On my mind this week
I see this every single exam season.
Students walk out of an exam feeling fairly neutral about how it went.
Then the post-exam analysis begins.
Someone says they got Question 4 wrong.
Someone else remembers a detail you forgot.
A friend confidently gives a different answer.
Suddenly a paper that felt “fine” starts becoming “terrible”.
Then comes Student Room.
You search for an unofficial mark scheme.
You find pages of students debating answers.
Some sound certain.
Some sound panicked.
Some are convinced the grade boundaries will be a certain way.
You read one thing that does not match your answer and immediately start mentally knocking marks off.
Hours later, you feel worse than you did when you actually walked out of the exam.
None of this changes a single mark on the paper!
Things I’ve learned
Once an exam has finished, there is very little value in carrying it around for the rest of the day.
You are allowed to talk about it.
You are allowed to laugh about the weird question everyone hated.
You are allowed to feel annoyed if something caught you out.
There just comes a point where thinking about it stops being useful.
I have watched students convince themselves they have performed terribly and then open their results in August and realise they were nowhere near as accurate as they thought. Likewise I have heard many students say, “That was really easy”…and they failed.
Students are usually very good at remembering mistakes.
They are much less good at remembering everything they got right.
Study tip
Give yourself permission to close the door on a paper once it is done.
- Avoid unofficial mark schemes.
- Avoid spending the evening on Student Room.
- Avoid the group chat where everyone suddenly becomes an examiner.
Move on to the next thing.
For Parents
One question seems to appear after every exam:
“How did it go?”
The problem is that students usually do not actually know.
They know whether they found it hard.
They know whether there was a question they disliked.
They know whether they remembered everything they wanted to remember.
What they do not know is how the paper will be marked, or where the grade boundaries will sit.
“How did it go?”
often invites an emotional answer rather than an accurate one.
A more useful question might be:
“What do you need right now?”
Sometimes they need food, or a nap (that would be me!)
Sometimes they need to switch off for an hour.
Sometimes they simply need help moving onto the next exam without carrying the last one around with them. The ability to move on and focus on the next task is what is most useful.
Quote of the week
“You cannot start the next chapter if you keep rereading the last one.”
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