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How to Score High Marks in Exams

Written By

Anonymous

Published

March 2, 2026

Mastering Your Exams: A Strategy for Success

Hello there! I'm so glad you're here. Think of me as your personal coach. Scoring high marks isn't about being a "genius"—it's about having a better game plan than everyone else.

Why this matters

Studying hard is common; studying smart is rare. By shifting your approach, you can cut your study time in half while doubling your retention. It's about working with your brain, not against it.

1. Treat Your Brain Like a Library

Imagine your brain is a massive library. If you just throw books (information) through the front door in a pile, you'll never find them during an exam. You need to index that information.

Instead of re-reading your notes until you're bored, use Active Recall. Close the book and ask yourself: "What did I just learn?" If it's hard to remember, that's good! That's the sound of your "mental muscles" growing stronger.

Pro-Tip Don't highlight everything. Highlights are just "colorful distractions." Only mark the "Golden Nuggets"—the key concepts that connect everything else.

2. The Power of "Mock" Stress

Exams are like marathons. You wouldn't show up to a race without having run the distance first. At least once a week, sit down in a quiet room, set a timer, and solve a past paper without your notes. This builds exam stamina and kills the "blank page" anxiety.

For more resources on organizing your study sessions, check out our guide on effective study planning.

Deep Dive: The Feynman Technique

Named after a Nobel-winning physicist, this is the ultimate test of knowledge. It works in four simple steps:

  • Choose a topic you're struggling to understand.
  • Explain it out loud as if you were talking to a 10-year-old.
  • Identify the gaps where you got stuck or used big words you couldn't explain.
  • Go back to the source and simplify your explanation until it's crystal clear.

If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough yet.

3. Eat, Sleep, and Breathe Strategy

You cannot fuel a Ferrari with cheap soda. Your brain needs sleep to move information from short-term memory to long-term storage. Pulling an all-nighter is like trying to write on water—it won't stick.

Explore More Resources

You've got this. Take a deep breath, pick one topic, and start small. Consistency beats intensity every single time.

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