1.
Tips for academic mentors:
o
Ask what students think will be on the exam, and ask to
explain these concepts in their own words;
o
Make worksheets for students while students make a worksheet
for academic mentor. Switch papers, fill them out, and go over together;
o
Make a study plan with students that gives them a chance to
learn the way they do best: organizing material? Teaching material? Working
through it orally?
o
Incorporate past exam questions in sessions through
semester, student will become comfortable with style;
2.
Tips for students:
A) Preparing for the test:
o
If the professor posts old exams, print those off and
simulate real testing conditions. Go to the exam room if possible, sit down for
50 minutes and take that test;
o If
you study confidently, you test confidently;
o Study
a lot - be over-prepared for the exam;
o Start
studying early to eliminate last minute cramming; use these exam countdown
forms;
o Create
a realistic schedule for studying;
B) A day before the test:
o Make
sure to have finished studying at least a day before the exam;
o Midterms:
don’t study the day off, finals: don’t study the night before;
o Get
a good night’s sleep;
o Realize
that anxiety will lead to worse grade. So try to relax by listening to music, play sports, talk with
professors/friends;
C) Right before the test:
o Listen
to music and relax before a test, don’t study up until the moment before;
o Take
a walk;
o Recall
all the tests you got through in the past (high school or college) and any
challenge (application to college, taking the ACT, interviews). If you realize
all the other stressful situation you made through, one exam might seem less
intimidating, you just need to take one step at a time;
o Tell
yourself that since you have been working hard so far, if the test doesn’t go
well, you shouldn’t feel sorry;
D) During the test:
o Find
a “security blanket” and bring it with you every time you have an exam. I
always have a bottle of Diet Coke with me when I sit down for an exam. It makes
for a natural break during a tense exam;
o Sit
at the corner, so that you won’t be disturbed by others who finish early;
o Try not to look at the test as something to prove to other but yourself;
o Be
confident.
Another very useful strategy that was suggested by Lead
Academic Mentor Libbi Fletcher is writing about your anxieties right before the
test. This has proven to reduce text anxiety and improve test performance in
college students! More on the topic: http://news.uchicago.edu/article/2011/01/13/writing-about-worries-eases-anxiety-and-improves-test-performance
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