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August 23, 2025, 07:14:51 pm

Author Topic: How can I adapt to the exam's time limit  (Read 3556 times)  Share 

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sin0001

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How can I adapt to the exam's time limit
« on: March 06, 2013, 05:57:40 pm »
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I just had my Language Analysis SAC, and I completely failed as I ended up being short on time, despite the SAC being 2 hours long...
This always happens to me under exam/SAC conditions, for English, and I'm concerned whether I'll be able to be able to finish the end of year English exam :/
I was thinking that this might be because of the fact that I always type up my practice SACs and take 3-4 hours to write them, I definitely need to practice under exam conditions more often.
So if you guys can be awesome  :) and suggest a strategy I can use, between now and the end-of year exams, to write much more efficiently (not just for Lang. Analyses, but for every English essay) and ensure that I'm able to finish well on time, come exam time.
One of my teachers suggested handwriting practices once a fortnight, but instead of stopping at the one-hour mark, I should draw a line to see how much I get done in the time limit.
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jeanweasley

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Re: How can I adapt to the exam's time limit
« Reply #1 on: March 06, 2013, 09:18:04 pm »
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I think you definitely need to practise under exam conditions, stop at the 1 hour mark. Also, it would help if you are stuck for time thinking on what to write that you leave at least 5 minutes to plan your points; they need not be overly detailed but I think just a summary so that you have an overview of what you're talking about.

Also, use a timer when writing and test yourself to think quickly. That means for example brainstorming topics for practise within 5 minutes. You can also practise writing quickly by attaching a rubber at the end of your pen. I've been told this is an effective method but I'm not sure since it didn't really help me. It might help you though.

You could write an essay a week if that helps you seeing that it is possible because you have 3 hours for the exam anyway. Practise is the key!
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brenden

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Re: How can I adapt to the exam's time limit
« Reply #2 on: March 06, 2013, 11:56:56 pm »
+3
Firstly - don't let it psych you out. This is a very common issue (and I use the word issue very hesitantly).
A friend of mine was in the exact same position as you this time last year. In fact, she finished one SAC for the entire year! Timing really was her struggle. She often typed up essays, taking hours to perfect them. She just worked at it and slowly her time went down and down :). She never wrote a full piece in less than seventy minutes iirc, in fact, she didn't conclude any piece on the exam and she got a 50.
Your teacher's suggestion is a good one. Both my friend and I did this (however I rarely needed to, timing was one of my biggest assets, and served me well when I fucked up in the exam lol). I would also recommend handwriting perhaps every second essay. It's important to write it on a computer and feel like you're writing it perfectly, but handwriting is also useful. Don't give a time limit, but time yourself. Just try to finish as fast as you can. Legitimately. Don't be like "oh I don't have a time limit four hours is as fast as I can". Hard out, race yourself like your life depends on it. It will take some discipline.
Once you've done this race with yourself. See the time. Then take five minutes off. Your next essay, that's your goal. Then your next essay, maintain that five minute shave. Then shave another two and a half.
Conversely, think "I will write 500 words in an hour". Do it. Then, 550 words. Etc. However I prefer the first approach. I often sat practice SACs to time at home prior to a real SAC (or sometimes wrote practice SACs in class and aimed to do it in an hour. Was good in real SACs because it was like I had double the time).
A habit I also had was to write down the exact minutes it took me to write each paragraph. For a Twelve Angry Men essay, on average, it would take me about eleven minutes for the intro, around thirteen minutes on the paragraphs, and then the conclusion never mattered because it took me like five minutes. (Quite general times, they ofc vary depending on conditions) but it gave me a mental limit. If I got to the ten minute mark and I was half way through my intro, I knew I had to beast mode another paragraph. It was all a game of mental give and take.
Also, move your hand quicker. One thing I found that helped timing was rushing from the start (tactically, not like an idiot that will make many mistakes). If you write quicker in the last ten minutes than in the first ten minutes... well, write that fast for the first twenty minutes and then you have breathing room for the rest of your essay!! That was a habit of mine in SACs. We also go two hours, so I would write insanely quick at the start and then breathe easy :).
Sometimes, sacrifice a perfect sentence for your timing. People fuck themselves over psychologically. Don't take fifteen minutes going "fuck oh no cry cry my grammar in this sounds retarded and I sort of have a solution but it's sort of only half good". Just take the fucking solution, even if it is half good, and fix it later.
As you get better at writing, maybe your word count will decrease.


Just, don't stress too much about the exam. It's a long time away. Without fail, Year 12s do not consider SWOTVAC in their calculations of their abilities. If you do it right, you can improve... by... infinity...
Happy writing :)
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FlorianK

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Re: How can I adapt to the exam's time limit
« Reply #3 on: March 07, 2013, 06:20:00 am »
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The last 2 essays I wrote for English took me like 3 hours each, in the exam it took me 1 each.
The TR essay that I wrote in the exam was the longest, fastest and best essay I ever wrote.
The exam conditions will help you, well they helped me.
Otherwise just practice heaps, you'll copy specific wordings that you remember from previous essays and stuff

brenden

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Re: How can I adapt to the exam's time limit
« Reply #4 on: March 07, 2013, 05:37:33 pm »
+1
I'd also be wary of the "adrenaline will push me over the line". My heart beat didn't increase one single little bit during my English exam. Not even when I had thirty minutes left and hadn't started my last piece. It's like I was detached from the seriousness of the situation lol. Some adrenaline could have been really handy! hahaha
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Re: How can I adapt to the exam's time limit
« Reply #5 on: March 07, 2013, 06:12:02 pm »
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I'd also be wary of the "adrenaline will push me over the line". My heart beat didn't increase one single little bit during my English exam. Not even when I had thirty minutes left and hadn't started my last piece. It's like I was detached from the seriousness of the situation lol. Some adrenaline could have been really handy! hahaha

Wow, to have no adrenaline kick in the English exam is pretty much unheard of haha, you must've been pretty zen... My leg was jittering so hard I reflex-kicked the chair of the person in front of me at least 5 times.

OP, don't be like me - get practicing now, and get practicing regularly. And when you're practicing, don't try to write to the time limits specified in the exam so early! Start with a reasonable goal, and see if you can achieve that as a basis. Then, wipe 5-10 minutes off the allocated time with each essay you write to time. Consider only wiping off minutes when you're comfortable writing to a specific time, BUT make sure you don't fall into the habit of writing to that time limit unless it's at the point that you want it to be during the exam.

Also, it's important to note that the time it will take for you to complete an essay is likely to be dependent on text/prompt/multitudinous variables. Make sure you don't lump all your practice into one type of prompt, or into one text.
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brenden

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Re: How can I adapt to the exam's time limit
« Reply #6 on: March 07, 2013, 07:38:15 pm »
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Yeah, I was honestly so surprised.  I was expecting to go like a Zertek. I think I had practised so much it was like "there is nothing that I can't handle", which, ironically, was what I couldn't handle, because it ended up with me writing a ninety minute LAnal because I was too relaxed.
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abcdqdxD

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Re: How can I adapt to the exam's time limit
« Reply #7 on: March 07, 2013, 08:09:32 pm »
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I have a similar problem, except my SAC is 60 minutes writing time + 15 minutes "planning time" where we can plan (and sneakily write) our text response. So essentially I have to finish in 75 mins.. should I go for quantity over quality or the other way around?

It takes me a good 2-3 hours to type up the "perfect" piece.. I've got almost 3 weeks left to prepare, what should I do?

brenden

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Re: How can I adapt to the exam's time limit
« Reply #8 on: March 07, 2013, 08:11:41 pm »
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Quality of an English essay will always beat quantity, if it is a choice between the two.
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HossRyams

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Re: How can I adapt to the exam's time limit
« Reply #9 on: March 08, 2013, 01:20:22 pm »
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HEY sin0001 - a bit creepy, but I figured out who you were from your subjects. I guess you can figure out from my username who I am anyway, so.... Hey! We're in the same homegroup! LOLOLOL

FIRST OF ALL, that SAC was a comparative piece with 3 pieces (including 2 long-ass articles), hence the 2 hour time limit (I didn't sit it though, I'll be sitting an alternative SAC). If we were to somehow, although unlikely, receive a comparison task for the exam with the same amount of pieces, it would be much shorter. But I'm presuming we'll only have to compose a single article analysis in the exam.

How did you go about writing the Language Analysis in the previous exams at school? (Both mid-years and end of year in year 11?)

For me, I spent about 40 minutes writing the essay. I spent about 10-15 minutes purely planning out everything. I would start grouping similar purposes/effects so I could construct a coherent essay. Then I could get straight into writing my piece without really having to stop at any moment. (And if it helps, I got 19/20 for both exams for my language analysis) I usually write about 3 pages for my LA. Perhaps I could suggest that approach?

I also definitely agree with practising under timed conditions (+ handwrite it). In fact, you should time it so you finish it in 50 minutes (just to be safe) and keep doing it until writing a killer essay in a short time is second nature! I'm trying to work in a system where I write at least one essay per week. I only type up my first few practice essays per section, and then after that, I try and keep it all handwritten!

ANYWAY chill out, I know you (creepy muahaha) you're a hardworking guy, you'll get there! :D That analysis will only make up 5% of your entire score so it can be made up for.

Edit: typo
« Last Edit: March 08, 2013, 01:22:25 pm by youshine »
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HossRyams

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Re: How can I adapt to the exam's time limit
« Reply #10 on: March 08, 2013, 01:27:11 pm »
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I have a similar problem, except my SAC is 60 minutes writing time + 15 minutes "planning time" where we can plan (and sneakily write) our text response. So essentially I have to finish in 75 mins.. should I go for quantity over quality or the other way around?

It takes me a good 2-3 hours to type up the "perfect" piece.. I've got almost 3 weeks left to prepare, what should I do?

Wait - you get 15 minutes of planning time where you're allowed to write? Anyway I'd still deal some of that time into just really coming up with the best ideas and what examples would come under each before I begin writing. If you quickly plan it out first, you can avoid missing out anything and maintaining a good pace when writing.

Anyway, since you've got plenty of time prior to the SAC, I'd write a sh!t-tonne of practice essays on random prompts (shouldn't be too hard to find if your teacher doesn't provide you with some) and get a teacher to mark them. The feedback is crucial, so you might as well make as many mistakes as you can now to avoid it during the SAC. :P
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sin0001

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Re: How can I adapt to the exam's time limit
« Reply #11 on: March 08, 2013, 10:41:47 pm »
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Firstly - don't let it psych you out. This is a very common issue (and I use the word issue very hesitantly).
A friend of mine was in the exact same position as you this time last year. In fact, she finished one SAC for the entire year! Timing really was her struggle. She often typed up essays, taking hours to perfect them. She just worked at it and slowly her time went down and down :). She never wrote a full piece in less than seventy minutes iirc, in fact, she didn't conclude any piece on the exam and she got a 50.
Your teacher's suggestion is a good one. Both my friend and I did this (however I rarely needed to, timing was one of my biggest assets, and served me well when I fucked up in the exam lol). I would also recommend handwriting perhaps every second essay. It's important to write it on a computer and feel like you're writing it perfectly, but handwriting is also useful. Don't give a time limit, but time yourself. Just try to finish as fast as you can. Legitimately. Don't be like "oh I don't have a time limit four hours is as fast as I can". Hard out, race yourself like your life depends on it. It will take some discipline.
Once you've done this race with yourself. See the time. Then take five minutes off. Your next essay, that's your goal. Then your next essay, maintain that five minute shave. Then shave another two and a half.
Conversely, think "I will write 500 words in an hour". Do it. Then, 550 words. Etc. However I prefer the first approach. I often sat practice SACs to time at home prior to a real SAC (or sometimes wrote practice SACs in class and aimed to do it in an hour. Was good in real SACs because it was like I had double the time).
A habit I also had was to write down the exact minutes it took me to write each paragraph. For a Twelve Angry Men essay, on average, it would take me about eleven minutes for the intro, around thirteen minutes on the paragraphs, and then the conclusion never mattered because it took me like five minutes. (Quite general times, they ofc vary depending on conditions) but it gave me a mental limit. If I got to the ten minute mark and I was half way through my intro, I knew I had to beast mode another paragraph. It was all a game of mental give and take.
Also, move your hand quicker. One thing I found that helped timing was rushing from the start (tactically, not like an idiot that will make many mistakes). If you write quicker in the last ten minutes than in the first ten minutes... well, write that fast for the first twenty minutes and then you have breathing room for the rest of your essay!! That was a habit of mine in SACs. We also go two hours, so I would write insanely quick at the start and then breathe easy :).
Sometimes, sacrifice a perfect sentence for your timing. People fuck themselves over psychologically. Don't take fifteen minutes going "fuck oh no cry cry my grammar in this sounds retarded and I sort of have a solution but it's sort of only half good". Just take the fucking solution, even if it is half good, and fix it later.
As you get better at writing, maybe your word count will decrease.


Just, don't stress too much about the exam. It's a long time away. Without fail, Year 12s do not consider SWOTVAC in their calculations of their abilities. If you do it right, you can improve... by... infinity...
Happy writing :)
Thanks, that made me feel so much better, always look forward to your motivational responses :P
And woah, you had 30 mins for the last piece and yet you scored 56/60, nice!
Wow, to have no adrenaline kick in the English exam is pretty much unheard of haha, you must've been pretty zen... My leg was jittering so hard I reflex-kicked the chair of the person in front of me at least 5 times.

OP, don't be like me - get practicing now, and get practicing regularly. And when you're practicing, don't try to write to the time limits specified in the exam so early! Start with a reasonable goal, and see if you can achieve that as a basis. Then, wipe 5-10 minutes off the allocated time with each essay you write to time. Consider only wiping off minutes when you're comfortable writing to a specific time, BUT make sure you don't fall into the habit of writing to that time limit unless it's at the point that you want it to be during the exam.

Also, it's important to note that the time it will take for you to complete an essay is likely to be dependent on text/prompt/multitudinous variables. Make sure you don't lump all your practice into one type of prompt, or into one text.
It's the adrenaline rush that gets to me, in exams (specifically English :/ )
And yeah, I'll look into the 'wiping off 5-10 mins' technique, sounds good :)
HEY sin0001 - a bit creepy, but I figured out who you were from your subjects. I guess you can figure out from my username who I am anyway, so.... Hey! We're in the same homegroup! LOLOLOL

FIRST OF ALL, that SAC was a comparative piece with 3 pieces (including 2 long-ass articles), hence the 2 hour time limit (I didn't sit it though, I'll be sitting an alternative SAC). If we were to somehow, although unlikely, receive a comparison task for the exam with the same amount of pieces, it would be much shorter. But I'm presuming we'll only have to compose a single article analysis in the exam.

How did you go about writing the Language Analysis in the previous exams at school? (Both mid-years and end of year in year 11?)

For me, I spent about 40 minutes writing the essay. I spent about 10-15 minutes purely planning out everything. I would start grouping similar purposes/effects so I could construct a coherent essay. Then I could get straight into writing my piece without really having to stop at any moment. (And if it helps, I got 19/20 for both exams for my language analysis) I usually write about 3 pages for my LA. Perhaps I could suggest that approach?

I also definitely agree with practising under timed conditions (+ handwrite it). In fact, you should time it so you finish it in 50 minutes (just to be safe) and keep doing it until writing a killer essay in a short time is second nature! I'm trying to work in a system where I write at least one essay per week. I only type up my first few practice essays per section, and then after that, I try and keep it all handwritten!

ANYWAY chill out, I know you (creepy muahaha) you're a hardworking guy, you'll get there! :D That analysis will only make up 5% of your entire score so it can be made up for.

Edit: typo
Lol had a feeling you would figure it out, given that I post quite frequently.
Last year LA was my strongest are in English, and it pretty much saved me from flunking the exam. But if I can't write withing the time limit, it's useless. I'm definitely gonna handwrite my practices from now on.
Thanks for the suggestion, will look into it :) Good luck with your studies!
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brenden

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Re: How can I adapt to the exam's time limit
« Reply #12 on: March 08, 2013, 10:50:29 pm »
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Hahaha, yeah, three of those four marks were lost on that story :'(


Just kidding about the cry-y face.


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Shenz0r

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Re: How can I adapt to the exam's time limit
« Reply #13 on: March 08, 2013, 10:57:16 pm »
+1
Sometimes it took me 10 hours to type up my first essays for each section. Hahaha good old days.

But you find with time that as you write more essays, your speed gets quicker and quicker. Old ideas and phrases may come back to you, and with enough practise your ideas will become so ingrained that you just automatically think of good points.

When I was trying to cut down into the time-limit for each SAC, I would ideally write 3 typed essays completely untimed, then I would write a handwritten essay with an extra 20 mins, then an extra 15 mins, then an extra 10 mins, then no extra time.

It works, but yeah you have to write lots of essays,.
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lala1911

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Re: How can I adapt to the exam's time limit
« Reply #14 on: March 11, 2013, 09:03:13 pm »
+1
Here's what can help you:
- You said it takes you 3 hours to do an essay, try to gradually minimise the time you allocate to complete an essay. Start off at the 3-hour limit you're currently writing your essays at and next time try a 2.5-hour limit and so on.

- Perhaps you're not entering the SAC with enough ideas. It was a major issue for me, and still is.