Test Preparation
| Before a test | During a test | After a test |
|---|---|---|
| Arrive early, with necessary writing and test-taking materials such as calculator, essay booklet, "scantron" form | Before you look at the test, jot down any information you don't want to forget. | After taking the first test in a class, you can gain insights that will help you prepare for future tests. Try the yellow and blue highlighter technique: |
| Practice relaxation techniques while waiting: deep breathing, muscle relaxers. | Read all of the directions carefully. Know exactly what you need to do. Ask your professor if you are unclear. | Conduct an analysis of your test, to determine how to improve your performance on the next one. |
| Get a good night's sleep | Review the test quickly to determine how to schedule your time, based on number of questions and points allocated for each section.
Example: If you have 50 minutes to complete a 100 multiple choice question exam, you have 30 seconds per question. |
|
| Exercise in the evening or morning | Allow for a few minutes to review your test after you have completed it. | |
| Eat well the morning of your test. | Put most of your time into the sections with the most points. | |
| Begin with the easiest parts of the test. If you come to a question you don't know, mark it and move on. Come back to it later. Answering other questions may trigger your memory to retrieve the correct answer. | ||
| Check for questions you left blank, spelling, etc. Change only those answers you are reasonably sure are incorrect. Do not change a guess. More often a guess is correct and the correction is not. |
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