MIDTERMS

It’s the first time this academic year for Steve’s Exam Checklist.

I write every term more than once on exams. This makes sense, as most of my students take exams more than once each term. (If you are wondering who the lucky ones are who don’t write exams every term, just remember that there are many ways to assess academic performance–portfolios, presentations, skill demonstrations–and they are usually not stress free.)

I’m going to assume that this is your first set of mdterms. For those of you who are seasoned, experienced exam writers, this can be a quick refresher.  For all of you, pause. Take that breath. Endorse yourself for being at school. Endorse for getting the year started and through the first weeks of class.

Now down to the checklist. This is a checklist for the last 48 hours before your exam. Plan now to sit down those two days before your first exam and map out those strategic 48 hours. Exam tomorrow? Then attend to as much as you can tonight. Any self-regulating preparation is better than none!

Two Days Before the Exam: 

You know what I’m going to say.

Maintain your structure for sleep, meals and moderate exercise. If you’ve fallen off a bit, get back into the regular routine that works for you.

Two days before the exam, go over this checklist and adapt it for your circumstances. 

Plan an activity for after the exam. This helps you maintain objectivity and keep the perspective that life does go on after the exam.

Prioritize your allocation of remaining study time so that what needs the most attention gets the most attention.

Now take a sheet of paper or large file card, and make up a plan of what you need to do, and what you need to bring to the exam.

Plan your plan with a list. Your list might include

  • Gas up the car or make sure you have your bus pass.
  • Have snacks and meals handy.
  • Review study summary.
  • Complete help sheets that are allowed.
  • Make sure clothes are ready to wear.
  • Make sure last minute trips for medical, personal, and school supplies are looked after.
  • Make sure cash and credit cards are in order.

The Night Before the Exam

  • Eat a light dinner.
  • Review study summary.
  • Gather help sheets that are allowed.
  • Set out breakfast.
  • Pack snacks, lunch and hydration for tomorrow.
  • Charge phone.
  • Charge tablet/computer.
  • Charge calculator.
  • Make sure student ID is in wallet.
  • Make sure bus pass or parking pass is in wallet.
  • Make sure cash, credit cards, and license are in wallet.
  • Make sure wallet is in purse or pants you’ll be wearing.
  • Pack extra pens/pencils.
  • Pack a timepiece (that may be your phone).
  • Check weather forecast.
  • Set out clothes for tomorrow.
  • Pack backpack with everything except food and items charging.
  • Eat a light snack if that is part of your regular food plan.
  • Place packed backpack out of sight next to your door.
  • Set your charged or plugged in alarm and put it out of reach of your bed.
  • Set alternate alarm.
  • Visualize writing the exam.
  • Visualize walking out of the exam room.
  • Put away the day with your bedtime routine and calming exercises.
  • Go to bed and sleep.

The Day of the Exam 

  • Go through your morning grooming routine.
  • Eat a light breakfast.
  • Pack phone and charger into your backpack.
  • Pack tablet/computer and charger into your backpack.
  • Pack calculator and charger into your backpack.
  • Pack snacks, lunch and hydration into your backpack.
  • Check your wallet contents and ensure it is in your pants or purse.
  • Grab your keys.
  • Go to the exam site. Target to arrive 15 minutes before exam time–too early is almost as bad as too late.

At the Exam Site

  • Go to the bathroom.
  • Avoid lingering near the entrance to the exam room, picking up the chatter and fear pheromones from other students.
  • When the exam door opens, find your seat, arrange your ID, supplies, and  timepiece.
  • Breathe. Calm.

Writing the Exam

I have dealt elsewhere with techniques for writing different types of exams and different types of questions, and will be happy to discuss particulars with you. In the meantime, the basics are

  • Use every minute. Do not leave early.
  • Answer every question. If you don’t know, a best guess (or any guess) has a better chance for marks than no answer unless the question is right minus wrong.
  • Read the introduction to the exam. It may have critical instructions, such as “show your work,” “answer in complete sentences” “show your outline.”
  • For every question, read the whole question before you start to answer.
  • Quickly answer the questions that are easy for you.
  • Note which questions are worth the most points, and allow enough time to give yourself time for them.
  • Keep your eye on your timepiece. 
  • Outline essay questions before you start to write the essay–but keep your eye on your timepiece.
  • If you run into a question you have no idea how to answer, move on and come back to it later. Sometimes memory kicks in. Sometimes later questions give an idea about how to answer.
  • Check your work once you have answered everything for typos or missing words. Marks have been lost because the word “no” was intended but not entered.
  • Again, answer every question. If you don’t know, a best guess (or any guess) has a better chance for marks than no answer unless the question is right minus wrong.
  • Again, use every minute. Do not leave early.
  • And make sure your name and ID are on your exam.

After the exam

  • Leave quietly.
  • Avoid the nerve-wracking post mortem sessions with other students at the exit. 
  • Endorse yourself for preparing for and writing the exam in a professional manner.
  • Take time for a reward before heading into preparing for the next exam.

Now modify to make this list your own.

Extra tip No. 1: What if there are questions I have no idea how to answer?

Accept that it is normal to have a quickening of the pulse and a bit of anxiety or fear. Then pause, lift up your head, and call on your rational self. You may well not get this question. A suitable response may come later. Take the secure thought that you will finish this exam, will finish the term, and you will survive. Right now, it’s just finish this exam.

Plant your feet firmly on the floor.

Skim through the rest of the exam to make sure you have time for the answers you are more sure of. Sometimes there is information in later questions that give a cue for the question you are uncertain of.

If there are several troubling questions, accept that this is not a happy time, but it is also not the last exam you are going to write in your life. Tell yourself that you are going to do as good as you can, and that will be what you do on this exam, this day.

Extra Tip No. 2: What if I have exams back to back?

Plan ahead to use the break between exams. You will want to allow for travel from venue to venue, hydration, light nourishment, bathroom breaks, and ensuring that you have all of your tools, texts, etc. in your backpack as you leave one exam and move on to the next.

Change your mental focus. If there are concerns about the earlier exam when you have finished it, jot them down on your phone, take a few deep breaths, stretch and recall your mental notes for the upcoming exam.

Midterms are here. Classes and projects carry onLet me know how it goes. Connect with me if you’d like to explore how we might work together on tools for your academic success. [email protected] .

The information in this blog cannot take the place of support from your own mental health professional or community health resources. Reach out to them. And IF YOU ARE IN CRISIS, PLEASE DIAL 911.