Test Prep Services New London CT
Getting ready for an intense exam can be nerve wracking. Study and don’t stress. Here you will find some pointers on taking standardized tests that will give you more confidence. Also consider doing test prep before serious placement tests such as GMAT, GRE, LSAT, MCAT, SAT, and ACT. Here you will find test prep centers in New London, CT listed below.
AMH Real Property Appraisals
(203) 314-3303
P.O.Box 144
Guilford, CT
Paul Thomas Piano Studio
(203) 488-6857
102 Sunset Hill Dr
Branford, CT
Paul Thomas Piano Studio
(203) 488-6857
102 Sunset Hill Dr
Branford, CT 06405
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QUIZZICLE, LLC
1-203-230-2887
2558 Whitney Avenue
Hamden, CT
Aimee Badner School of Music
(860) 677-7701
14 Eddy St.
Avon, CT
Aimee Badner School of Music
(860) 677-7701
14 Eddy St.
Avon, CT 06001
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Brass City Ballet
203-598-0186
1255 Middlebury Road
Middlebury, CT
Harris AgriScience & Technology Center
(860) 286-2630
5 Huckleberry Lane
Bloomfield, CT
Harris AgriScience & Technology Center
(860) 286-2630
5 Huckleberry Lane
Bloomfield, CT 06002
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Tutoring in Reading
(203) 881-1276
28 Old State Road ONE
Oxford, CT
Too Cute for Words
203 381 6211
Marcroft St
Stratford, CT
Gary Knepler Driving School
203-268-6040
446 Main Street
Monroe, CT
A Way to Learn, LLC
203-557-0939
175 Post Road West
Westport, CT
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Provided by petersons.com Once you've registered to take your exam and you've decided how you're going to study for it, you can turn your attention to the actual test situation. Ask yourself three questions: - How do I really feel about taking tests? Am I generally relaxed and efficient?
- Am I nervous in a test situation, so nervous that I waste time with instructions, get confused by questions, or fixate on getting the answer to every one, unable to move on until I do?
- What special skills will I need to work on in order to improve my test performance?
Recently, a group of students spoke candidly with Peterson's about their first reactions to standardized tests: - "When it comes to tests, I'm the kind of person who gets hypnotized by the clock. I watch the minutes tick away and become more and more tense until I can't work anymore. Consequently I never finish tests on time and always leave them with a sense of deep frustration."
- "It's funny; I always worked hard and performed pretty well in my high school classes and on the tests we had every week in class. But I've never been able to transfer that success over to standardized tests. I just wish I didn't have to be judged by how well I do on tests, and that people would just accept me for who I am."
- "In test situations I just can't focus on the test! I keep thinking of how much fun I am going to have next Saturday afternoon when I get together with my friends."
If you have a hard time focusing when you go into a test, remember how you overcame other challenges in your life, like your first dive into the local swimming pool. You talked to yourself, right? Do this again, and persuade yourself to look at the questions in a relaxed and thoughtful manner. If the clock intimidates you, then practice with your software or test-preparation book, using a kitchen timer. When the timer rings, reset it and move on to the next question no matter what. You will get used to thinking more efficiently and quickly. If difficult questions make you panic, then the appropriate strategy would be to skip the difficult questions. On most standardized tests, some of the responses will be more difficult than others, and each response counts the same. Think of the fact that if you correctly skip the few difficult questions on the test and get all the others right, you are going to do very well. If you have difficulty with a question and pass it by, you can always look at it again later if there is time. Faced with four or five multiple-choice responses to a question you understand, eliminate the one or two obvious wrong answers, then select the response that best answers the question. If you are still puzzled, do not respond to the question at all. Remember not to read too much into a question. Take the test questions at face value. The test makers are not out to trick you, believe it or not. A Group Approach to Test Anxiety Sometimes cou... |
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