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How to Survive Exam Weeks?
Do you find yourself panicking when you have several exams to take in a
short period? Do you feel a lot more stress during mid-terms and finals?
If so, then the following suggestions should prove useful.
1. Dealing With Tension
Expect a certain amount of tension. It is normal during an exam
period. Actually a little anxiety helps to heighten your awareness and can
enhance your performance.
2. Take Time To Relax
Cope with your excess tension before and between exams through rest,
exercise and deep muscle relaxation. For example, long walks and bike
rides are excellent ways to release nervous energy and maintain your
stamina for the duration of your exam period.
3. Adopt a Positive Approach
To avoid becoming too anxious, look at the exam as the application step of
your study efforts, instead of a threatening new experience.
4. Anxiety is Contagious
Keep away from people who are highly anxious before exams, because
their nervousness may tend to increase your own.
5. Plan Rewards
Schedule a meal, a movie, a handball game, a visit with a friend
periodically throughout finals. Plan a treat when they're all done. These
help keep your spirits up.
Schedule
For Exams
Prepare a general schedule. Write down the time of each exam and plan how
much time you can allot to studying for each course; remember that your
hardest course will require more time.
1. Start Early
Schedule your study periods to avoid last-minute cramming.
2. Allow Large Blocks of Time For Studying
Block out hour spans for getting down concepts and basic relationships.
3. Allow Short Periods For Review
Use the odd moments, in the shower or walking across campus, for recall
and review. Run through the information frequently; this will ensure that
you remember it and it will broaden your understanding.
4. Vary What You Study
Don't study for two similar courses consecutively. It is better to
break the pattern with a completely different study approach. For example,
study chemistry and then French instead of chemistry and then physics.
5. Schedule Breaks
Respect your concentration span. Especially if you haven't studied
much all semester, it may be difficult to study for several hours at a
time. Starting your exam period with impossibly long study periods is
likely to leave you exhausted before it is all over.
6. Stay With Your Routine
Stick to your normal daily routine as much as possible. If you do get off
your routine and need extra time, avoid staying up all night; go to bed at
your regular time and get up a couple of hours earlier than you normally
would, to continue studying. You will be able to understand and remember
more when you are rested than you would if you postpone rest.
The Night
Before
As you approach the first exam, and the time between exams:
1. Spend Last Hours
Spend Your Last Hours Calmly Reviewing What You've Learned. Try not to
tackle new material then.
2. Avoid Staying Up All Night
The shorter you are on sleep the less clearly you will be able to
think and write what you know on the exam.
3. Cream Selectively
The night before an exam when you are more anxious than usual is one
of the least effective times for study. Your ability to deal with concepts
and synthesize material is greatly reduced, and even your ability to
memorize is impaired by marked anxiety. Cramming only serves to make you
more frantic about the exam and, hence, less prepared to do your best. If
you do come up to exam time unprepared, use your last minute studying as a
review of key concepts, instead of trying to learn it all. Be realistic
about what you can accomplish: set priorities based on what you expect to
be emphasized on the test. Stay calm.
4. Don't Go To Movies
Don't get involved in any activities that might either interfere with
what you have been learning or make you feel so guilty that you
Take Care
Of Yourself
In addition to taking an organized and calm approach to studying, you
need to make common sense and moderation a general life style during this
and other times of stress.
1.Moderate Stimulates
Coffee, tea and Coca-Cola all contain caffeine and are relatively safe
ways to help you stay awake. Pills, such as No-Doz, taken in recommended
dosage, are fairly safe to help stay awake: they are concentrated caffeine
equal to about one and a half cups of coffee. An overdose may cause
jitters and keep you from being able to sleep even if you want to.
2. Beware Of Taking Drugs
This includes pills that were prescribed for other persons. Diet pills,
for example, should be avoided, as it is possible to get an overdose of
thyroid and a lethal dose of digitalis.
Amphetamine preparations such as speed, Benzedrine and Dexedrine increase
mental processes, but they can cause other bad effects. A student under
the influence of amphetamines can cram and scan more information, but
retention may be reduced.
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