Preparing for exams
Students have built up years of experience with
examsBut they have not
always built up confidence in this
knowledge
We know a lot about exams...
So what gets in the way of using that knowledge?
What makes exams difficult for many people?
It feels like there’s a lot to do...
So it helps if you can ...… break tasks down
Think of revision in 3 stages
Pre-revisionrevisionmanaging the exam
Stage 1 - Pre-revision
Revision means preparing for specific exams - so pre-revision means finding out what the exam is testing
Find out what the exam is testing?
This does not mean ‘question-spotting’ - it means researching
what the paper is asking of you, e.g. is it memory for detail, linking
together theory, solving problems?
Pre-revision - research the paper you are preparing
forHow long is the paper?What sort of questions are asked - essays, problem-solving, MCQ?Are there past papers available?
Is there information about exams in your course handbook?Attend any revision seminars offered by your department(s)Is it designed to allow choice in what you revise?
Remember!The style of the exam
paper dictates how you revise
Stage 2 - Revision
Revision techniquesCan we come up with a list of revision techniques what techniques have you used? or have you heard about?
For more revision ideas ...
Look on the Effective Learning website - •go to Lancaster home page •click on ‘learning support’•then click on ‘effective learning’
Revision needs to be active
This means using more of your 5 senses & more areas of your brainIt means injecting variety into your timetableIt means actively trying to create understanding of a topic
Some revision techniques are active
Some techniques prepare you for the examSome techniques promote understandingSitting in your room just rereading notes over and over again is PASSIVE revision
How do you decide which revision techniques to use?Personal learning style - what suits you?Style of exam - what is appropriate to the type of questions you will answer?What helps you to rehearse what you will do in the exam?What techniques allow some variety?
Timetabling revisionWhat, in your experience, makes timetabling difficult?
What do you do when your timetable doesn’t work?
3 Rs of revision
ReviewRegroupReward
Review? what has been done, what needs to be done?
Start the week - map out what has to be done on each dayThe night before or in the morning - what has to be done?
After revision sessions - what is left to do on that topic?End of the day & end of the week - what’s left on your list to do?
Regroup?Reviewing can lead to regrouping - this means that if your timetable is not working, rather than get depressed you reorganise your timetable.
Regrouping is a sensible tactic, not a sign of failure.
Reward yourselfAllow yourself to have breaksTake short ‘contrast’ breaks for 5 or 10 minutes - something non-academic such as music, TV, radio, meditationGo out to get some fresh airChange tasks - variety means including some activities that you like
Stage 3-Managing the Exam
Forward planning...
Arrive in a fit state...Double check your timetable - know where the exam isif you live a long way from school, arrange to arrive in plenty of time unbothered by traffic jams etc.Find out what you can take into the exam and what you cannot - keep your ‘exam kit’ together & ready for each exam
Exam kit?
Think about time in advance...
If you have a long list of short-answer or MCQs to do, you cannot allocate time per question. Ensure, though, that you don’t spend half your time on one questionSome exams ask you to complete different sections which include short and long answers - you should know this in advance & plan how to allocate time
Take time to think
If you are doing a traditional essay-based exam, you should allow equal time for each essayIf you are writing essay-answers - always allow time to plan your answer before writing
Plan answers?Essay questions rarely ask you to ‘tell all you know about’ a topicMore often, they ask you to apply what you know to the question - to make sense of a topicThis means your essay needs to make links - it needs a theme that links your points AND addresses the question
What if I can write 2 essays
but I am struggling with the third one?
Plan an answer to this essay question...
Discuss the wallaby population in the Lake District
Imagine...What sort of information might you discuss in this
essay?
People have different styles of managing exam
daysTake time to work out what
‘before’ and ‘after’ strategies work best for
you
Decide how you like to enter & leave the exam
Do you want to wait away from other people?Do you need to be in fresh air when waiting?Do you prefer to be in the room at the front of the crowd to find your place?
After, do you like to be with friends?Do you avoid post-exam discussions or do you like to hear how others have answered questions?Does exercise help you wind down after an exam?
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