Check it out
No matter what kind of academic test you’re facing, you can boost your
chances of making the grade with help from library resources.
For fourth- through sixth-graders, 300 top high school students offer
tips for successfully preparing for tests and handling homework in
“Surviving Homework.”
Covering everything from dealing with boredom to memorizing lists, this
compendium of study secrets is written in a zippy style and features
lively cartoons that make its good sense highly palatable to younger
students.
Comprehensive guidance for effective learning is offered in “Where
There’s a Will There’s An ‘A,”’ a series of books, videos and cassettes
for students in grade school, high school and college. From dealing with
dyslexia to mastering memory skills, this motivational program, developed
by Arizona State University professor Claude Olney, offers myriad tools
for anyone facing scholastic pressures.
There’s a chapter devoted to taking tests, from midterms and finals to
PSATs and LSATs, in “Ron Fry’s How to Study Program.” This guide to
building study skills also includes tips for organizing study time,
excelling in class and writing reports and papers.
Young adolescents will find information on goal-setting, decision-making
and becoming a better test-taker in “The Junior High Survival Manual.” In
addition, there are suggestions for improving personal integrity and
social success in chapters focusing on making friends, improving
relationships and handling peer pressure.
For high school students preparing for advanced placement exams, numerous
volumes published by the Research and Education Assn., Barron’s and The
Princeton Review concentrate on American and European history, physics,
English literature and other specific subjects. Many feature full-length
model tests, essay tips and practice questions with answers and
explanations.
Also aimed at the college-bound are “10 Real SATs,” “SAT & PSAT” and
other works from The College Board and Kaplan Educational Centers that
provide strategies, practice tests and test-taking concepts aimed at
boosting college entrance test scores.
For exams testing verbal and language skills, “601 Words” includes word
lists, definitions and fascinating information on word origins and
changing usage.
For a more irreverent approach, check out “Up Your Score, The Underground
Guide to the SAT,” written by six students who scored more than 1500 on
this critical test. In addition to tips for thinking like SAT writers,
maintaining concentration, honing speed and being a good guesser, there’s
insider college admission advice, relaxation techniques and advice on the
fastest way to fill in the answer ovals in this strategy guide with
attitude.
Beyond tests, scholastic campuses can be minefields of social and
academic stress. To navigate them safely, consider solutions offered in
“Help! My Teacher Hates Me,” a collection of tips for moral, academic and
social quandaries -- from cheating and teacher woes to slipping grades
and sports anxieties.
CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public Library.
This week’s column is by Melissa Adams, in collaboration with Terri
Wiest.
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