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Perfecting Your Study Skills: GED Language Arts, Reading (page 5)

By LearningExpress Editors
LearningExpress, LLC

Mark It Up

Get in the habit of highlighting and underlining when you read. When you open your book, pick up your pen, pencil, or highlighter. When you see a main idea, mark it. If you come across an unfamiliar word or a word used in an unfamiliar context, mark it. However, the trick is to be selective. If you are marking too much of the passage, important information and key ideas will not stand out. You need to practice distinguishing between main and supporting details. (You will learn how in Chapter 2.)

You can practice asking questions and marking main ideas and supporting details by going through the sample test passages in this book and in Learning- Express's GED Test Prep. Check yourself by looking at the questions about those passages. How well do your ideas match up with the questions about the passages? Check your answers. Were they correct? If not, why not?

On the GED, you will write the key words and ideas on your scratch paper. You may want to prepare by practicing this technique as you study for the test. Of course, you will also want to practice it with any borrowed books that you use, such as library books.

Make Notes

Don't just take notes; make them. Making notes requires you to think about what you are reading. Asking questions, such as the ones mentioned previously, is one way to make notes. Another kind of note making involves recording your reactions to what you are reading. For example, you may disagree with an author's opinion; if so, write down your reaction. Be sure to say why you disagree or agree, or why you are confused. When you read the kinds of challenging materials that you will find on the GED exam, it should be more like a conversation between you and the author than an author's monologue. So what if the author can't hear you? You can still hold up your end of the conversation. It will be more interesting for you, and you will get more out of what you read.

Make Connections

Another way of interacting with the material that you study is to relate it to what you already know. For example, if you are trying to learn the word demographic, you may know that democracy refers to government run by the people, while graphic refers to information, written or drawn. Then you can remember that demographic has to do with information about people.

Making connections differentiates remembering from memorizing. In the short run, it may seem easier just to memorize a word or a fact, but unless you understand what you are learning—unless you have connected it to what you already know—you are likely to forget it again. Then you will have wasted your study time and failed to improve your test score. Memorized information gets stored in your short-term memory, which means that it's forgotten within a few days or even a few hours. Your long-term memory has to file new information to fit in with your existing information. That means that you have to create connections to what you already know.

Break It Up

You do not train to run a marathon by waiting until the last minute and then running 20 miles a day for five days before the race. Similarly, you cannot effectively prepare for the GED exam by waiting until the last minute to study. Your brain works best when you give it a relatively small chunk of information, let it rest and process, and then give it another small chunk.

When you are studying the various elements of fiction, for example, don't try to memorize the whole list at once. The most efficient way to learn is to take two or three elements—such as characterization and symbolism—and make sure that you fully understand them before tackling the next. Making some kind of connection among the elements in each literary type will help you remember them. For example, you see the connection between plot development within fiction, and its use in drama.

Flash cards are a great study aid for the GED exam. The act of writing on the cards engages your kinesthetic learning ability. Seeing the cards uses your visual learning, and reading the cards aloud sets up auditory learning. Flash cards are also extremely portable and flexible in the ways they can be used and help you work on small chunks of material at a time. For example, you can pull them out while you wait for the bus, or look through a few while eating breakfast.

Remember, your brain works best when you give it small, frequent assignments and then give it time to process each one. Recent scientific studies show that sleep helps the brain process what it has learned. In other words, if you study before bed, when you wake up, you will know more than you did before you went to sleep. It's just one more reason for getting a good night's rest.

On the actual exam, it is important to give yourself permission to take a mini-break whenever you need it. If you need to stretch after every question, that's okay. A quick stretch or a deep breath and forceful exhalation can do wonders to keep you focused and relaxed.

Testing Psychology

As you already know, it's important to review reading comprehension techniques, improve your critical reasoning skills, and review the different types of literature (fiction, poetry, and so on) as you prepare for the GED exam—but it's not sufficient to do only these things. Like all standardized tests, the GED exam also measures your test-taking skills. In this section, you will learn some of the best test-taking strategies for success on the GED exam.

Get Familiar with the Exam to Combat Fear

In the previous sections, you learned that fear or anxiety is your enemy on the GED exam. What happens when you are feeling fearful or anxious? Your heart starts pounding, sending blood away from your brain to your limbs. Maybe you start feeling a little lightheaded, a little disconnected, or even a little woozy. Are you in good condition for test taking then? Of course not!

There is much truth in the saying that we fear what we don't understand. Therefore, the best way to overcome the anxiety that keeps you from doing your best on the GED exam is to learn as much as you can about the test. The more you know about what to expect, the more practice you have with the exam, the more relaxed you will be, and the better you will perform on test day.

Another way to eliminate a source of test-day anxiety is to familiarize yourself with the location of your official testing site. Take a drive there before test day, so you are familiar with the route.

Taking practice tests and working with the tips and strategies in this book will help you immensely. You will get used to the kinds of questions on the GED exam and learn how to maximize your chances of answering them correctly. You will build on what you already know and enhance the skill sets that you need for GED exam success. By the time you enter the testing center, you will be familiar with the format of the test and prepared for the length of the exam with strategies to help you succeed.

How to De-Stress

It is one thing to be told not to worry, and another thing to actually not worry. How can you stop yourself from worrying? You can start by replacing worried and anxious thoughts and actions with positive ones. The following sections examine some techniques.

Nip It in the Bud

What are you worried about? Maybe you are worried that you don't have enough time to prepare for the test, or perhaps you are afraid that you won't do well on the exam. That leads to anxiety about not getting into the right school or job. Pretty soon, you are convinced that your life is basically ruined, so why not just turn on the TV and resign yourself to a low-paying, dead-end job? Sounds silly when you put it that way, right? But fear has a way of escalating when you do not control it.

The best way to beat test anxiety is to prevent it. Don't let it get a grip on you. Whenever you catch yourself worrying or thinking anxious thoughts about the GED exam, firmly tell yourself that you have nothing to worry about because you are preparing for GED exam success. Of course, for that strategy to work, you have to establish and stick to your study plan. Therefore, beating test anxiety is made up of two components: thinking and doing.

Just Do It

Half the battle with test anxiety is how you think about the test and what kinds of messages you are giving yourself about the exam. The other half is what you do to prepare. These two halves are interrelated: If you are paralyzed by negative thoughts ("I'm not ready; I don't have enough time; I'm not smart enough; I don't want to think about the GED exam"), you are going to have a hard time getting yourself to do the work that you need to do.

On the other hand, if you can somehow get yourself to stop thinking those unproductive thoughts, you can start preparing. The very act of doing something makes you feel better and leads to more positive thoughts, which makes it easier to continue working.

Therefore, it makes sense to just begin work. Start by making a study plan based on the times you have available to study and on your assessment of your practice test results (see the section The Study Plan earlier in this chapter). Creating a study plan is easy. You have time to do it. Once you have it in place, you just follow it. You choose success. If you have not already made your study plan, what are you waiting for?

Once you have created a study plan, stick to it as though you had no choice. Of course, you do have a choice. You are choosing how you want your future to unfold. You are doing this for yourself.

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