One of my school friends had his birthday in the beginning of May and he could never throw a party and call his friends that day because we always had our final exams then.
May is starting again and those of you who have your exams and birthday will have to make do with a subdued celebration. That doesn’t really matter because you can celebrate birthdays later on, but you need to focus on your exams as you can’t give the exams later on.
While ‘How to celebrate your birthday’ is an interesting topic to discuss, we will be discussing here ‘What mistakes to avoid during exams’. Exams are more important and tricky. No matter how well we prepare for something — exams, trips, parties, interviews, debates, speeches, etc., — we are bound to commit some mistakes. A successful person is one who learns from mistakes, whether their own or of others, and avoids them in the future.
Some mistakes are very common and peculiar to a certain situation, for instance, during exams people are prone to running out of time and not attempting all the questions, misunderstanding instructions, writing illegibly, forgetting an important stationary item, etc.
Since your success in exams are as dependent on you doing the exam preparations well as it is on not making mistakes in giving your exams, let us look at some of the common mistakes that people make during examination and how we can learn to avoid them.
Selective study: Learning the whole course that is going to come in the exams is a task that few can claim to do well, most of us resort to going through past question papers, hints dropped by teachers and class discussions to narrow down to the questions that are most likely to come in the paper, whatever the subject.
Then we sit down and learn the answers to those particular questions. But such guess work hardly pays, and it never happens that all the prepared questions appear in the paper. A better option is to focus on important topics and chapters rather than important question because if you learn a topic well, you can answer the why, when, how and who, related to it.
But those who leave their learning for the last few days before the papers, they can’t help but depend on learning just the important topics/questions.
Panicking: We all freak out before or during a paper. Try to calm your nerves, take deep breaths, say your prayers, make sure you’ve had a good breakfast, and jolt yourself into concentrating on the question paper in front of you.
Tell yourself “I can do it!” Or “I know the answers, I need to just focus!”
Once you have calmed down, read the questions slowly and with concentration. Forget about the difficult questions, start with the easy ones that you know. This will boost up your confidence and then when you come to the tougher questions, they will not appear so very difficult.
Arriving late: Last minute delays and problems can happen anytime so always be ready before time and reach the exam hall or room in advance, especially if the sitting arrangement has been changed or the exam in a new room or centre. If you are in a higher grade and have to go to an exam centre that is different from your school, do take time out and check it before the exam day so that you don’t lose your way and become late.
If you are late, you lose precious minutes of the exam duration or, in worst scenarios, be barred from sitting in the exams! And the rushing you might have done is bound to make you tense and worked up, leading you to do poorly in a paper that is otherwise not too difficult.
Missing stationery items: The night before the exams, always set your bag and make sure you have the required stationery items packed in it. If you need a compass or calculator, do bring your own rather than plan on taking it from a friend during the paper.
What if they refuse? Or you are not allowed to borrow anything during the paper? So come well-prepared to give your exam. And keep some spare things too — just in case.