Most students spend all their energy studying — and almost none learning how to actually take the exam. That's a costly mistake.
Research published in Applied Cognitive Psychology shows that test-taking strategy accounts for up to 20% of a student's score, independent of actual knowledge. You can know the material cold and still underperform if you're poor at exam execution.
This guide is for students who've already put in the study hours and want to make sure every point they've earned actually lands on their score sheet. Whether you're sitting a multiple choice midterm, an essay final, or a STEM problem set, these tactics work across formats.
This article is for: college students, high school students, and anyone preparing for an academic or standardized exam who wants to optimize performance on test day — not just in the library.
📋 Key Takeaways:
• Start every exam with a full scan and time allocation plan before writing a word
• Answer easy questions first to bank marks and build confidence
• Use a "brain dump" in the first 90 seconds to offload memory pressure
• Allocate time by mark weight, not by question number
• When you blank, use process of elimination — not panic
• The last 10 minutes should be reserved for review — build this into your plan from the start
Here's an uncomfortable truth: two students can study the same material for the same amount of time and walk out of the same exam with scores that differ by 15%. The difference is almost never what they knew — it's how they executed.
A 2019 study in Applied Cognitive Psychology found that students who used deliberate test-taking strategies — time allocation, question sequencing, systematic checking — scored an average of 12% higher than students with equal knowledge who skipped these steps. That's the difference between a B and an A.
Exam strategy isn't a shortcut. It's the skill of translating what you know into points on paper — efficiently, calmly, and without letting nerves cost you marks you already earned.
The worst thing you can do when you receive the exam is flip to page one and start writing immediately. The best thing: spend the first 3–5 minutes on reconnaissance.
The exam scan protocol:
This 5-minute investment routinely saves 15–20 minutes of backtracking, confusion, and misallocated effort. On a 90-minute exam, that's enormous.
Pro Tip: Write your time checkpoints directly on the exam paper (e.g., "Q3 by :45"). Externalizing your plan removes cognitive load so you can focus fully on answers.
The moment you receive your exam paper, your working memory is flooded with everything you're afraid of forgetting — formulas, dates, key terms, process sequences. Don't try to hold all of it in your head.
In the first 90 seconds: write everything you're anxious about forgetting in the margin or on scratch paper. Formulas, key dates, the acronym you kept blanking on, the sequence of steps for the long answer — dump it all out.
This works because it offloads the mental burden of "holding" information, freeing your working memory for actual problem-solving. It's the equivalent of clearing RAM before running a heavy program.
Students who use the brain dump technique consistently report less mid-exam blanking and a stronger sense of control throughout the test. It takes 90 seconds and costs nothing.
Ignore the page layout. Answer questions in your own optimal sequence — not the order the exam presents them.
The recommended sequence:
The psychology here is well-documented. Starting with a difficult question triggers anxiety that lingers across the whole exam. Starting with questions you can answer quickly creates a confidence effect that improves performance on harder questions.
On a 40-question multiple choice exam, this means doing a first pass and answering every easy or medium question, then circling back to uncertain ones. Mark every skipped question clearly — put a circle or asterisk next to the number. Don't trust memory to track them.
The single most common exam mistake is spending 30 minutes on a 5-mark question while a 20-mark essay goes unfinished. Time management during the exam is not optional — it's structural.
The marks-per-minute formula:
⏱️ Minutes per question = (Question marks ÷ Total marks) × Total exam time
Example: On a 90-minute exam worth 100 marks, a 20-mark question deserves ~18 minutes. A 5-mark question deserves ~4.5 minutes. Not 30.
Set hard time limits per section before you start writing. When time is up, move on. An incomplete answer to a second question earns more total marks than a perfect answer to only one.
Reserve the final 10 minutes as a dedicated review buffer — factor this into your time budget from the start, not as an afterthought.
Blanking happens to everyone. Here's the tactical response — without spiraling.
Step 1: Eliminate what you know is wrong. Even if you can't identify the correct answer, removing 1–2 clearly wrong options on a 4-choice multiple choice question raises your probability from 25% to 33–50%. That gap compounds across a full exam.
Step 2: Use what the question gives you. Exam questions often contain embedded clues — specific dates, terms, or phrasing that narrows the answer space. Read the question a second time, slowly, looking for signals.
Step 3: Write something for open-answer questions. Partial credit exists. A blank guarantees zero; writing the relevant formula, defining a key term, or outlining the first step often earns 30–50% of available marks. Examiners are looking for evidence of understanding, not just the final answer.
Step 4: Move on and return. Your brain continues processing problems in the background after you consciously move away from them (the incubation effect). A question you blanked on at minute 20 may click at minute 60 — but only if you moved on instead of freezing.
For essay and short-answer questions, the most common trap is writing more when you should be writing better. A 300-word essay that directly answers the question, cites 2–3 pieces of evidence, and reaches a clear conclusion routinely outscores a 600-word essay that rambles.
Use the PEEL framework for timed essay answers:
PEEL forces structure under pressure and prevents the verbal spiral that kills most timed essays.
Also critical: underline the instruction verb in every essay question. "Analyze," "compare," "describe," and "evaluate" are not synonyms. Answering the wrong type of question — describing when asked to analyze, for example — is one of the most common causes of unnecessary mark drops in essay exams.
Multiple choice has its own tactical playbook, separate from the general exam approach.
Read the question before the answer options. Form a tentative answer in your head before you look at the choices. This makes you harder to mislead by attractive-looking distractors.
Watch for absolute language. Answer options containing "always," "never," "all," or "none" are frequently traps. Academic content is rarely that absolute; options that claim otherwise are often incorrect.
When to change your answer: Research from the University of Illinois found that second-guessing yourself is usually correct — approximately 54% of answer changes result in a better answer. If you have new information or a clearer line of reasoning, change it. If it's purely a vague gut feeling, leave the original.
For "all of the above" options: Only select it if you've confirmed that at least two other options are definitively correct. If any single option is wrong, "all of the above" is automatically eliminated.
Panic is a physiological state — and it can be interrupted in under 60 seconds. When you feel it starting:
The worst response to mid-exam panic is to freeze and stare at the paper. Motion breaks the state. Doing something — even answering a low-stakes question — restores the sense of progress that calms the nervous system.
Pre-exam preparation is also a major anxiety reducer: students with a clear time plan, a brain dump completed, and questions ordered by difficulty report significantly lower panic rates during exams than students who start writing immediately.
Checking is a skill, not just re-reading. Build 10 minutes into every exam plan specifically for this step.
What to check:
What not to change: Anything you've already spent time reasoning through, unless you've spotted a clear, specific error. Don't second-guess solid work with 3 minutes left on a gut feeling.
Plan for this from minute one — not as a bonus if you finish early, but as a non-negotiable block built into your time budget.
Priority order for the final 10 minutes:
Never leave an exam early unless you've genuinely reviewed everything at least twice. The extra minutes almost always surface something worth fixing — and if not, you lose nothing by staying.
Yes — this is one of the most evidence-backed exam tactics available. Answering easy questions first banks guaranteed marks early, builds confidence, and warms up your thinking before you tackle harder material. Skip uncertain questions clearly (mark them), complete everything else, then return. The confidence boost from early successes measurably improves performance on harder questions.
Before you write a single answer, calculate a time budget based on mark weights: divide total exam time by total marks, then multiply by each question's mark value. A 20-mark question on a 100-mark, 90-minute exam gets 18 minutes — hard cutoff. Write these checkpoints on your paper and treat them as rules, not suggestions. Reserve the final 10 minutes for review.
First, do a brain dump in the margin — write everything you associate with the topic, even loosely. Then use process of elimination to remove clearly wrong options on multiple choice. For open-answer questions, write down anything related — formulas, definitions, the first step of a process. Partial credit is real, and a partial attempt earns more than a blank. Then move on and return later; distance often breaks the mental block.
For most academic exams that do not penalize wrong answers: always answer. Even a random guess gives you a 25% chance. With process of elimination removing one or two options, that rises to 33–50%. Only leave blank if the exam explicitly uses negative marking — where wrong answers deduct points from your total.
When panic hits mid-exam, stop writing for 30 seconds. Use slow breathing: 4 counts in, hold 4, exhale for 6. Then move immediately to the easiest remaining question. The key pre-exam strategy is having a clear plan — time budget, brain dump, question scan — because a defined roadmap dramatically reduces the sense of overwhelm that triggers panic in the first place.
Knowing the material is necessary — but it's not sufficient. The students who consistently score highest aren't just the ones who studied hardest. They're the ones who've learned to deploy what they know efficiently, calmly, and strategically under pressure.
Start with the 5-minute exam scan. Do your brain dump. Answer easy questions first. Budget your time by mark weight. These four habits alone will add real points to your next exam — without an extra hour of studying.
And in the study phase? Snitchnotes helps you turn your notes, PDFs, and lectures into smart AI-powered quizzes — so you walk into every exam knowing the material cold and ready to execute. Try it free at snitchnotes.com.
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