Post Brain Discussions Leading Into
SAT Testing Week!
Advisors, please
incorporate these discussion pieces and activities into the rest of your week.
Getting your Mind Ready
Discussion:
·
EAT!!!!!!
·
Plenty
of research shows that including protein at meals helps improve focus and
satisfy appetite.
·
A warm, cozy bowl of oatmeal is a terrific source of fiber-rich, slow-burn
carbohydrates that deliver a steady stream of energy for students' bodies and
brains to draw upon all morning long. Add in some soy milk or skim milk for the
protein!
·
Low-fat yogurt is a good source of protein, making it a fine
foundation for a substantial pre-test breakfast.
Activity:
·
Discuss having these types of foods at your Friday B-day
Breakfast. Plan the meal together and give helpful hints of like breakfasts
they can plan for the following week.
·
If you want to get really creative you can give students one of
the food guide My Plates and have them fill it with drawings or cut outs of
food. Check out this page http://www.squidoo.com/plate-coloring-page or go to www.Myplate.gov
Reducing Anxiety before
the Test
This
is a cute short animation that describes anxiety in kid terms https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pvM_TtQi9DU
Discussion:
·
The
next time you feel nervous or insecure before a test or presentation, try this
simple trick: take ten minutes to write down your feelings about it.
Psychologists at the University of Chicago recently published an article in the
journal Science
about this easy way for anxious students to relax before a high-stakes exam.
·
The
leaders of the study aimed to better understand why pressure-filled exam
situations undermine some students' performance.
·
Indeed, the study showed that stressed
students who were given ten minutes to express their feelings on paper
performed significantly better than their peers who either wrote about other
topics or did nothing at all.
Activity:
·
Try it! Get out some paper or those journals
we are supposed to be working with and give the students a few minutes to put
on paper how they are feeling.
·
Then
Pair Share, or rip the page out and have a snow ball fight, or play hot potato
with all the pages crumpled into one big ball.
Reduce
Anxiety during the test
Discussion:
·
Symptoms of test anxiety include sweating,
shallow breathing, upset stomach, feeling jittery, insomnia and inability to
concentrate. While studying ahead of time is a great way to feel more in
control of the test material, there are also certain tricks to help you with
anxiety during the test itself
For multiple-choice questions, eliminate and decide. Most multiple-choice questions have
four possible answers. You can often eliminate two answers immediately. That
leaves two possible answers. Can you decide between the two? If so, then mark
the correct answer and move on. If not, make an educated guess - you have a 50%
chance of getting it right.
For essay questions, brainstorm and outline before writing. Don't let yourself
freeze up while staring at that blank essay form. Use your scratch paper to get
those ideas moving by brainstorming whatever comes to mind related to the essay
question. Then quickly organize those thoughts into a brief outline, and you're
ready to start writing your essay.
Keep it moving. Because most tests are timed, it's important to pace
yourself during a test and not spend too long on any one item. For example, if
you have a multiple-choice section followed by an essay question, you should
leave enough time for the essay. To avoid getting stuck on a multiple-choice
question, use the "eliminate-and-decide" strategy discussed above. If
your test allows you to skip questions, you may need to do so if you get stuck
on a particular question.
Breathe and stretch. Test anxiety results from a heightened "fight or
flight" biological response to a threatening event. The good news is that
this response can help you to think fast. The bad news is that the jittery
feelings and other symptoms can interfere with your concentration. There are
two good ways to counteract test anxiety during a test: 1) breathe deeply,
causing your stomach - not your chest - to rise as you inhale, and 2) relieve
muscle tension by periodically stretching, or by making a fist and releasing
it.
Activity:
·
Review different types of tests questions.
·
Ask students for their own helpful tips
·
Give some sample questions
·
Review the bubbling and test procedures
·
If you are really connecting with your
students and think you can get them to focus on their breath you can use the CD
and technique that Brandy talked with us about or you can find something online
to tryout like http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lnXrXX0m-NE
Thank you for taking the time to help your students
prepare for the week of testing!
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