What do you know about the test?
Knowing the various aspects of the testing situation is valuable in deciding what to study. This
includes knowing how much detail to study, and what level of learning you should do. Ask the
instructor, the teacher's assistant, fellow classmates, or former students.
What kind of test will it be?
Objective, short answer, essay, multiple choice, or a combination?
Objective tests will necessitate learning specific facts and being able to recognize answers.
Subjective (essay) tests require an overall understanding of the material with less emphasis on
learning specific facts, although knowing specific information is important.
How many items will be on the test?
Knowing the number of items to be asked in proportion to the amount of material to be covered
gives an indication of the extent of coverage.
How much time will you have to process the test?
Compare the number of questions to be answered to the amount of the time available on the test.
This will tell you whether you will have to recall information quickly or you can take more
time to think about answers.
What is the relative importance of course requirement?
Will text material be covered more heavily? Will lecture notes be on the test?
Will lab experiments be covered on the test, etc.? Knowing what will be covered on the test
and to what extent will help you to focus your study time in the most important sources.
What is the emphasis on the various topics?
If all of the lectures and text reading are to be covered, which topics are most important?
Budget your study time accordingly. Learn the most important sections first.
Who will write the test questions?
The professor, teaching assistant, or is it a departmental test? If you know who is writing the
test and their biases, you will know how to approach your studying and how to word your answer.
Who will grade the test?
What are the grader's biases? - does he check for spelling, prefer lengthy discussions?
What needs to be studied?
Make a list of the required reading and optional reading that you have yet to do.
Look over your lecture notes. What notes are missing, and which notes do you need to review?
What other assignments, lab problems, or homework need to be looked over? Write this all down.
With this information, make decisions about the reading and assignments not yet completed
based on your assessment of what the test will cover. If you have large amounts or material to
cover and little time, you must cut corners on your studying. Perhaps eliminating reviewing
lecture notes if they are not too important, skimming the textbook instead of word-by-word
reading, reading chapter summaries to pick up key points, memorizing key terms and skipping
lesser facts. Begin by knowing what will be on the test. Then make your decision on what to
study and what to skip.
Plan your study time.
Determine how many
days you have before the test. List any obligations such as classes, labs, work hours, and
other commitments which cannot be put off. Total the remaining time which is your study hours.
If there is too little time available, look for "hidden times," such as break at work, time
between classes, time to and from campus, etc. Be sure to schedule in time for nutrition,
social activities and study breaks. Allow yourself some time to unwind. Use a Things To Do
list or Weekly Schedule to help you plan and organize study time.
Look over the subject.
List all topics
sure to be a part of the test. List important subtopics for each. Survey or skim all the
materials to be covered, checking those to be studied in-depth. Read or reread all materials
not understood; use a specific purpose when reading. Ask questions over those ideas from
different viewpoints. Orally recite or write answers. Memorize those facts or ideas most
needed.
Make exam questions.
Develop your own
exam questions to help you think actively about the material and to decide on the importance
of each piece of information and how it fits into the overall scheme. When you test yourself
on these questions, you are getting practice in taking the exam. Your questions may not be
exactly like the professor's, they'll help you to handle the material more confidently.
Suggestions:
Use flash cards as a memory aid.
Use
flash cards to learn specific facts such as vocabulary, formulas, equations, definitions,
dates, names, etc. Use flash cards to learn general principles such as main ideas on a given
topic, lists of characteristics, cause-effect relationships, or categorizing groups of items.
Coding flash cards by text page or lecture date will help you verify the information source.
Coding by topic or subject may test your understanding and expand the use of the cards during
review. Suggestions: