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Provided
by petersons.com
Once you've registered to take your exam and you've decided
how you're going to study for it, you can turn your attention
to the actual test situation. Ask yourself three questions:
- How do I really feel about taking tests? Am I generally
relaxed and efficient?
- Am I nervous in a test situation, so nervous that I waste
time with instructions, get confused by questions, or fixate
on getting the answer to every one, unable to move on until
I do?
- What special skills will I need to work on in order to
improve my test performance?
Recently, a group of students spoke candidly with Peterson's
about their first reactions to standardized tests:
- "When it comes to tests, I'm the kind of person who
gets hypnotized by the clock. I watch the minutes tick away
and become more and more tense until I can't work anymore.
Consequently I never finish tests on time and always leave
them with a sense of deep frustration."
- "It's funny; I always worked hard and performed
pretty well in my high school classes and on the tests we
had every week in class. But I've never been able to transfer
that success over to standardized tests. I just wish I didn't
have to be judged by how well I do on tests, and that people
would just accept me for who I am."
- "In test situations I just can't focus on the test!
I keep thinking of how much fun I am going to have next
Saturday afternoon when I get together with my friends."
If you have a hard time focusing when you go into a test,
remember how you overcame other challenges in your life, like
your first dive into the local swimming pool. You talked to
yourself, right? Do this again, and persuade yourself to look
at the questions in a relaxed and thoughtful manner.
If the clock intimidates you, then practice with your software
or test-preparation book, using a kitchen timer. When the
timer rings, reset it and move on to the next question no
matter what. You will get used to thinking more efficiently
and quickly.
If difficult questions make you panic, then the appropriate
strategy would be to skip the difficult questions. On most
standardized tests, some of the responses will be more difficult
than others, and each response counts the same. Think of the
fact that if you correctly skip the few difficult questions
on the test and get all the others right, you are going to
do very well.
If you have difficulty with a question and pass it by, you
can always look at it again later if there is time. Faced
with four or five multiple-choice responses to a question
you understand, eliminate the one or two obvious wrong answers,
then select the response that best answers the question. If
you are still puzzled, do not respond to the question at all.
Remember not to read too much into a question. Take the test
questions at face value. The test makers are not out to trick
you, believe it or not.
A Group Approach to Test Anxiety
Sometimes counseling centers will offer group sessions devoted
to alleviating test anxiety. The first step requires that
all members of the group share their test-taking experiences,
and these experiences are condensed and put in the left-hand
column on a chalkboard. The group then brainstorms about ways
in which each anxiety might be reduced or eliminated. These
responses are recorded in a middle column on the board beside
the anxiety they are meant to cure.
Next, the group conducts a rehearsal of the test situation
itself. This exercise enables students to identify how they
react in a test situation. The counselor takes notes on how
each student acts as he or she is taking the test. For example,
he might write in his notebook: "Dave appeared stone-faced
and stared into outer space a lot." Or, "Joan bit
her nails and her pencil unmercifully." Or, "Tom
kept crossing and uncrossing his legs and then scrunched up
in the chair, and he kept looking at the clock." When
the exercise is over, the counselor reads his comments as
he writes them in the third column on the board. The group
discusses the chart they have produced on the board and makes
recommendations about the behavior of each member. The counselor
enters that recommendation in the fourth and final column
on the board.
For Dave, the conclusion might be, "Dave should relax
and not lift his head and be distracted from his paper. He
should focus on head and neck relaxation techniques."
For Joan, "She should keep her hands as still as possible
and chew gum so that she does not poison herself chewing her
lead-filled pencils." For Tom, the comment is, "He
should sit in a more relaxed and upright position and look
at the clock only when he has come to the end of a section."
Simple Relaxation Exercises
Once students have identified their particular counterproductive
behavior in an exam situation, they will want to think seriously
about going through a brief relaxation exercise before taking
the test. John Emery of the Human Resources Institute in California
has suggested the following muscle-relaxing exercises for
people approaching anxious moments in their lives:
- Settle back in your chair and relax. Take a few deep
breaths and begin to let yourself go.
- Now extend both arms straight out and clench your fists
more and more tightly as you count slowly to five. Then
relax and let your arms drop. Concentrate on the differences
you perceive between the tension phase and the relaxation
phase.
- Focus on your forearms. Extend your arms as above, and
push out on a slow five count as before. Relax again. Do
the same for your biceps, flexing your arms toward your
body and then relaxing after 5 seconds.
- Concentrate on your forehead. Wrinkle your brow hard on
a five count. Relax.
- Close your eyes tightly as you count to five. Then relax
slowly.
- Do the same for your neck and shoulders, sitting up rigidly,
then relaxing. For each exercise, conclude by contemplating
the difference between the tense feeling and the relaxed
feeling that follows it.
- Do the same for your stomach muscles. Then let them relax
and try to spread this relaxation throughout your entire
body.
- Now move to your thighs. Straighten out your legs and
turn your toes up toward your face on a five count and relax.
- Relax your calf muscles in a similar way, turning your
toes away and down as hard as you can as you count to five.
Then relax again. Repeat the exercise, turning your toes
up this time.
Finally, in a relaxed position, close your eyes and review
your exercises, trying to spread that relaxed feeling outward
from each particular muscle group throughout your whole body.
Rewarding Yourself for "Good Behavior"
Test anxiety can also be handled by inventing a simple game
called "Rewarding Yourself for Good Behavior."
- Dave, who blanks out and stares into outer space during
tests, might promise himself a solid 10-minute break after
taking a mock test, if-and only if-he does not look up and
blank out while taking the practice test.
- Joan might reward herself by having something fun to eat,
like an ice cream sundae, if-and only if-she is able to
abstain from chewing her pencil while taking a practice
test.
- Tom could decide to limit his clock watching to two time
checks per test session and reinforce this behavior by promising
to buy himself a shirt he recently admired in a shop downtown,
if-and only if-he succeeds in controlling his behavior on
the practice test.
Whatever strategy you use, the important idea to bear in
mind is rewarding good behavior and punishing the undesirable
behavior. Make sure the reward and punishment system is reasonable
for you. The more it is, the better it will work to reduce your
anxiety.
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