What this handout is about
At some time in your undergraduate career, you’re going to have to write an
essay exam. This thought can inspire a fair amount of fear: we struggle enough
with essays when they aren’t timed events based on unknown questions. The goal
of this handout is to give you some easy and effective strategies that will help
you take control of the situation and do your best.
Why do instructors give essay exams?
Essay exams are a useful tool for finding out if you can sort through a large
body of information, figure out what is important, and explain why it is
important. Essay exams challenge you to come up with key course ideas and put
them in your own words and to use the interpretive or analytical skills you’ve
practiced in the course.
Instructors want to
see whether:
-
You understand concepts that provide the basis for the course
-
You can use those concepts to interpret specific materials
-
You can make connections, see relationships, draw comparisons and contrasts
-
You can synthesize diverse information in support of an original assertion
-
You can justify your own evaluations based on appropriate criteria
-
You can argue your own opinions with convincing evidence
-
You can think critically and analytically about a subject
What essay questions require
Exam questions can reach pretty far into the course materials, so you cannot
hope to do well on them if you do not keep up with the readings and assignments
from the beginning of the course. The most successful essay exam takers are
prepared for anything reasonable, and they probably have some intelligent
guesses about the content of the exam before they take it. How can you be a
prepared exam taker? Try
some of the following suggestions during the semester:
-
Do the reading as the syllabus dictates; keeping up with the reading while
the related concepts are being discussed in class saves you double the
effort later.
-
Go to lectures (and put away your phone, the newspaper, and that crossword
puzzle!).
-
Take careful notes that you’ll understand months later. If this is not your
strong suit or the conventions for a particular discipline are different
from what you are used to, ask your TA or the Learning Center for advice.
-
Participate in your discussion sections; this will help you absorb the
material better so you don’t have to study as hard.
-
Organize small study groups with classmates to explore and review course
materials throughout the semester. Others will catch things you might miss
even when paying attention. This is not cheating. As long as what you write
on the essay is your own work, formulating ideas and sharing notes is okay.
In fact, it is a big part of the learning process.
-
As an exam approaches, find out what you can about the form it will take.
This will help you forecast the questions that will be on the exam, and
prepare for them.
These suggestions will save you lots of time and misery later. Remember that you
can’t cram weeks of information into a single day or night of study. So why put
yourself in that position?
Now let’s focus on studying for the exam. You’ll notice the following
suggestions are all based on organizing your study materials into manageable
chunks of related material. If you have a plan of attack, you’ll feel more
confident and your answers will be more clear. Here
are some tips:
-
Don’t just memorize aimlessly; clarify the important issues of the course
and use these issues to focus your understanding of specific facts and
particular readings.
-
Try to organize and prioritize the information into a thematic pattern. Look
at what you’ve studied and find a way to put things into related groups.
Find the fundamental ideas that have been emphasized throughout the course
and organize your notes into broad categories. Think about how different
categories relate to each other.
-
Find out what you don’t know, but need to know, by making up test questions
and trying to answer them. Studying in groups helps as well.
Taking the exam
Read the exam carefully
-
If you are given the entire exam at once and can determine your approach on
your own, read the entire exam before you get started.
-
Look at how many points each part earns you, and find hints for how long
your answers should be.
-
Figure out how much time you have and how best to use it. Write down the
actual clock time that you expect to take in each section, and stick to it.
This will help you avoid spending all your time on only one section. One
strategy is to divide the available time according to percentage worth of
the question. You don’t want to spend half of your time on something that is
only worth one tenth of the total points.
-
As you read, make tentative choices of the questions you will answer (if you
have a choice). Don’t just answer the first essay question you encounter.
Instead, read through all of the options. Jot down really brief ideas for
each question before deciding.
-
Remember that the easiest-looking question is not always as easy as it
looks. Focus your attention on questions for which you can explain your
answer most thoroughly, rather than settle on questions where you know the
answer but can’t say why.
Analyze the questions
-
Decide what you are being asked to do. If you skim the question to find the
main “topic” and then rush to grasp any related ideas you can recall, you
may become flustered, lose concentration, and even go blank. Try looking
closely at what the question is directing you to do, and try to understand
the sort of writing that will be required.
-
Focus on what you do know about the question, not on what you don’t.
-
Look at the active verbs in the assignment—they tell you what you should be
doing. We’ve included some of these below, with some suggestions on what
they might mean. (For help with this sort of detective work, see the Writing
Center handout titled Reading Assignments.)
Key terms
Information words, such as who, what, when, where, how, and why ask you to
demonstrate what you know about the subject.
Information words may
include:
-
define—give the subject’s meaning (according to someone or something).
Sometimes you have to give more than one view on the subject’s meaning.
-
explain why/how—give reasons why or examples of how something happened.
-
illustrate—give descriptive examples of the subject and show how each is
connected with the subject.
-
summarize—briefly cover the important ideas you learned about the subject.
-
trace—outline how something has changed or developed from an earlier time to
its current form.
-
research—gather material from outside sources about the subject, often with
the implication or requirement that you will analyze what you’ve found.
Relation words ask you to demonstrate how things are connected. Relation
words may include:
-
compare—show how two or more things are similar (and, sometimes, different).
-
contrast—show how two or more things are dissimilar.
-
apply—use details that you’ve been given to demonstrate how an idea, theory,
or concept works in a particular situation.
-
cause—show how one event or series of events made something else happen.
-
relate—show or describe the connections between things.
Interpretation words ask you to defend ideas of your own about the subject.
Don’t see these words as requesting opinion alone (unless the assignment
specifically says so), but as requiring opinion that is supported by concrete
evidence. Remember examples, principles, definitions, or concepts from class or
research and use them in your interpretation. Interpretation
words may include:
-
prove, justify—give reasons or examples to demonstrate how or why something
is the truth.
-
evaluate, respond, assess—state your opinion of the subject as good, bad, or
some combination of the two, with examples and reasons (you may want to
compare your subject to something else).
-
support—give reasons or evidence for something you believe (be sure to state
clearly what it is that you believe).
-
synthesize—put two or more things together that haven’t been put together
before; don’t just summarize one and then the other, and say that they are
similar or different—you must provide a reason for putting them together (as
opposed to compare and contrast—see above).
-
analyze—look closely at the components of something to figure out how it
works, what it might mean, or why it is important.
-
argue—take a side and defend it (with proof) against the other side.
Plan your answers
Think about your time again. How much planning time you should take depends on
how much time you have for each question and how many points each question is
worth. Here
are some general guidelines:
-
For short-answer definitions and identifications, just take a few seconds.
Skip over any you don’t recognize fairly quickly, and come back to them when
another question jogs your memory.
-
For answers that require a paragraph or two, jot down several important
ideas or specific examples that help to focus your thoughts.
-
For longer answers, you will need to develop a much more definite strategy
of organization. You only have time for one draft, so allow a reasonable
amount of time—as much as a quarter of the time you’ve allotted for the
question—for making notes, determining a thesis, and developing an outline.
-
For questions with several parts (different requests or directions, a
sequence of questions), make a list of the parts so that you do not miss or
minimize one part. One way to be sure you answer them all is to number them
in the question and in your outline.
-
You may have to try two or three outlines or clusters before you hit on a
workable plan. But be realistic—you want a plan you can develop within the
limited time allotted for your answer. Your outline will have to be
selective—not everything you know, but what you know that you can state
clearly and keep to the point in the time available.
Again, focus on what you do know about the question, not on what you don’t.
Writing your answers
As with planning,
your strategy for writing depends on the length of your answer:
-
For short identifications and definitions, it is usually best to start with
a general identifying statement and then move on to describe specific
applications or explanations. Two sentences will almost always suffice, but
make sure they are complete sentences. Find out whether the instructor wants
definition alone, or definition and significance. Why is the identification
term or object important?
-
For longer answers, begin by stating your forecasting statement or thesis
clearly and explicitly. Strive for focus, simplicity, and clarity. In
stating your point and developing your answers, you may want to use
important course vocabulary words from the question. For example, if the
question is, “How does wisteria function as a representation of memory in
Faulkner’s Absalom, Absalom?” you may want to use the words wisteria,
representation, memory, and Faulkner) in your thesis statement and answer.
Use these important words or concepts throughout the answer.
-
If you have devised a promising outline for your answer, then you will be
able to forecast your overall plan and its subpoints in your opening
sentence. Forecasting impresses readers and has the very practical advantage
of making your answer easier to read. Also, if you don’t finish writing, it
tells your reader what you would have said if you had finished (and may get
you partial points).
-
You might want to use briefer paragraphs than you ordinarily do and signal
clear relations between paragraphs with transition phrases or sentences.
-
As you move ahead with the writing, you may think of new subpoints or ideas
to include in the essay. Stop briefly to make a note of these on your
original outline. If they are most appropriately inserted in a section
you’ve already written, write them neatly in the margin, at the top of the
page, or on the last page, with arrows or marks to alert the reader to where
they fit in your answer. Be as neat and clear as possible.
-
Don’t pad your answer with irrelevancies and repetitions just to fill up
space. Within the time available, write a comprehensive, specific answer.
-
Watch the clock carefully to ensure that you do not spend too much time on
one answer. You must be realistic about the time constraints of an essay
exam. If you write one dazzling answer on an exam with three
equally-weighted required questions, you earn only 33 points—not enough to
pass at most colleges. This may seem unfair, but keep in mind that
instructors plan exams to be reasonably comprehensive. They want you to
write about the course materials in two or three or more ways, not just one
way. Hint: if you finish a half-hour essay in 10 minutes, you may need to
develop some of your ideas more fully.
-
If you run out of time when you are writing an answer, jot down the
remaining main ideas from your outline, just to show that you know the
material and with more time could have continued your exposition.
-
Double-space to leave room for additions, and strike through errors or
changes with one straight line (avoid erasing or scribbling over). Keep
things as clean as possible. You never know what will earn you partial
credit.
-
Write legibly and proofread. Remember that your instructor will likely be
reading a large pile of exams. The more difficult they are to read, the more
exasperated the instructor might become. Your instructor also cannot give
you credit for what they cannot understand. A few minutes of careful
proofreading can improve your grade.
Perhaps the most important thing to keep in mind in writing essay exams is that
you have a limited amount of time and space in which to get across the knowledge
you have acquired and your ability to use it. Essay exams are not the place to
be subtle or vague. It’s okay to have an obvious structure, even the
five-paragraph essay format you may have been taught in high school. Introduce
your main idea, have several paragraphs of support—each with a single point
defended by specific examples, and conclude with a restatement of your main
point and its significance.
Some physiological tips
Just think—we expect athletes to practice constantly and use everything in their
abilities and situations in order to achieve success. Yet, somehow many students
are convinced that one day’s worth of studying, no sleep, and some well-placed
compliments (“Gee, Dr. So-and-so, I really enjoyed your last lecture”) are good
preparation for a test. Essay exams are like any other testing situation in
life: you’ll do best if you are prepared for what is expected of you, have
practiced doing it before, and have arrived in the best shape to do it.
You may not want to believe this, but it’s true: a good night’s sleep and a
relaxed mind and body can do as much or more for you as any last-minute cram
session. Colleges abound with tales of woe about students who slept through
exams because they stayed up all night, wrote an essay on the wrong topic,
forgot everything they studied, or freaked out in the exam and hyperventilated.
If you are rested, breathing normally, and have brought along some healthy,
energy-boosting snacks that you can eat or drink quietly, you are in a much
better position to do a good job on the test. You aren’t going to write a good
essay on something you figured out at 4 a.m. that morning. If you prepare
yourself well throughout the semester, you don’t risk your whole grade on an
overloaded, undernourished brain.
If for some reason you get yourself into this situation, take a minute every
once in a while during the test to breathe deeply, stretch, and clear your
brain. You need to be especially aware of the likelihood of errors, so check
your essays thoroughly before you hand them in to make sure they answer the
right questions and don’t have big oversights or mistakes (like saying “Hitler”
when you really mean “Churchill”).
If you tend to go blank during exams, try studying in the same classroom in
which the test will be given. Some research suggests that people attach ideas to
their surroundings, so it might jog your memory to see the same things you were
looking at while you studied.
Try good luck charms. Bring in something you associate with success or the
support of your loved ones, and use it as a psychological boost.
Take all of the time you’ve been allotted. Reread, rework, and rethink your
answers if you have extra time at the end, rather than giving up and handing the
exam in the minute you’ve written your last sentence. Use every advantage you
are given.
Remember that instructors do not want to see you trip up—they want to see you do
well. With this in mind, try to relax and just do the best you can. The more you
panic, the more mistakes you are liable to make. Put the test in perspective:
will you die from a poor performance? Will you lose all of your friends? Will
your entire future be destroyed? Remember: it’s just a test.
Works consulted
We consulted these works while writing this handout. This is not a comprehensive
list of resources on the handout’s topic, and we encourage you to do your own
research to find additional publications. Please do not use this list as a model
for the format of your own reference list, as it may not match the citation
style you are using. For guidance on formatting citations, please see the UNC
Libraries citation tutorial. We revise these tips periodically and welcome
feedback.
Axelrod, Rise B., and Charles R. Cooper. 2016. The
St. Martin’s Guide to Writing, 11th ed. Boston: Bedford/St Martin’s.
Fowler, Ramsay H., and Jane E. Aaron. 2016. The
Little, Brown Handbook, 13th ed. Boston: Pearson.
Gefvert, Constance J. 1988. The
Confident Writer: A Norton Handbook, 2nd ed. New York: W.W. Norton and
Company.
Kirszner, Laurie G. 1988. Writing:
A College Rhetoric, 2nd ed. New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston.
Lunsford, Andrea A. 2015. The
St. Martin’s Handbook, 8th ed. Boston: Bedford/St Martin’s.
Woodman, Leonara, and Thomas P. Adler. 1988. The
Writer’s Choices, 2nd ed. Northbrook, Illinois: Scott Foresman.