Preparing for an Exam
1) Revise actively.
Just reading through your notes is the worst possible way to
revise. Well, OK, perhaps not the worst possible, but it’s really not very
good. The more of your brain you can engage in the revision, the more you will
remember. Memory is not a box in one part of your brain that things are either
in or out. Memory is spread out everywhere: there’s verbal memory, visual
memory, audio memory, muscle memory, all sorts. The more your brain does with
the information, the more you will remember.
So don’t just read. Make up poems and mnemonics. Summarise
the notes. Set them to music. Extract key points and write them down yourself
somewhere – even if you’re just copying them out, this is better than just
reading, since more of your brain is involved. Make up quizzes and do them.
Write limericks. Above all – do problems. Make up your own if you run out. Get
active!
2) Plan revision.
Write a good revision plan, and stick to it. Don’t do just
one subject a day, you’ll get tired of it; then again swopping too often means
you don’t get the chance to get deep into anything. I used to do mornings on
one subject, afternoons on another and evenings on a third.
3) Do past papers – as many as you can lay your hands on.
The internal web has (at least) the last three year's papers
on it. Papers from previous years are stored in the library (at least that used
to be true - it's worth checking if they still have them). Work through them.
If you can't do a question, check that it is still in the syllabus (the modules
change every year, and it's always worth checking what is new). With a good
revision plan you should be doing nothing in the last week before the exams
except working through exam papers and examples sheets making sure you can do them.
I can’t emphasise the importance of this enough. Anyone who
doesn’t work through past papers has very little chance of doing well in an
exam.
Oh - and do the past papers, and the examples sheets,
against the clock. Time is short in an exam, you need to get used to thinking,
and writing quickly. Get your hand trained up so it can write fast (but
legibly, please).
4) Question-spotting.
This can be risky, but if you're playing the percentages
it's worth a try. Look for any topic that was in the exam two and three years
ago, but not last year. If you can get hold of papers from further back, try
and spot patterns: does any topic come up every other year, for example?
Another good tip is to make a very careful note if the
lecturer says at any point "this is new in the course this year". If
he does, there's an above average chance that this will be in the exam - it
gets harder every year to come up with new questions about the same old
subjects, and putting a new topic in the course is an easy "new
question" for the examiner.
Posted By HAMDAN MOHD SALLEH
December 14 2014
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