Exams & Revision

Revision and Exams

Revision tips

Here are our top tips for making sure your revision is as effective as possible.


Tip 1: Consider the best time for you to revise


Tip 2: Think about the best place for you to revise


Tip 3: Use your attention span to your advantage


Tip 4: Plan it out


Tip 5: Choose methods that work for you

Using lists/sequences:

Using revision/flashcards:

Auditory techniques:

Using colour, symbols or senses:

Exam tips

Many people think about these questions at some point (even if they never ask them). Here is some useful advice and guidance adapted from Stella Cottrell’s Study Skills Handbook and the Skills4Study Campus site:

Should I plan out essays at the beginning of the exam, or before each question?

You will learn from experience what works best for you, so it is a good idea to complete some past papers to try different approaches before the exam. It is also worth spending a few minutes at the start of the exam jotting down the key information for each essay answer. This may help with:


Should I spend more time on my best question?


Should I take breaks/finish early?


I don’t seem to use as much paper as other people


What if I go blank in the exam?

This is a very common concern. Here are some ways of managing this situation:


It’s over... so why don’t I feel happy?

In the lead-up to the exam, it is often assumed that everything will seem wonderful once the exam is over, and there will be a sense of freedom. However, the end of exams affects people in different ways. For example, it can make us feel:

However you feel, remember that it is finished, and that repeatedly going over the exam in your mind can be a bad thing. Try to relax, and shift your focus to the future instead.

Are you taking an online, time constrained test?

How do you feel about this?

Some of you will be happy, others will find it unfamiliar and challenging!

If you are used to doing online tests you have a head start, but these assessments may be longer and in a different format from the online and multiple choice tests that you are used to.

If you are doing an online assessment it is still a serious exam and you will need to be prepared.


Preparation

You will need to prepare for these assessments. Some of them are closed book, which means you will not be allowed to have any materials with you. Others may be open book, meaning you can have specified resources with you.


Closed book – If this is a closed book assessment, you are not allowed materials and you need to revise for this exam, in the same way as you would do if you were doing it at the university. I am sure most of you would never think of having materials with you, but if you do think of that, don’t fool yourself, you will not have time to look things up, you will need to spend the time giving full answers. 

Open book – If your assessment is open book you are allowed some specified materials with you. However, you will need to make sure these materials are very well organised and that you know where to find the information you need. You will still need to know the material, you will not have time to search for answers, so the revision resource will also be useful for you.

Organising your workspace

If you are taking the exam outside of the classroom you will need to make sure you have a suitable workspace. You will need a quiet place, as you would do in an exam at the university. If your assessment is closed book you will need a clear desk with just the equipment you need for your exam. If your assessment is open book you will need a space where you can organise your materials.

You will need a sufficient connection to the internet to complete the exam. If you have any concerns about your IT equipment and internet connection, you will need to inform your course leader or personal tutor and you should talk to the university’s Information Services:

Telephone: 023 9284 7777

Email: servicedesk@port.ac.uk

Online chat: https://servicedesk.port.ac.uk/#

If you have any concerns about your IT connection or equipment make sure you contact them in good time before the exam day.


On the day of the assessment

You should treat this like any other assessment. Once you have started the exam you should stay at your computer working on it, using the time effectively. Make sure you have everything you need on your desk.

Have breakfast or lunch before the exam. Your brain doesn’t work as well when you are short of blood sugar and you won’t have time to eat during the exam. 

Top Tips

Interpreting your Question

It is natural to be concerned when preparing for exams, and many of them can be overcome with planning and stress management. However, if you develop the skills for interpreting your questions, you will be in a much stronger position when producing future assignments, or going into your exams.


How can I make sense of the question?

Although many of the terms used in your exam questions will be subject-specific (they will rely on you knowing what they mean), there are some simple techniques for identifying the real meaning of the questions, to ensure that you answer them fully.

Taking the question apart

Exam questions in business and law subjects can be broken down into three main components:

Task words (also sometimes called action words or key words)

These words are usually the easiest to identify within the question. Task words give instructions, or tell you what to do. For example, “discuss”, “evaluate” or “critically assess”. 


Statement/content words

These words or phrases usually make up the biggest part of a question. They are often in the form of a statement for you to evaluate. Where task words tell you what to do, the content tells you what to do it with. However, not all questions will include a statement or many content words. In this case, they will certainly contain specific terms.


Specific terms

These are subject-specific words or phrases which may require evaluating. For example, in the question “outline Modigliani & Miller’s dividend irrelevance hypothesis”, the specific term would be the dividend irrelevance hypothesis.

Interpreting a question using the BUG technique


1) Write out the question

2) Draw a box around the task words (what to “do”)

3) Underline the content words (what to “do” things to)

4) Check back over the question to make sure you didn’t miss anything!

The BUG technique was developed by Geraldine Price, and is fully explained in Study Skills for Business & Management Students, Ramsay, Maier & Price, 2010)

In this case, you would consider the statement (identified here as a belief), and would discuss it (that is, provide detail about and evidence for and against the belief, explaining which argument seems stronger), using real-world examples to clarify your ideas. It may also be worth identifying the specific terms such as workers, poorer countries and multinational businesses, in order to ensure that you fully explore the issues.

Some other examples of questions:


“Critically discuss if and how non-audit services threaten independence, and why is it important for Ethical Standards to restrict certain non-audit services.”

Task words: critically discuss        Specific terms: non-audited, independence, Ethical Standards


“Discuss whether Imran has a claim for misrepresentation and identify his available remedies. Illustrate your answer with relevant law.”

Task words: discuss, identify, illustrate               Specific terms: misrepresentation, remedies

Taking your tasks apart in this way will help you to establish exactly what you are being asked to do and will help you to ensure that you do not go off track.