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      10 Tips to study effectively before exams

      10 Tips to study effectively before exams 


      10 Tips to study effectively before exams if you have a lot of syllabus left


      1.Study Small Portion at one go

      Study smaller quantities of syllabus every day instead of taking on huge portions. If you hurry with all the chapters you haven't yet covered, you will be able to memories very little of it for exam day.

      2.Don't Study more than 2 Hours at the Stretch

      The optimal period of continuous study is 2 hours. Each period of 2 hours can again be broken down into slots of 25 minutes of solid studying followed by 5 minutes of break.

      3.Give Your Mind Regular Break

      When you are on 'break', you should keep your mind free from any exam related thoughts or stress. If you use the break time to discuss the syllabus with friends or plan your next round of studying, then your mind is not on a break.

      If your mind doesn't take a break, the next round of studying is not going to be as effective.

      4.Focus More On Core Material

      Study material in a syllabus can be divided into core material and elaborative material. While core material consists of important principles, theorems, formulae, important diagrams and graphs, elaborative material consists of examples, quotes, illustrations etc.

      As much as 80 per cent of the questions asked in an exam are likely to come from the core material. So, if you are struggling with unfinished syllabus, concentrate on the core material of the different subjects.

      Moreover, study the question patterns of the last few years and make sure you are not spending too much time on topics that are highly unlikely to be asked in the exam.

      5.Shift Between Subject Categories

      Before you schedule your study list for the day, you need to take into account that the subjects we learn can be divided into three categories:

      Memory dependant subjects like Biology, History and Geography, which contain a lot of material that need to be mugged up.

      Problem-solving subjects such as Maths and Physics.

      Interpretation based subjects such as English Literature and literature papers from other languages.

      For most effective studying, you should alternate between each category of subjects in long study periods.

      6.Learn and Write

      Reading the chapters and highlighting important portions help a lot, but when you write down the important points you read in a piece of rough paper or your notebook, it helps you retain information even more.

      "Read important points aloud and write them down after. This makes sure that you don't just SEE the points, but you HEAR them and WRITE them too."

      7.Use Proven Note Taking Strategies

      Proper note taking is very important for effectively completing the syllabus at the last minute. There are two scientifically proven methods of note-taking that work the best-SQ5R and Cornell Notes.

      a) SQ5R is short for Survey, Questions, Read, Record, Recite, Review and Reflect.

      • Survey: Skim through the textbook and mark important areas. Don't take more than 7-10 minutes
      • Question: In your textbook, turn the headings and subheadings into questions that could be asked in the exam. Jot down possible questions at the side of important portions of text
      • Read, Record, Recite: Go through the text again and record important points in your own words separately. Put them in bullets or in boxes for better visual representation. Recite the points you noted to yourself
      • Review: Ask yourself the questions you noted and see if you can answer them properly
      • Reflect: Repeat the above steps and reflect on the topic you learned till it's completely memorised

      b) Cornell Notes is an effective three-column configuration of taking notes which makes memorizing and recalling information much easier. When revising, one can easily cover the right column and try to answer the questions on the left.

      8.Use Visual Cue For easy Memorization

      Stick a couple of chart papers on your wall and cupboards and write down dates, formulae, mnemonics and tit-bits of important information that are very difficult to learn.

      Keeping these in front of your eyes all the time will help you learn them more easily than trying to mug them. Create flashcards for the difficult bits and carry them around. You can go through them while commuting, or standing in a queue somewhere.

      9.Revise Within 24 Hours

      If you are studying untouched chapters or uncovered syllabus in the last few days before the exam, you need to know that the three Rs are very important.

      Any new information you learn needs to be Recapped, Reviewed and Reinforced within 24 hours. If you fail to do so, you lose 80 per cent of the information you learned. Science says so.

      10.Sleep Well To Boost Memory

      Most students stay up late till night to finish revising before exams. You need to remember that it is proper sleep that turns your short-term memory -- what you just studied -- to long-term memory -- what you can recall sitting in the exam hall.

      So, sleep 7-8 hours every night to make sure all of your day's studying is actually retained by your brain.

      These 10 tips to effectively study for longer periods and finish your syllabus in the last few days will keep you crack your board exams.

      "One quick test that can tell you how much you have learned is trying to explain the concepts of a topic to someone who doesn't know it yet. It could be a sibling, parent, grandparent or friend."



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