I swear, sometimes revision is the most exhausting phase in any high school year T-T
Please don't mind my messy notes, for some reason my brain cannot just process neat notes. It's like we're enemies but nevertheless, I managed to finish quite alot and tomorrow is another long day :")
I've struggled with this but I'm adapting, you know? So here are some of my tips I use for this :)
If you can't understand it at once, do not think that it is hard
Many times, the topic itself if simple but the way the textbook has described it is complex so go and search for related videos and Google about it until you've got a hint about what it is.
If it's complicated, divide the sentence.
When you find yourself getting completely lost in a topic while banging your head against the wall because it's so confusing.... separate each part of the sentence while you write each part as you say it out loud. It'll help you to atleast get a short idea about the subject.
Read! Read! Read!
Read it over and over again and underline the words you think are important, write them down, explain it to yourself, draw small diagrams around your notes, connect them through visual representation. The more you use different types of senses, the better you understand it.
Give yourself time.
Let yourself grasp what the whole topic is about, do not under any circumstances have a time limit for difficult topics. I took days just to understand how Javascript loops work and I'm still not fully clear about it but i can explain the general, very basic purpose of it.
Explain it to someone or yourself
The best way to learn is to teach, this actually does work. It helps you to put your understanding in words and clear any underlying questions. And lastly...
Handwritten notes!
I cannot stress this enough but things that you've written down generally stay in your memory for longer durations. I also prefer handwritten notes to digital ones cause personally it works better.
Hope this helps! :D
Tips To Study Concept-Oriented Subjects
I've always struggled with this. Everything is concept oriented but there are only a few that come to mind when i think about this topic. Maths. Physics. Chemistry. Economics. Accountancy. These honestly eat our heads so here are a few tips of how i study them.
Practice everyday
These subjects require practice. Most of these require a deep understanding of topics, so that's why practice it daily. Every single day.
Basic Concepts Are Your Weapons
The basic foundation must be strong because that's how you build your pillars. Understand the ground so you can build your pillars on it. You should have the foundations like the back of your hands.
Maintain a notebook for formulae and theory
Keep a separate book for all basic concepts, another book for formulae and another book for your notes. When you have to revise, you have all the materials and they're organised.
Maintain a separate notebook for concepts
The main concepts are everything in these subjects. If you get your foundations strong then viola, you're all done. Maintain one book that is fully concept based. Everything that is related to the foundations are supposed to be in that book.
Past question papers
Past Question Papers = Grade Booster. The thing about past papers is that they're literally indicators of how you exam would be. They tell you crucial elements of your whole syllabus. Important chapters, topics and repeated questions. You practice papers and you can automatically see how beneficial they really are. If you want to know how to use practice papers. Click here.
Do it. Just do it
For a procrastinator like myself, let me tell you. It is hard. Even now, i'm writing this instead of studying like a normal human being who would when there are high school finals going on so let me just say this. Get up and do it for sometime. Just some time and you'll automatically get invested in it. It may take some time but it will happen eventually. I personally just do it due to fear. I don't really wanna fail my exams so align your goals with some kind of emotion so it gets you going.
Watch videos
This is like the interest booster. You may not realise but when your teacher teaches you the subjects, it gets awfully boring and confusing. When you learn it through videos and visuals on YouTube, you know what it is, you know additional details and it sticks to you. So, watch and try not to get distracted. Period.
Break It Down
Not your chapter. I mean the topic itself. Line by line if you have to. I did this exact thing for accounts whenever i had to do ratios. It was a pain. An unwanted pain. I couldn't understand anything. But i sat down one day and read every single line of the textbook for that topic. I made what i call "Line Visuals". This is simple.
You read a paragraph => You don't understand anything.
Read every line => Draw it
Understand the key terms used there
And then draw a single visual representation for that entire topic.
I'll guarantee you, you will understand it. Review it once a day for a week and then once a week.
____________________________
Hope this helps!!! :))
π Send this to the twelve nicest people you know or who seem to have a good heart and if you get five back you must be pretty awesome. π πππ
Hey!
Thanks <33
We are at the end of 2024 and I feel the need to say this
You don't have to be guilty for the goals you didn't get to achieve for this year because of mental health/any other problems.
You can be guilty for the goals you didn't achieve because of laziness and procrastination. It's human honestly.
The person you look up to in terms of their goals and achievements may or may not be disappointed in themselves because of something too.
Someone looks up to you in terms of their goals and achievements without you knowing about them.
You don't need a new year to change your life and get a new you.
If you're struggling with addiction/ compulsive behaviours (anything really), a reminder that it takes time and it doesn't disappear overnight and it's normal to relapse. That doesn't mean you haven't achieved your goal.
And on the other hand, if you're trying to work on a productive habit but are unable too, that is also normal. Habits take time to form.
It's okay to not have goals for the new year.
It's also okay to have a huge list of goals for the new year.
It's okay to feel excited for new beginnings.
It's okay to feel dreadful and anxious about it too.
It's okay to not be okay.
Tips for before, during and after exams
Before (Night before and in the morning)
Pack your bag. Materials, supplies, everything etc.
Always take extra pens. If it's only an MCQ type, just take one extra pen but if it's a written theory exam. Take 2. (I always keep 4 pens with me and two in my bag just in case)
Sleep before 10:30 or max 12
I always recommend not to wake up too early during exams. Get a good 8-9 hours sleep.
Eat breakfast.
Don't drink/eat anything that will cause you have stomach upset or something. Cause you're already anxious, you need to be mindful of what you eat. I especially avoid coffee and tea.
Try to reach school an hour before the exam.
Revise things that you already know very well. DO NOT LEARN ANYTHING NEW.
Before (I'm talking about like 1 hour)
Take your water bottle. If your examiner doesn't allow it take 3 short sips before entering. If you are taking it, don't keep it on the table because there's a chance of spilling it.
Personally, I never ever revise before 30 mins of the exam. I just calm myself down repeating affirmations and duas.
Go to the bathroom and as much as possible try to avoid it during the exam.
Before entering, again make sure you have the supplies needed. Pencils, rulers, pens, erasers etc.
After taking your seat, just close your eyes and calm your breathing until you get the question papers.
Pray. I always pray. We need to be in our halls before 20-30 mins itself, so I just sit in my place for 30 mins and just pray and recite some duas. During this time, I also retain some important keywords and other things in my head
5 mins before, I take all my materials out and place it beside me with my watch.
During exam:
At the start, when I receive my question paper. I just look through the questions, I don't start writing immediately. I give a solid 5-7 mins for recalling the answers in short.
Then, start writing! Just write. Whatever you know. Puke it all out!
Always follow the question sequence.
If you don't know the question. Go to the next one and start from there. Otherwise you'll waste time. Come back to the question after you complete the paper.
Try your best to complete the paper before 20 mins till the exam ends. For 2 main things, presentation and cross checking.
I always underline my headings, subheadings, keywords etc etc and underline between each question so it looks neat. It looks good and it kinda covers for bad handwriting.
Cross check your answer sheet with the question paper. Are all the questions there? Have I accidentally written the wrong question number for the answer? Spelling mistakes? Grammar mistakes? Wrong answer? Just cross check and count the questions and see if you've written everything.
When you don't remember something or don't know something. Do not panic. Don't. Just take a breath and go to the next. After completing everything, write anything related to the word. Just anything. Try to remember if it is familiar and if it is, write the thing related to that topic. You will get a point for attending the question.
NEVER LEAVE A QUESTION. Just write something, it must be relevant but you'll get a point.
Set a time limit for each sections. Example: I have 4 sections in my exams, I always complete the first three in 1 hour 15-30 mins so I can have time for the last one which carries the highest points.
Stick to the time limit. Keep checking your watch in between and see if you're going according to plan. (It helps if you know how much time you take for each question.)
If you are writing an answer and you're kinda remembering another answer, write keywords in pencil on the margin so you won't forget it but don't forget to erase it before submitting the paper.
When you've completed. Just take a breath.
After:
Don't discuss answers with your friends. It's a waste of time, energy and causes panic.
Hydrate yourself. Drink water.
Get a small reward. Chocolate or any snack.
Be glad that you finished the exam.
If the exam didn't go well, just take some rest. Try not to think about it. Rant to someone because you'll feel better. No body is going to be asking you from years down the line about why you scored less in your highschool exams.
Watch your favourite tv show or something funny.
Take a walk.
Enjoy that it's over.
Hope it helps :)
You're not always going to be motivated. So you must learn to be disciplined.
Thanks for the tag! :)
Tagging: (no pressure :)) @girlwithherheadinthestars @ashs-reverie @anna--studies @ros3ybabe @wandering-whisperer @ anyone who wants to
i made a quiz: what does your soul smell like? (friendship/ relationship compatibility in the results!)
π Send this to the twelve nicest people you know or who seem to have a good heart and if you get five back you must be pretty awesome. π πππ
Hello there! :)
Thanks for the ask! Really appreciate it! Right back to you <3
People make it weird by acting weird. Nobody was looking at you when you entered the room but if you be fidgety and nervous then viola! You've made people look at you and made it awkward. Seriously. I've had this experience so many times. Even when you've done something wrong, just apologize and say that "I'll do better" and watch the reaction of the other person. While if you act all guilty and just stare at the ground, of course it's going to piss someone off and this was something i realised really late. So, the next time you have any thoughts like:
what if it looks bad?
what if they think I'm weird?
what if they talk bad about me?
what if they talk behind me?
In most cases, you're the one in this situation and your brain is indirectly controlling you into doing things that actually prove your thoughts so in other words, you're messed up by your own mind.
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