An Academic Tutor's Tips: Preparing for Midterms

College High School homework help study skills

describe the imageIn New York, Boston and all over the globe, high school and college students are gearing up for dreaded mid-term exams. While students’ academic habits are hugely diverse, there are certain things that every student can do to effectively prepare for a test:

1) Plan ahead. Start thinking about your exams on Day 1.

Stay tuned in class. Every ounce of information delivered by your professor, whether in a lecture, reading or assignment, will inform the exam’s content. If you keep up with the material throughout the semester, prepping for the exam won’t be so arduous.

2) Observe your Professor(s). What topics does he/she emphasize the most in class?

Professors will drop subtle hints throughout your course as to what they consider to be the most important, without even realizing it. Pay close attention the themes they continually reinforce whether you are in a world history, chemistry, French or calculus course. Every little nugget of information you can garner will help you ace the test. 

3) Treasure your Syllabus. This is your roadmap to the exam.

The test’s content shouldn’t be a mystery. Your syllabus was made for a reason – to guide you through the topics in the course and structure your learning. Make sure you are comfortable with all the concepts covered on that syllabus before your test date.

4) Keep everything: corrected homework, quizzes, assignments, and essays.

All of the work you’ve done in the class builds up to the exam. Logically, the exam will represent the cumulation of your homework, quizzes and lecture notes. Refer to these, along with your textbook and notes, for your exam preparation.  

5) Internalize and store information. Don’t cram the night before.

Cramming is popular way to prepare for a test. It works for some people in the short-term, but as an academic tutor, I can guarantee you won’t store this information in the long-term. Come the final exam, you’ll have to go through this same process, two-fold! Instead, keep you with your class (Remember the maxim, slow and steady wins the race?) and you’ll find that a lot of the concepts on the test are fresh in your memory. 

Alright, now get to it and ace your midterm! 

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