Anyway, all you high achievers out there; how did you do it? Like really, how?
Did you slave your arse off and never see daylight? Did you balance work, leisure and play (if so, how?)
I put a lot of my ATAR down to my legal result, as my scores this year weren't amazing. I'm probably one of the few people here who didn't study endlessly, and even reading of the 4-8 hour study sessions makes me shudder! I spent maybe 1-2 hours studying a night, and definitely not everyday. Id say maybe 5 times a week. If I had a SAC, I'd add on another 2-3 hours the night before (I'm a crammer, sue me). Anyway, I didn't have a balance, nor did I work my arse off. I kinda just procrastinated... A lot. I procrastinated studying by studying, cleaning by exercising, and everything by playing pokemon.
Did you do a sport or part time job?
No sport, just walking. Part time job, yes. I worked 10-20 hours weekly. A lot of people criticise this, but I think it helped keep me sane. It was something to take my mind off studying for a few hours. Even through exams, I worked 5-10 hours a week.
Did you make endless amounts of notes and completed countless practice questions or spend hours each night studying?
I wrote up notes in class, never any more. When I studied, it was mostly reading, practice questions, or discussions with peers. From September onwards, I just smashed practice exams. For legal I did 22, but this year I only did maybe 5-10 for each subject (except lit, which I neglected, and wrote only 4 essays, oops). I learn through discussing, so a lot of my learning was just sitting down with my teachers or mates and talking about the content. As I already mentioned, I didn't study much at all.
Do you regret anything?
Yeah, but I'm slowly getting over it.
I regret doing further and methods both in one year. It made me hate Maths so much haha, and ultimately impacted my scores in both. I regret relying on natural ability in literature, it only gets you so far

.
Overall, while our contributions may give you ideas, it really just depends on what works for you. Find a balance that gives good results and stick to it! However, I cannot express enough the importance of mental and social well being through the year.