The semester is almost over,
friends. Already I’m on the last page of my syllabi in several classes. And on
the last page of every syllabus (most of the time, unless your teacher is so
wonderful and gracious), there is that big, bold, all-caps statement that makes
all college students shudder: FINAL EXAM.
Gasp!
Shock! Awe! Face it—it’s coming whether you like it or not. In my
two-and-a-half years of college, I still shudder at the thought of finals,
especially cumulative finals with make-or-break percentages on your final grade.
I can say, however, that over the years I have developed my own studying
methods and techniques. This semester, in particular, I have analyzed the
methods to successful academic results—that is, what works and what doesn’t
work to produce desirable, Honors College-worthy test grades. I’ve summed up everything I’ve learned in
four easy points:
1.
Take “good”
notes. This sounds like the no-brainer. Everybody can take notes.
Just copy the professor’s PowerPoint onto a Word Document, right? Well, in my
experience, I’ve realized that the PowerPoint presentation alone isn’t going to
cut it. Most of the time, a PowerPoint is a general framework of everything
else the professor says. The professor may put a few bullet-pointed terms on
the screen, but are the definitions there? No. That’s why listening to the
professor is key to understanding the essence of the topic. Taking notes
without understanding is like drawing a picture without coloring it. It looks
nice, but it’s boring.
2.
Cover all
bases. Your good notes are just one piece of the puzzle. The rest of
the pieces include what the teacher said, what the readings said, what your
friends said, what the PowerPoint said, and what Quizlet said. Now for some
classes, professors will tell you to focus more on the lectures, or more on the
readings. But if they give you the fateful phrase “everything is fair game,” it’s
always better to be more prepared than less prepared. So after you study your
notes, go back and look at everything else at least once.
3.
Start
early. “But there’s so much to study!” I know. I’ve felt that way
every day since freshman year. Something that proved especially effective for
me this semester is starting early.
For example, if I have ten pages of notes for the next exam, I would start
eleven days early—studying one page each day for ten days, and bringing
everything together on the eleventh day. I always found this method much more
effective than cramming everything the night before the exam. That way I’m not
spending all night teaching myself the material, because I had looked at the
previous pages in advance. I used the latter method (i.e., cramming the night
before) a couple of times this semester. It did not produce as successful
grades as the former method.
4.
Bullet-bite.
This is the hardest part. Let’s face it—the path to an undergraduate
degree is hard work. Sometimes, all you have to do is bite the bullet. Just do
it! “Okay, it’s bullet-biting time!” I tell myself. Time to put the phone away,
log out of Facebook, get started, focus and don’t stop.
I realize that some of these
methods might not work for you. These are just methods I’ve learned over the
years and formulated over the course of this semester. You might have your own
sure-fire way to study. Nevertheless, I hope that somehow what I’ve learned
could help you survive the rest of this whirlwind semester and undeniable joy
of Finals Week.

Thank you for sharing, Samantha! As a freshman still waiting to take the first of my finals, I appreciate the advice! I definitely can connect with your first point, on taking good notes. I find it much easier to study when I have good notes all in one place and then all I have to do is add a few things from the book. Admittedly, I have horrible study habits, but maybe I can begin to incorporate some of your tactics into my life.
ReplyDeleteIn response...I don't wanna!!! But seriously though, a lot of these points are great advice! On the flip side, I've frequently found that comparing notes with a friend is a great way to not only see what you missed in class notes but also offers a great way to break up the monotony of studying.
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