2. What It Takes To PASS
Preparation Attitude
Sight Skills
3. Preparation
â˘You need to take time to prepare for the test.
â˘Approach your preparation time like any other study timeâŚ
⢠Make sure you are in a quiet place free of distractions.
⢠Have all the materials you need with you so you donât
have to waste time trying to find them later.
â˘Think about the possibilities of the test before you step into the
testing roomâŚ
⢠Predict exam questions by focusing on main themes from
lecture notes, looking at old exams, or talking with the
professor.
4. Preparation
â˘Ask your professor about the test as early as possibleâŚ
⢠What types of questions are going to be asked?
Essay, multiple choice, short answer�
⢠How many questions are there on the test?
⢠How long will you have to complete the test?
⢠Professors like active test-takers!
â˘Three good rules for studying early and often!
⢠Review your notes from each lecture daily.
⢠Read your textbook as required
⢠Start your heavy preparation for a test about a week
before.
5. Preparation
â˘Use all available resources to help you figure out what to expect
on the testâŚ
⢠Review old tests on file in the library (if available).
⢠Examine past tests and quizzes to determine testing style and how
you could improve.
â˘Donât forget the details!
⢠Where is the test going to be?
⢠When is the test?
⢠What do I have to bring to the test (i.e. scantron, pencil, calculator)?
â˘Stop preparing at least an hour before the test so you can clear
your mind and be refreshed.
6. Attitude
â˘Tests areâŚ
⢠A measure of your knowledge of a particular subject
according to your professorâs standards.
⢠An opportunity for you to do well and prove to the
professor exactly what you know.
⢠Challenging and personally-rewarding experiences.
â˘Tests are notâŚ
⢠Designed in a way to fail you.
⢠The end of your college career if you fail.
⢠Evil and diabolical attempts by your professors to take
over your mind.
7. Attitude
â˘You should approach a test calm, relaxed, and with self-
confidence.
⢠If you have taken the time to prepare, you donât need to
worry.
⢠The professor has taken and given many, many tests.
They know itâs stressful and they wonât give you
anything that you are not able to handle.
⢠Keep a positive attitude â you can succeed on tests!
â˘Arrive at the testing site a little early to relax.
⢠Donât engage in negative conversations before the test
about how bad everyone is going to do â they only bring
about unnecessary stress.
8. Sight
â˘During the test, use your eyes as well as your brain!
â˘Look over the entire test before you begin.
⢠Read all the available directions.
⢠Underline key words and any special directions or
instructions you donât want to forget.
â˘Look at your test if the professor has to make any
corrections and correct them on your paper before you
start.
9. Sight
â˘Look at each and every question.
⢠Determine the type of the question (multiple choice, true/false, short
answer, essay).
⢠If there are answer choices or a word bank, be sure to look at all the
possible responses.
â˘Look at the time during the test.
⢠Wear a watch or use the classroom clock to monitor how much time
you have left.
⢠Very quickly calculate how long you have to spend on each question.
It doesnât have to be down to the second, but get an idea if you have
two seconds or two minutes per question!
10. Skills
â˘During the test, use skill to get a better grade.
â˘Do the easy questions first.
⢠Donât get stumped on a question and waste time
agonizing over it. Skip it and come back at the end.
â˘Avoid over analyzing or over simplifying the
questions.
⢠Questions are usually laid out simply â the answer
choices throw people off.
⢠When in doubt, ask the professor for clarification. It
canât hurt you!
11. Skills
â˘Your first reaction is usually correct!
⢠If you are torn between two answer choices, your first choice is
usually correct. If you do change your answers, make sure you
have a reason.
â˘Use the test for information for other questions.
⢠The test might have similar questions â compare the answer choices
to see if you can find any similarities and commonalities.
â˘Check your paper before you turn it in.
⢠Circle your answer choices on the test and then check your scantron
at the end to see if the answers match and that erasures are clear.
⢠Make sure youâve answered every question.
12. Skills
â˘Approach each question with specific skills for that type of
question.
⢠Stay tuned â weâll come back to this idea of specific skills for common
types of questions.
â˘Use your skills after the test.
⢠When you get the grade back, look at your test and see why you
missed the questions you missed. Was it a lack of
knowledge, misreading something, or a confusing answer choice?
⢠Learn from your mistakes, and continue to do what you did right.
⢠Take note of where the professor pulled the questions to help you
study for the next test.
13. Types of Questions
Letâs take a look at a few specific types of questionsâŚ
True / False
Multiple Choice & Matching
Fill-In-The-Blank, Short
Answer, & Essay
14. Multiple Choice
â˘A skillful test taker looks at a typical multiple choice question like
thisâŚ
â˘Each multiple choice question on this test will attempt to confuse you by containing
a large, wordy, and often confusing introduction at the beginning, throwing in a
useless fact like this seminar is given on Thursday, and then actually asking you
who is the first President of the United States?
A. Thereâs always a massively long answer choice that is just meant to
confuse you as well. It drags on and on and just doesnât seem to end
B. Thereâs another answer choice that seems pretty close to the long one,
but itâs shorter
C. George Washington
D. Abraham Lincoln
E. None of the above
15. Multiple Choice
â˘You can master the multiple choice!
⢠Usually, multiple choice questions are going to have very
long introductions with very little question involved. The
information is sometimes there as a help, but its usually a
distraction. Underline the question, then go back and
analyze the information given with the question to
determine its relevance.
⢠Before you read the answer choices, try to answer the
question yourself. Like we said earlier, itâs usually answer
choices that get people confused. If you know what
answer youâre looking for before you look for it, youâll be
less confused when you think you find it.
16. Multiple Choice
â˘You can master the multiple choice!
⢠Read all the answer choices carefully. Rate each choice
as ânot goodâ or âpretty goodâ as you read them. Pick the
âpretty goodâ answer that most closely matches your
original answer to the question.
⢠The answer choices are likely to have at least one answer
that is totally wrong and one answer that is incredibly
long. Typically, these are distractors on the test. Read
every answer, but be aware that some are there to throw
you off from finding the correct one.
⢠If two answer choices are very, very similar, chances are
both of them are wrong.
17. Matching
â˘Answering matching questions are very similar to answering
multiple choice questions.
⢠Read all the questions. Analyze and see if there is
anything in the question that will help you find the answer.
⢠Read the directions carefully. Pay attention to directions
about using the answers more than once or if all of the
answers are going to be used.
⢠Answer all the easy questions first. If you can only use
the answer choices once, this eliminates the number of
possibilities left for the hard choices.
18. True / False
â˘This is often the most tricky kind of question on tests because of
the wording.
⢠A statement is true if and only if everything within that
statement is true. Any part of a statement that is false
makes the entire statement false.
⢠A statement is false if and only if something within that
statement is false. Although part of the statement may be
true, any part of a statement that is false makes the entire
statement false.
â˘Be weary of absolutes like âalwaysâ and ânever.â
â˘Absolute qualifiers are rarely true.
19. True / False
â˘Rewrite statements that are negative.
⢠If a statement contains a ânotâ or âno,â rewrite it to remove
the negative and then reread it. If it is true, mark false. If
it is false, mark true.
â˘Watch out for relative qualifiers such as âusuallyâ and
âsometimes.â
⢠Relative qualifiers are used in questions regarding
general rules. If they are in the question, remember to
think in general terms. Just because you can think of an
example to disprove a statement doesnât mean it isnât a
true statement.
20. Fill-In-The-Blank
â˘Putting your pen on the paper is an extremely important
skill for mastering âwrittenâ or âopen-endedâ type questions.
⢠Write legibly and large enough so that it is easy to read.
⢠Be sure to use proper subject/verb agreement and
grammar.
⢠If you donât know how to spell a word, donât use it!
â˘For Fill-In-The-Blank questionsâŚ
⢠The number of lines per answer may dictate the number of
answers to be used.
⢠If you canât remember the exact word, at least write
something.
21. Short Answer
â˘Reading the question is the most important part!
⢠Understand what the question is asking before you answer it.
Underline key words if necessary.
â˘Answer just the question asked.
⢠Donât fluff with extra nonsense and risk muddling your correct
answer with incorrect facts.
â˘Process your short answers similar to an essayâŚ
⢠Step 1: Get off to the right start. Start your answer with a PROMISE
that includes keywords from the question.
⢠Step 2: Keep the promise. Include a REASON, an EXAMPLE, or an
EXPLANATION.
⢠Step 3: Follow up the promise. REINFORCE the logical train of
thought with a MORE SPECIFIC EXAMPLE, REASON, or
EXPLANATION.
22. Essay
â˘Before an essay testâŚ
⢠List some possible essay topics.
⢠Reread notes and the textbook regarding those topics and keep the
ideas fresh in your mind.
⢠Practice writing out the details of a topic and putting them in a logical
order.
â˘On test dayâŚ
⢠Relax. Youâve been preparing so you should have nothing to worry
about.
⢠Eat before the test. Donât go into the test hungry and start thinking
about pizza instead of the essay question.
23. Essay
â˘Allow enough time while taking the test to work on essay
questions.
⢠A good rule of thumb is to allow about 20 minutes per essay â 5 for
planning and 15 for writing and proofreading.
â˘Read the question carefully.
⢠It could be the best written essay in the world but if it isnât on topic it
isnât worth any points to you on the test.
â˘Plan the essay before you write it!
⢠Sketch a quick outline of your answer. Decide what order you are
giving your reasons and examples in advance.
24. Essay
â˘Some general tips for writing the essayâŚ
⢠In a short answer question, itâs not as important to separate out your
ideas. For essays, itâs vital. Be sure to break your ideas into
paragraphs and include introduction and summary paragraphs if
you have the time.
⢠Use words from the question to answer the essay. It helps the
grader to recognize which part of the question youâre answering.
⢠Write something for every essay on the test even if you donât know it.
Donât write fluff though â write the facts you know for sure and try to
construct as best an answer as possible.
⢠Use proper grammar and spelling. Proofread afterwards to make
sure everything is correct.