor of the UNT at Frisco campus at 12995 Preston Rd in Frisco, Texas. The library provides resources, services, and spaces in an open libraryenvironment that promotes collaboration and supports student learning.Services available include borrowing materials, materialdelivery, research assistance, course reserves, andlibrary instruction.
Please be aware that past exam papers are not under the control of the Library. Your School, tutor, or supervisor are best placed to help you with mark schemes or other assistance concerning past exam papers. 2ff7e9595c
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