Test-Taking Strategies
Test-taking skills can be learned through practice. Try a few of these strategies to improve your performance on standardized tests.
- Take the practice test in the materials you receive from the SAT or ACT.
- Find practice tests online or in books (check your guidance office or library).
- After taking a practice test, look carefully at the questions you get wrong. Read the explanations of the right answers.
- If you find that certain types of questions or certain topics stump you, get some help from a teacher in those areas. For example, a math teacher can recommend a good book to review the basics of geometry or algebra.
- Learn from every test you take. Take the opportunity to see the answers for the questions you got wrong, if the testing service offers this service. Don't just study the answers themselves—look at the reasoning behind each answer. Then, if you decide to take the test again, you'll be better prepared.
The Big Day
"A good night's rest and nutritious snacks are still high on my list" of test-taking strategies, says Mary E. Lindner, assistant director of admission at Alfred University (NY). In other words, don't stay up late cramming-or worrying. Here are some other do's and don'ts.
The night before:
- Do set out everything you'll need (including your no. 2 pencil!). Then you won't have to run around early the next morning.
- Don't schedule a huge social event.
- Do plan to do something that relaxes you—reading a favorite book, watching TV, talking on the phone (but not about the test!), taking a walk.
- Don't stay up late to catch Letterman.
- Do go to bed early—you'll think better if you're well-rested.
The morning of:
- Do plan to arrive at the testing center early.
- Don't skip breakfast. When you're hungry, it's harder to concentrate—and you'll feel more sleepy.
- Do bring a snack. If a full breakfast is too much for you first thing in the morning, eat an apple on the way to the test center. And bring a snack to munch on during the break.
Finally…
A pep talk from Jonathan Burdick, associate dean at the University of Southern California: "Stop worrying about it so much. [Tests are] supposed to be a guideline, not a new way of life. If a college is going to admit or deny you based on your test score, you don't want to be there anyway, and it's their loss. Go to some place that's prepared to appreciate you for who you really are."
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Reprinted with the permission of the National Association for College Admission Counseling. © 2008 National Association for College Admission Counseling.
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