Test Preparation

You are becoming a more active learner as soon as you read or listen and take notes. The Cornell notetaking method has been suggested as a good method to use because it sets you up for studying effectively. Starting with your notes, you identify essentials, and consolidate what is really important to know on summary sheets.

Identify Essentials
Sift through your notes from class, articles and textbooks to identify and highlight the most important concepts and facts.
 
Summary Sheets
Place the consolidated, highlighted material from your search for essentials on a new sheet, following the same Cornell format (details on the right side, and questions or key words summarizing the details in the left 2 inch column).
 
Color Code
If you have access to different colors of text on the computer or pens if doing this on paper, decide on a color coding scheme and apply it to your notes. Your scheme will depend on what kind of class it is, but some students use yellow for main idea statements, blue for key concepts, red for names, dates or specific details that must be commited to memory, green for an application or explanation of an example, and so on.
 
Studying
You then are ready to test yourself by lining up the summary sheets so as to cover the "details" side of the notes, and try to answer the questions or explain the keywords in the "main idea" column. The process serves as a way of learning the material, as well as a "self-test" to check what you know. You continue studying until selected information is committed to memory.
 
Test Questions
It is a good idea to devise a set of questions that you think will be close to those on the quiz or test. You set yourself up for success in many ways by attempting to answer these to the best of your knowledge. First, you have at your fingertips the relevant vocabulary, which is a big part of what you are tested on. Second, you practice thinking through how to answer good questions, which makes it much easier when you are trying to produce an answer in writing under the pressure of a timed test.
 

Mnemonics
After testing yourself using the summary sheets, you can identity the ideas, names, or facts that defy memorization. Make a list of these and create mnemonic devices to aid retrieval. Options:

Source: Gerry Lewin, Gyrus Learning Skills

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