How
to Study for Exams
The
immediate goal of studying is to helpyou remember.
You are probably never more aware of this than when
you're confronted with an examination. If exams make
you tense, try to relax. As is the case with most
skills, your success on tests is greatly affected
by your study technique.
Consistent
success in taking exams is po
ssible
once you understand that your ability to recall information
is largely determined by the way you study the material
in the first place.
Research
clearly shows that learning takes place most effectively
when information is processed in small chunks spread
out overtime. So, if you want to remember what you
study, review ideas a few at a time, many times.
The
way to get a head start on effective learning is to
complete all assignments, including reading, before
class. Then attend all classes and take thorough notes.
This should be followed by reviewing and editing your
notes as soon after class as possible. This process
alone will ensure that a significant amount of learning
takes place prior to becoming involved in what most
students think as actual "study."
If
you have prepared yourself in this manner,studying
for an examination should be largely a matter of systematic
review. For most courses, this will involve some SILENT
REVIEW, where you alternately read the information
you want to learn and then quiz yourself until you
can recall it without referring back to your notes.
Effective
learning involves more than simple recall, however.
It includes developing a sound understanding and the
ability to use the ideas you are learning.
One
easy way to improve upon silent
review
is to increase the number of senses involved in the
learning process. RECITATION, or repeating information
aloud, increases recall through stimulating the hearing
sense as well as the visual sense.
Transforming
ideas into DIAGRAMS or MAPS is another way to increase
sensory input. In addition to the extra thought involved
in developing a diagram, recall of that information
will often be increased simply because of the newly
created visual structure.
Many
students also find that the motor activity involved
in the act of WRITING out information they wish to
learn helps them to remember it better.
A
technique that often accompanies silent review or
recitation is the use of CUES. A cue is usually a
word, phrase, or question selected because of its
ability to trigger the recall of specific information
you want to learn.
Cues
can be incorporated into your notes by placing them
in the left-hand margin beside the ideas or information
they summarize. You can then study the material by
covering your notes and using the cues to help you
recall as much as you can. To improve recall, this
procedure is repeated until you are able to recall
each idea completely.
A
good variation of this technique is to write the summary
word or phrase on one side of a 3x5 card and place
the information you want to recall on the other side.
STUDY
CARDS offer two important advantages. First, the work
involved in making the cards helps you begin to learn.
Second, study cards allow you to physically separate
and focus on one piece at a time, which can be important
for some learners.
There
are two techniques which can be of aid when you must
learn long lists of information. The first is called
CHUNKING and refers to breaking the list up into related
groups of information. To chunk effectively, make
sure that each group contains only those items which
have something in common. When you cannot chunk information
or you need to recall a list in a specific order,
you might want to use a word or sentence MNEMONIC.
A
memorable word can often be created by using first
letters of the terms you have to know. The word HOMES,
for example, can help you remember the first letters
of each of the great lakes: Huron, Ontario, Michigan,
Erie, Superior.
Where
a word cannot be made, the first letters might be
used as the first letters of words in a sentence.
For example, if you needed to remember the order of
the first nine planets of our solar system you might
develop this sentence using the first letter of each
planet as you move from the sun outward: My Very Earthly
Mother Just Served Us Nine Pizzas.
The
M in My is for Mercury, the V in Very represents Venus,
the E in Earthly- Earth, the M in Mother - Mars, the
J in Just - Jupiter, the S in Served - Saturn, the
U in Us -Uranus, the N in Nine -Neptune, and the P
in Pizzas -Pluto.
Another
very helpful method of preparing for exams is to PREDICT
TEST QUESTIONS. The special advantage of this study
method is that it requires you to consider what you
are learning from your instructor's point of view.
In fact, the actual success of your predictions is
not nearly so important as the processing you must
do to develop the questions.
In
courses where you can expect computations on the exam,
it is important that you prepare through PRACTICE.
You can do this by reworking any homework problems
that you missed, by working additional problems that
were not originally assigned, or by working problems
on old exams.
Tests
involving computations usually adhere to a strict
time limit, so you should emphasize speed as well
as accuracy when you practice.
An
often overlooked source of aid in preparing for exams
are the CLUES PROVIDED BY YOUR INSTRUCTORS. Instructors
are frequently more helpful in pointing out what will
be emphasized than they are given credit for.
If
you are serious about your studies, you should always
be willing to take the initiative to find out as much
as possible about the exam. At worst, your instructor
will only decline to answer some of your questions.
Chances are, however, that you'll receive useful advice.
Finally,
should you cram for an exam? You should do so only
as a last resort, remembering that if you need to
cram it is too late to learn everything! Instead,
be selective. CRAMMING leaves little time to process
ideas in depth so focus mainly on basic concepts,
terminology, or lists that can be memorized.
And,
because time is very short, study first those ideas
which you strongly expect to be covered on the exam.
In
addition, having a GOOD NIGHT'S SLEEP and PROPER FOOD
is an advantage in the recall of information.