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Exam Taking Tips
Adnan Aziz
Electrical and Computer Engineering
The University of Texas at Austin
March 30, 1998
Abstract:
I've found time and time again that students who
have an excellent understanding of the exam material
often do far more poorly than students who have a lesser
knowledge, but have honed their
exam taking skills. In this note, I describe some of the
techniques that worked for me.
PREPARATION
- Review material that you know; will help you do
it faster in the exam.
- Look at the homework problems carefully; instructors usually
base exam questions on these. Also previous exams.
- Review the lectures, asking yourself what might make
for a good question.
- Make a crib sheet; even if it isn't allowed, it's a good
way of reviewing.
- Take lots of spare pens/paper/erasers.
- For standardized tests (SAT, GRE, GMAT, etc.) do lots of
practise runs, under the clock.
IN THE HALL
- Read over the entire exam first; get an idea of how long you should
spend per mark.
- Start with the easiest questions; don't worry about proceeding
in sequence.
- If you get stuck, go on to the next question. Your brain thinks
in parallel, and you may find when you come back to the problem that it
suddenly makes a lot more sense.
- If a problem takes inordinately long, it's a usually a sign
that you misunderstood it -- very rarely do examiners
give ``trick'' questions. Go back to the beginning and read it again.
- Make sure you attempted everything. Partial credit is usually
given very generously.
- Multiple choice: if you don't know the answer, see if you
can eliminate possibilities, then give it your best guess (statistically,
this is a good idea even when there is negative marking).
- Feel free to ask the TA/instructor for clarifications, but only
when you really need them.
- Don't leave early; review what you did.
- Don't Panic.
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Aziz Adnan
Mon Mar 30 15:57:17 CST 1998