Title: Developing a balanced outlook about exams
1Developing a balanced outlook about exams
- Dr. Moira Peelo
- SLDC
- Furness College
2It is good to do well in exams
- But personal wellbeing matters as well
- Success in exams is easier to achieve if you
treat yourself - mentally and physically - with
respect - A balanced life at exam time helps reduce stress
and make life more fun
3So what is this balanced life?
- Diet
- Exercise
- Balanced day
- Working to a reasonable timetable
4Diet
5Diet?
- Try to eat regularly
- you dont have to become a great cook - many
fresh foods are easy to prepare - fruit is an easy breakfast meal - a bowl of soup
and a bread roll at lunchtime doesnt have to be
highly expensive
6So what are the dos and donts?
- Do try to eat at regular intervals
- Do drink water
- Do try to include fresh fruit and vegetables in
your diet - Do use meals as enjoyable breaks
- Dont go for long periods without eating
- Dont overdose on sugar and coffee/ tea
- Keep off the take-aways, they are expensive as
well as unhealthy
7Is this really relevant to exams?
Preparing for an exam is like preparing for a
race - feeling physically good gives you a better
chance of achieving personal goals finishing in
a reasonable state
8Exercise
- If you already swim, play football, badminton,
tennis, cycle or any other physical activity then
DO NOT give it up entirely during exam time - By all means cut back on the amount of time spent
exercising, but make sure you do some kind of
physical activity every day
9Why exercise?
You will get slow and sluggish if you sit inside
poring over books all the time. As time passes
you will study less effectively become more
stressed.
10If mobility is not possible for you...
- Make sure you have contrast breaks - i.e. 5 or
10 minutes doing something completely different - Contrast breaks can include listening to some
music, watching 10 minutes of TV, watching people
walk past, meditating.
11But if it is just that you are not a great
athlete...
- go for a walk round the block
- try running on the spot
- or shake your hands and arms
- ANYTHING - as long as you move about a bit!
12Plan a balanced day
13This means planning a day that...
- Enables you to work effectively
- Allows you to feel physically and mentally OK as
well as to revise effectively - Includes a variety of activities
- Allows time for breaks and for meals
- Has relaxation and work sensibly timetabled
- Sets attainable goals
14Planning a balanced day
- Try breaking your work into attainable goals -
rather than having a general good intention to
revise Megatronics today - Try different revision techniques to add some
variety to the day - Break the day into sections - use meals as
markers - instead of facing a whole day of
revision
15Remember -
- If you spend days sitting in one room reading
lecture notes and drinking coffee to stay awake -
then dont be surprised if you start to feel
nervous - If you miss too many meals, have no variety in
your days and stop talking to friends and family
- then dont be surprised if you start to feel
sluggish and slow
16A balanced day includes ...
- knowing when to stop work
17Working to a reasonable timetable
18Surely all timetables are reasonable?
- A common problem with timetables is that people
just cram the number of topics into the days
available and hope that will work - A second common problem is that there is no room
for flexibility built into timetables, for those
days when revision does not go as you have planned
19Some timetabling thoughts
- Some topics will take you longer to revise than
others - so allow them more time - Play to your strengths - E.g. Do you read more
happily in the morning? If so, timetable reading
for the morning
- Different revision techniques require different
amounts of time - so reflect this in your
timetable - Allow extra spaces in your timetable to use for
difficult topics and if revision is not going as
planned
20Manageable chunks
- A good timetable breaks the day into sections -
morning, afternoon and evening - Includes a range of activities - from learning
material to planning an outline answer - Allows space for relaxation and fresh air
- Be aware which topics are difficult for you -
perhaps slot them between topics you enjoy more
21Reasonable timetables let you -
22Review - what has been done, what needs to be
done?
- Start the week - map out what has to be done on
each day - The night before or in the morning - what has to
be done?
- After revision sessions - what is left to do on
that topic? - End of the day end of the week - whats left on
your list to do?
23Regroup - when the planned timetable is not
working
- Reviewing can lead to regrouping - this means
that if your timetable is not working, rather
than get depressed you reorganise your timetable. - Regrouping is a sensible tactic, not a sign of
failure.
24Reward yourself
- Allow yourself to have breaks
- Take short contrast breaks for 5 or 10 minutes
- something non-academic such as music, TV,
radio, meditation - Go out to get some fresh air
- Change tasks - variety means including some
activities that you like