Although I know most of my stuff, I am still a little nervous. My teacher said I will have a LOT of writing to do and I am hoping I can think clearly on the spot. Do you have any words of wisdom to calm me down?I have a Philosophy exam on Monday afternoon: do you have any advice?
Read through all of the questions before you start writing. Think for a minute or two about them before you start writing. Don't answer them in order -- start with the one that you are most confident about.
What will happen is that though you are concentrating on the one that you know -- the other problems are stuck in your head %26amp; answers to them will start to form subconciously. By the time you get to them, a partial answer will be formed %26amp; you will be able to jump into that one.
You know most of your stuff -- so don't worry.
And don't forget to breathe.I have a Philosophy exam on Monday afternoon: do you have any advice?
Take deep slow breaths, and then again breathe out slowly, close your eyes so as not to be disturbed. Imagine watching the air go down your wind pipe to your stomach and watch it in your mind's eye coming out again slowly through your nose a s you breathe out. Do this for five minutes and you will be fine. All the best.
Sunshine says, ';Study,you silwy rabbitt,study.';
exams are nothing to be nervous about. you are gonna get alot more exams in your life
Practice. Put yourself into a very quiet room with only a piece of paper and a pencil %26amp; see what you can write down.
The other thing to do is get a list of words together that will help spur memories of bigger concepts - that way, when you start, jot the list on the side of the paper %26amp; if your mind does shut down, look at the list.
Good luck!
You are already prepared. There is really nothing to be nervous about.
Practice writing what you know (like an essay)or think may be asked, ie topics he covered extensively. After writing go back to your notes and see if you missed any important points or topics. See if you can get you thoughts out clearly and orderly.
When you study, choose the topic area and just start talking out loud about the topic. Since speaking about something is usually easier than writing about it, practice your responses verbally. Plus you will figure out quickly if you know the topic sufficiently or not because if you can't talk about it for 1-2 minutes, you don't have enough knowledge or the ability to apply it. BTW, good luck!
depends on the questoin
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