Pass Your Exams!
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By Paula Vera in School Published: Sunday, 11 November 07 - 10:29 AM (GMT -08:00) Last Updated: Sunday, 11 November 07 - 12:39 PM (GMT -08:00) |
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Just recently, I had midterms week. Lo and behold, I do what I always do: CRAM. Here is how my studying day often goes:
- Get out of class
- Eat lunch and hang out with friends
- Go home (around 2 or 3 pm)
- Turn on the laptop
- Check e-mails, Google Analytics and Adsense
- Stumble for a few minutes
- Read interesting articles on Technology, Architecture, Money, and Entrepreneur How-Tos
- MySpace it for a bit and then check Facebook for 30 seconds, then leave.
- Since it's only 5 pm, I take a nap.
- I wake up at around 10 pm - 12 am
- I get out all the things I need to study.
- I promise myself that I'll study in the next 10 minutes or when it's 12 am.
- After some more Stumbling, I study for 10 minutes, then have a break.
- I go on YouTube and watch a few videos.
- It's now 3 am and I finally decide to crack that book open.
How To Cram It All In!
It's quite simple really. Some things I do are:- Make acronyms of lists - If you have to memorize, let's say, four things, then make an acronym out of them.
- Make a "short-movie" - Memorize this list: cherries, pig, tea cup, cell phone, camera. Then make a "movie" of some sort out of those five things. "Sara went to give cherries to a fat pig stuck inside a tea cup. She thought it looked funny, so she took a picture of the scene with her cell phone's camera." Crappy example, but you get the idea.
- Don't read everything because you're just wasting time. Read the important stuff--the words in bold, italics. Read the headlines--if it's about Hamburgers and Their Effects, then you better freaking read the effects of hamburgers. Headlines are like questions--answer them.
- Don't memorize definitions. Put them in your own words--into words you understand!
- *** Connect, Connect, CONNECT! - Connect everything you've learned into your daily life. If you're studying for Law, then connect law terms and theories with stuff you see on the news (OJ Simpson case, Britney Spears' case).
- Outline It! - If you know you'll be writing an essay, then get an outline ready. Nothing fancy, just make sure you have your introduction, your body (high school - 3 paragraphs, college - 4 to 5 paragraphs with a lot of ideas), and your tight ass conclusion. By doing this, you'll be prepared for your essay exam. You won't waste time on constructing the essay during the exam and you'll remember the things you've written.
During The Test
- Read the question and make sure you know what it's asking you. Circle the importance bits if you have to. If it's an essay question, make sure you deliver what's it's asking you to do.
- Before answering multiple-choice questions, read the question and see if you already know the answer. By looking at the choices, you might end up second-guessing yourself.
- Think logically for multiple-choice questions. Cross out the ones that don't fit together. If you have two choices left, then pick the best one (or you can always pick C--haha j/k) according to your own reasoning.
- Go over your answers. Not many people do this, but I do. There have been times when I've accidentally bubbled in a different answer when I meant to bubble something else.
- Sometimes, the answers are in the questions. Read the other questions, there might be a chance that the answer for another question is there (or it may be the professor's way of swaying you off).
- When writing an essay, don't freak out and sit in dismay. In fact, USE THE ADRENALINE! Because you wrote that nifty outline, rewrite it again on another piece of paper (that is, if your professor let's you have scratch paper). I always suggest writing your introductory onto another paper for 2-5 minutes until it suites the topic.
- Writing an essay is like having a conversation (better be a damned intelligent one!) about one topic. You have to connect every sub-topic with the main topic (that is, you have to connect every sub-body paragraph with your thesis!).
- Writing your conclusion. When you end a conversation, you derive ending thoughts. Make sure to include the sub-topic of every sub-body paragraph you had. This is your time to connect everything together! Oh, and make your last line powerful, intriguing, or catching to your reader/professor.
- Always check the time! Obviously.
I don't recommend cramming all the time, people. You lose sleep, you get groggy, and end up drinking coffee to stay awake and "high". Health-wise, it's bad for the bod and if you're a poor college student, all those coffee-runs are bad for the budget. heh Just remember my tips on "studying" and do it from time to time, a long time before exam day. In fact, use it in every day of your life--connect everything while in class and always think logically. I'm in the same boat as you procrastinators, and I hope to get out of it. I hope you will too. Happy Midterms! (Have you tried these tips? Leave a comment!)
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