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Open Book & Take Home Exams

Doing Well in Open Book Exams

Open Book exams require you to

Study

You need to study for Open Book exams just as you would for any exam. If you know your subject, you'll have a knowledge base to draw on. You will also understand how and why topics are linked. This style of learning equips you well for exams and 'real life' experiences. If you don't study you won't know how to find answers and–books or no books–you can't answer the questions.

Familiarise yourself with texts and notes, and make sure you can locate important information. Be familiar with your materials so you will not waste valuable exam time searching through them.Prepare your environment

Plan ahead

Work out the materials and resources you will take into the exam room.

Don't overload with materials. Only take what you need into an Open Book exam. Carefully select your materials and resources and organise them for quick reference. The same goes for writing implements. Make sure you have spare pens, pencils and erasers. If you need any other tools, make sure they all work and pack them neatly. For those using non-solar calculators, don't forget spare batteries!

If you are doing a Take Home exam, gather readings, notes and resources together beforehand and organise them neatly in your study area at home. Make sure you have enough paper, pens etc. Set up a quiet space where you can concentrate, and where you can work without interruptions.

Find out the exam requirements

For Open Book exams, find out:

For Take Home exams, find out:

Don't anticipate questions

When you prepare your notes, don't waste time guessing possible questions or trying to prepare 'model' answers–preprepared answers don't work. Essay style questions will tend toward a 'free' response rather than a fixed 'single right answer' question, so formula answers don't fit. However, you do need to have 'thought through' conceptual frameworks and philosophical positions, and have some general conclusions in mind. You don't need to know everything, but you need to know how to find the relevant information.

Practise

Your lecturer or tutor may provide some sample questions or a dry run. You might also want to check out some past exam papers in the Library.

Get a Good Night's Sleep

On the night before the exam, don't stay up until all hours studying. You'll be fuzzy, stressed and unable to think clearly.

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Preparing Notes & Materials

Organise

A large amount of materials might make you feel secure, but you'll probably work best relying on no more than a few pages of notes and a few well-chosen texts.

Spend some time making your reference materials as user-friendly as possible so that you don't waste time frantically flipping pages back and forth or shuffling papers. Unless you're sitting a Take Home exam, you'll need to work within a short time limit (a few hours). To do this well, try to have the essential facts, formulae, etc. at your finger tips. Also, writing a flow chart to show how the relevant topics are connected is very helpful.

Preparing Resources

Before the exam

Preparing Notes

Make some useful notes for yourself

Links

Exam Success, Charles Sturt University

Exam Preparation: Open book, Charles Darwin University

Open book exams, the Study Guides and Strategies web site

Exam Tactics, James Cook University Learning Centre

Preparing for Open Book Exams, Centre for Academic Development, The University of Auckland

Learning Centre Guides

The Learning Centre, The University of New South Wales, Sydney NSW 2052, Australia • Telephone: +61 2 9385 2060
Email: learningcentre@unsw.edu.au • Opening hours: Monday to Thursday: 9am - 5pm, Friday: 9am - 2.30pm
Authorised by The Director, The Learning Centre, UNSW • Last updated 26 August, 2008
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