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Study Tip #18 HANDLING TEST ANXIETY (Part 1) Topics
Influences on feelings of worry and safety One key to lowering test anxiety is to lower your belief that you will be seriously harmed. Stress is the anticipation of harm, says psychologist Richard Lazarus. So when we expect to be hurt, damaged, injured, we are expecting harm and we feel stress, one sign of which is feeling anxious. When taking a test, we sometimes know that we might do poorly, which can mean harm, and we often feel anxious. We can help ourselves by thinking thoughts to lessen our belief that we will be harmed. Thoughts That Help Us Feel Safe
Since you will be using thinking methods to help your mind feel safe, you will need to assess if you can think on command. Please think the following thought and notice if you can do it. Think of a red house with a green roof. Now think of three parts of the house I didn’t mention. Now think about counting from 1 to 10 slowly and return to thoughts of the house and its parts. Well, can you do it? If you can, the thinking methods may work for you. There is a psychological principle that you will use: If you think of something, your cooperative mind will automatically start to bring to mind other bits of knowledge, feelings, and motives linked in the past to that first thought. You will handle test anxiety by choosing to think of things that lead to knowledge of safety and safe feelings. 1. Think that the amount of harm is low. Have you noticed that when you think that very bad things will happen if you do poorly on a test, your anxiety rises? If you think that the amount of harm is high and intense and that you expect severe damage and pain, you will worry more. By contrast, when you think that the harm will be a small amount of damage to you, you will worry less. So try these thoughts.
2. Think that even if a test failure could be harmful, you can prevent it because you have a lot of abilities, a lot of things you can do. Perhaps in the past you have noticed that when you think that you are stupid and incompetent, unable to learn the material, unable to remember what you studied, then you believe you are helpless and have no way to fight the damage that comes from doing poorly on a test. Instant test anxiety! In contrast, when you think about what you do know and about the abilities you do have, you will start to have safe feelings. We all have some strengths and weaknesses; the glass is half full and half empty. Worriers think of all they don’t know; calm people think about what they do know. Think of the topics you have studied and know. Think of your general abilities. Think about your knowledge of how to handle test anxiety. 3. Think that even if a test failure could be harmful, you can prevent it because you have helpers, friends, and forces on your side. The prior suggestion was about your ability; this one is about resources outside of you. Think about:
4. Think about other things than the harm. Even if you could be hurt by poor performance on a test, you don’t have to think about it. You can think about other things. Many people deliberately turn their mind to other things and that weakens the strength of the worry.
5. Think that the harm is far away in the future. When we know that trouble is coming but that it is far in the future, we feel safer than when we think trouble is immediate and near. So you can make mental images of the test as far away, so far that it seems blurry and unreal. When your worried mind makes it seem near and large and bright, make your visual imagery send it far away and small and dim. Say such distancing words as: “It’s not until tomorrow.” Combine the practice of not thinking about tomorrow with the sense that the future is distance and you’ll lower worry. (This is another of Dale Carnegie’s top three methods: “Live in day-tight compartments.”) 6. Think that the events signaling possible trouble are merely normal expected trouble, nothing unusual. It is a principle regarding emotions that when we define events as surprises, interruptions, and obstacles, we feel intense emotions. In contrast, if we define events as just normal expected events, we take a relaxed attitude towards them. When bad things happen while you take a test, keep thinking, “That’s normal. It’s expected. It’s common.”
7. Think that you have such important goals that you are willing anyway to expose yourself to the dangers of taking tests. When people see a loved one in danger, they often expose themselves to things they are intensely afraid. I’ve seen a woman who is intensely afraid of snakes rescue her curious cat who was walking too close to an 8-foot snake. I’ve read about parents rescuing their kids from oncoming cars. And you can use your strong goals for learning material and getting an education to help you face tests. You must remember those goals and think about them and think about why they are worthwhile. You will have both self-oriented goals (making money and a name for yourself) and generous loving goals (providing for loved ones and using your skills to help others live better lives). 8. Avoid other anxious people before a test so that they do not infect you with their anxious thoughts. You have probably noticed how strongly other people can affect us. When you hang around anxious people, you may pick up their worries and start worrying yourself. So stay away from them. (file: 18-Test Anxiety Part 1.doc. Dan Hodges. 4/2004) |
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