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Test Preparation System for The Paramedic Certification Exam (page 4)

By LearningExpress Editors
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Step 6: Know When to Guess

Armed with the process of elimination, you’re ready to take control of one of the big questions in testtaking: Should I guess? The first and main answer is yes. Some exams have what’s called a “guessing penalty,” in which a fraction of your wrong answers is subtracted from your right answers—but the EMT-Paramedic exam does not work like that. The number of questions you answer correctly yields your competency or incompetency. So you have nothing to lose and everything to gain by guessing.

The more complicated answer to the question “Should I guess?” depends on you—your personality and your “guessing intuition.” There are two things you need to know about yourself before you go into the exam:

  • Are you a risktaker?
  • Are you a good guesser?

You’ll have to decide about your risk- taking quotient on your own. Frankly, even if you’re a play- it- safe person with lousy intuition, you’re still safe in guessing every time. The best thing would be if you could overcome your anxieties and go ahead and pick an answer. But you may want to have a sense of how good your intuition is before you go into the exam.

Step 7: Reach Your Peak Performance Zone

To get ready for a challenge like a big exam, you have to take control of your physical, as well as your mental, state. Exercise, proper diet, and rest will ensure that your body works with, rather than against, your mind on test day, as well as during your preparation.

Exercise

If you don’t already have a regular exercise program going, the time during which you’re preparing for an exam is actually an excellent time to start one. And if you’re already keeping fit—or trying to get that way— don’t let the pressure of preparing for an exam fool you into quitting now. Exercise helps reduce stress by pumping wonderful good- feeling hormones called endorphins into your system. It also increases the oxygen supply throughout your body, including your brain, so you’ll be at peak performance on test day.

A half hour of vigorous activity—enough to raise a sweat—every day should be your aim. If you’re really pressed for time, every other day is okay. Choose an activity you like and get out there and do it. Jogging with a friend always makes the time go faster, or take an iPod or MP3 player.

But don’t overdo it. You don’t want to exhaust yourself. Moderation is the key.

Diet

First of all, cut out the junk. Go easy on caffeine and nicotine, and eliminate alcohol and any other drugs from your system at least two weeks before the exam.

What your body needs for peak performance is simply a balanced diet. Eat plenty of fruits and vegetables, along with protein and complex carbohydrates. Foods high in lecithin (an amino acid), such as fish and beans, are especially good “brain foods.”

The night before the exam, you might “carbo- load” the way athletes do before a contest. Eat a big plate of spaghetti, rice and beans, or whatever your favorite carbohydrate is.

Rest

You probably know how much sleep you need every night to be at your best, even if you don’t always get it. Make sure you do get that much sleep, though, for at least a week before the exam. Moderation is important here, too. Extra sleep will just make you groggy.

If you’re not a morning person and your exam will be given in the morning, you should reset your internal clock so that your body doesn’t think you’re taking an exam at 3 a.m. You have to start this process well before the exam. Here’s how it works: Get up half an hour earlier each morning, and then go to bed half an hour earlier that night. Don’t try it the other way around; you’ll just toss and turn if you go to bed early without having gotten up early. The next morning, get up another half an hour earlier, and so on. How long you will have to do this depends on how late you’re used to getting up.

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