why don't you create your own chart so, it's easier for you to understand it
like what geodome said, understand the mechanisms themselves
and when you do you'll know when it would be in a basic or acidic environment
eg. the presence of a strong base forces dehydrohalogenation of alkyl halides to undergo E2 mechanism whether its primary, secondary, or tertiary
let me list some mechanisms for you though
a.SN1-SN2
b. free radical substitution
c. E1-E2 dehydration of alcohols
d. E1-E2 dehydrohalogenation of alykyl halides
e. electrophilic addition of hydrogen halides (markovnikov)
f. free radical addition of hrydrogen bromide to alkenes (anti-markovnikov)
g. sulfuric acid addition (markovnikov)
h. acid catalyzed hydration of alkenes (markovnikov)
i. hyroboration-oxidation of alkenes (anti-markovnikov)
j.hydrogenation of alkenes
k. addition of halogens forming vicinal dihalides
l. conversion of alkenes to vicinal halohydrin
m. epoxidation
n. ozonolysis of alkenes
good luck on your test if you have one
put it this way, I find Organic Chemistry to be hard too
i got a 36 in my ACT
all my grades so far in college are in the 100 percentile and over (some proffs don't curve)
but my organic is only at a 94 percent