The most important thing in history is interest. Actually, history is very interesting. You can try to read more history books and movies, which will help you improve your interest and learn well. You can outline the knowledge points of each lesson and then remember them in connection with the relationship between knowledge points. The teacher introduced us a good method, that is, to establish an outline for the knowledge points, sort out the knowledge points clearly, and compare the details (event, place, cause, process, result, meaning of the event, etc. ) follow the knowledge points in the review, and then remember that the exam is nothing.
As for junior high school politics, I find it boring. To put it bluntly, it is ideology and morality, but it doesn't matter. Learn Chinese well, and politics will not be bad. After all, it is reasonable. You can buy a counseling book and compare it with the above questions such as "How to be a self-reliant person?" Then mark the corresponding content on it against the textbook, so it is clear. Generally speaking, the new lesson he learned is nothing more than: the first box question is definition and importance, and the second box question is how to do it. After you find out the law, you can try it according to my method, get familiar with its knowledge points, and then close the book and recite it, so that you can answer both your questions and the material questions. In my opinion, the ideology and morality are not so rigorous. As long as what you say is similar and reasonable, the teacher will give you points, but it is true that you don't digress. Remind you that the material questions should be analyzed, because some material questions will not directly tell you the knowledge points, and usually only ask you: What have you learned? Then it is very important for you to know what it is. But in the end, politics is always changing, so you can learn everything well.