Thanks for replying Heidiii! Hope other TTers join this discussion!!
Absolutely. If you're lurking reading this, anyone - please join in! You have only to gain if you do

Also, I wanted to ask, if one wants a ss between 38-43? What should my sac average be?
I'm not really sure - just aim for being at the top of your class as much as possible, and
do your best, really - ultimately it's your exam performance that means the most, and I've seen people doing really well in SACs get smashed by the exam and getting far lower than they deserve (and the other way round).
Anddd how do I memorise the information or verse numbers? Struggling a lot with that tbh
(
Yeah, there's a
lot of content to learn in this subject, and it's hard.
Memory tips:
- Teach them to someone else - a friend, the mirror, a teddy bear, w/e
- Keep using them and writing about them, and if you write closed-book, remember to go afterwards and fill in the gaps of content or verses you couldn't remember but could have used
-
Anki- More fun ways of learning content: sing it to tunes you know, dramatically declaim it or say in other people's voices, draw it, flow-charts, record it and listen to it
- Test yourself often (create questions about the content, have a daily quiz?)
- Sticky notes and posters with verses and facts in your bathroom and on the walls... surround yourself in it
The same thing happens to me too in my last sac we had to answer one extended response question, one essay and one exegesis in about 1hr and 30 mins or something. I fell like they expect to much for the amount of time they give.
Welcome on board, it's good to see you zulaltekeli!

Yeah, that's the perennial curse of T&T

It always killed me, for sure.
Timing tips- Don't spent time thinking how to phrase things, like English - they don't mind if it's a bit ugly
- PRACTICE heaps and heaps of past questions/exegeses, timed
- Avoid fluff and repetition - it takes practice to learn to write concisely; keep seeking feedback on this and trying to improve next time
- Know your concrete facts well, helps you to put them down quickly
- Get really familiar with nice-sounding sentences on commonly repeated topics (i.e. nearly memorise them by keeping using them); they start flowing off your fingers without much thought, which is really much faster
- Full steam ahead - write as fast as is humanly possible in the time
