How to study
I am looking for ideas from both instructors and students on how best to help my class. I am looking mainly on what to give them as far as study tips for the exams.
I just finished my EMR course and had to learn to study again at 39. It's been a while since I cracked a book. Adults who never went to college, may never have learned HOW to study. Sometimes things just came easy to them in high school, or they just didn't care way back then. A class to teach them or remind them how to study is a really good idea. These are my suggestions of what worked for me:
- Our instructor handed out prints of the powerpoint presentation so we could just take notes on what she was saying rather than what was on the board.
- The instructor used plenty of real-life examples to help us visualize what the topic was
- When we covered something that was behavioral, eg seizures, I had never seen one, so I googled YouTube for "seizures" to get an idea what it looked like and how I would handle it. Obstetrics was another one. I have never had children, so I needed to know what was going on down there...
- The instructor has an alter-ego called Zelda where she dresses up as a bum, right down to taking her teeth out... :wacko: so we have to lift, carry, treat and sometimes deal with a difficult personality, altered LOC, etc.
- She fell short in one way, in that the scenario for each topic covered ONLY that topic. Although there were always vital signs to take, I think she could have used more cumulative scenarios - eg we're covering a fracture but maybe they had a medical issue that caused the person to fall so we had to think through the call not just treat the fracture. There wasn't enough critical thinking for me - but maybe that's an EMR thing. (I'm applying for EMT school next)
- When I study I take notes while I read and highlight. By
just reading you are using only one side of your brain. By
reading and writing, you are using both sides of your brain, and you are more likely to remember words in your own handwriting, than just printed words in a book.
- Memorize by saying things out loud - sometimes when you hear your voice you remember better as well. The brain is a wonderful thing...
- Lists make EMS lives easier - it invokes structure right? Well to remember the lists we make anagrams...SAMPLE or DCAPBLS-TIC-PMS. I write those lists over and over again - sometimes I'm studing chapter 9 and will randomly make lists just to make sure I remember them from chapter 2 (whatever)... I recite them when I'm commuting. I make up new ones, for example, Routes of parenteral Drug Administration - 4I-SNEUTD. It may make no sense but it helped me remember the list for the exams. Remember, you don't
always have to remember something in the order in which it was taught. Sometimes, but not always, especially for exams.
- It helps to do multiple choice tests online just to get practice at recognizing questions, kinds of questions, and how they're answered - even helps you to realize what topics you are weak on. Just google
free EMT or EMR Practice Exams and voila - tons of practice tests. If you have certain protocols in your province or state, you will probably know or recognize to question their answer but 90% of the time, the answer is standard across the board.
- For the Midterm and Final exams - and for my provincial exam, I redid every weekly test we had. The more you practice, the more familiar you will become with writing tests. AND most importantly, the more confidence you get, the less exam anxiety that you hopefully will experience.
I got over 90% on every weekly test, 92% on my midterm, 93% on my final and I'm pretty sure I only got 3 wrong on the provincial exam.
I hope this helps. Sorry it is such a long email.