Tuesday 18 February 2014

curhatnya • 6 ways to ace ujian nasional

Ujian Nasional. That mofo? Been there, aced that.

It was mostly luck, of course. Most students find the low-grade paper the answer sheet was printed on an epic awful disadvantage. Me being the cheap shit I am, actually gained an upper hand. It was easier doing the black dots in that cheap paper rather than on the sleek expensive one. Sorry not sorry to be one of those kids that doodles on recycled paper!

And I am also that lucky bastard that only study partially for a test, all in my underprepared glory, and only the chapters I read (or mostly remember, because I don't really do studying) came up.

So this tips & tricks are proli super dubious and all, but hey, I did not get the highest UN score in my school only by pure luck. Maybe. But maybe there's someone out there that's as lucky as I am, so here goes nothing!

1. Pay attention. Lots of it. 
I know that teachers are extremely boring in class. I get that. They drone on and on and on about a certain subject that you want to puke because of information overload. Especially on that mandatory extra classes after school where they crammed three years worth of studying into a session. Like, what the fuck. But it will actually do you good if you pay attention. 
I seem to recall a scientist theory about remembering something perfectly after you read it seven times (more or less? idk). So, if they repeat the chapter long enough, there's a good chance that the information will cling to your brain. If not read it, at least do hear it. I seem to recall that it's easier to learn by listening.

2. Those mock tests and exercise books? Do it. 
There's the UN try outs. There's this book called 'Bank Soal Ujian Nasional' or something similar. And there's your teacher handing a lot of exercises. Do answer them, it'll do a lot of good. Yes, it is boring. Yes, the questions are damn repetitive. But the repetitiveness of it will get you on the subject easier. Like Math, if you do it enough, you'll soon do the equations with ease. 
And the question roll in UN is pretty similar to the years before that. There will be certain chapters that always came up on the test. If your teacher is like super veteran in teaching, they will know EVERYTHING that will came up, so they will exercise those more. 
I recommend the book 'Detik-Detik Ujian Nasional' by Intan Pariwara, by the way. I never actually have one, but it was very popular among my peers last year. Plus, for the Social kids, do buy the book 'Menguasai IPS Sistem Kebut Semalam' by Muhammad Doddy AB & Sriyanto. SUPER. RAD. It has everything. The cover is super doubtful but it comes in pocket size and it's like having three years of studying in a book. Really.

3. Study group is actually useful. 
Well, only if you do study instead of fooling around, of course. Because you and your peers have different fortes. In my year, UN actually kinda strengthen the bonds between friends, because we help each other out. I don't get Math, I got help. Friends don't get Accounting, I helped. Everyone is happy. Everyone passed the test. 
We often rehearse stuffs in the morning of the test, quizzing each other and all that jazz. It jogs memories, and we will often recall things we talk about. So, yay? 
And if you already aced every subject and refuse to help other people, you won't need this guidance anyway, so go suck balls. Selfish arsehole.

4. Study hard. Pray harder. 
The part of studying hard? Me not so much. The part of praying hard? Um, not so much too. I've never been an avidly religious person and I do my interaction with God in much more familial way instead of reverently (yes I'm such an insolent ungrateful child) but I do pray about UN once or thrice. More like a desperate cries for help and guidance, but, yeah. My parents (and maybe brother & other family members) do most of the praying. 
But, do pray. Have faith. Just because we are bunch of selfish ungrateful human beings does not mean God will refuse our plea for help. He is very generous, from what I've experienced.

5. Double-check your shits.  
One of the mistakes students often do is not double-checking their answers. They just want it all to end quickly that they breeze through it. You have to be sure that you answer the test correctly (except when you really don't know the answer, then you have to be sure that the answer you choose is most likely the correct one; do the logic and all that shizbams). 
To err is human. We might unintentionally blacken the wrong answer, or the wrong number on the answer sheet. And it is really sucky to have the right answer on the wrong number. Also, in distress, we might interpret the question wrong, or do some misstep in the calculation. So double-check! You don't want to fail the test because of mundane mistakes like that.

6. The most important thing of all things that matter: SLEEP. 
Yes, sleep. No jokes. It's VERY important. I slept at least 7 hours/night around UN d-days. Forget all those late nights trying to stuff more shits into your brain, it may unable to digest it. If you do your strategy right, everything you have to know about UN, it'll be there. That's why try outs and those exercises are pretty important. You need to be well-rested for UN. It'll lessen the anxiety of actually doing the UN. 
It sucks being anxious while you're sleepy. You'll get real grumpy, and all those negative thoughts during UN is very dangerous. That's what drove people into suicide. Be happy! And sleep makes people happy, right?

In my own experience, UN is not that anxiety-inspiring. I think my school do too much try outs that UN just feels like another mock tests I got to endure. Too much exercise ripped the band-aid, maybe. They took the scare away. And it was very helpful to have the weathered teachers, because they are experienced, they know what they're doing, and they do it good.

So, yeah, that's my 6 Ways to Ace Ujian Nasional, WITHOUT CHEATING! :D

It is really unhelpful, isn't it? Sometimes something just works for certain people. Or maybe I just got lucky. Kbai! x

Saturday 15 February 2014

curhatnya • Clinging To Not Getting Sentimental

Last night at home before the new semester: my room reeks of coffee, the speaker is crooning whatever alternative rock music I had in my playlist, my things are half-packed, and I'm floating in between consciousness and blissful slumber. In short: a perfect night that will turn into a chaotic morning of double-checking my luggage and find out that most of the important stuffs are not inside.

I'm not sorry. Yet.

(Title taken from Fluorescent Adolescent by Arctic Monkeys)