Yesterday, I offered
exam prep strategies for closed book law school exams.
Here, I consider
exam prep strategies for open book exams and conclude that there should be little difference in how you prepare for and take closed versus open book exams.
For those of you with closed book law school exams coming up, here are a few
exam prep strategies that you might find useful: (1) assess course expectations, (2) organize, memorize and master the course material, (3) practice, practice, practice, (4) rest your brain, and (5) take the exam with confidence.
Not exact matches
Strategies for cheating can include altering students» answer sheets, giving students the answers, or obtaining copies of an
exam before the test date and literally «teaching the test» —
prepping students with answers to actual test questions.
The following test
prep books can not only help with learning the fine details of the new
exam, they can give you the
strategies you need to master each section and get the highest New SAT score you possibly can.
To do this: (1) prepare as you would for a closed book
exam, but (2) adopt an open book
strategy and (3) integrate it into your
exam prep and then (4) apply it during the
exam.
Those topics include safe driving habits, rules of the road, signage, defensive driving
strategies, distracted driving, drunk driving, drugged driving, right - of - way laws, and all the
prep - work needed to pass the Ohio written driving
exam.
AFOQT
prep tools include Air Force Officer Qualifying Test practice tests with Q & A analysis, study guide and helpful
exam strategies.