Vertech Editorial
You already know the material. Here's how to stop your brain from getting in the way when it matters most.
It's Not Just Nerves - Here's What's Actually Going On
A little nervousness before an exam isn't a problem. It actually sharpens your focus. But when it tips into full anxiety - racing heart, scattered thoughts, the feeling that everything you studied just vanished - that's something else.
That's your threat-response system getting triggered by the pressure of the situation. And the annoying part is, it's self-defeating: the more you try to suppress it, the worse it usually gets. The fix isn't to calm down. It's to redirect.
Why Telling Yourself to Calm Down Doesn't Work
Anxiety and excitement produce almost identical physiological responses - elevated heart rate, heightened awareness, adrenaline. The feeling is the same. What's different is the story you're telling yourself about what it means.
Research from Harvard showed that students who reframed pre-exam jitters as excitement - rather than trying to suppress them - performed better on exams. Don't try to turn it off. Try to point it in a different direction: "I'm ready. This is energy."
Three Things That Actually Reduce Anxiety Before a Test
These aren't generic "breathe and believe in yourself" tips. They're techniques with actual research behind them.
Expressive Writing
Spend 10 minutes writing out exactly what you're worried about - no filters. Getting the anxiety onto paper frees up working memory that anxiety was consuming. Studies showed this improved test performance significantly.
Reframe, Don't Suppress
When nerves hit, say "I'm excited" instead of "I'm nervous." It sounds small, but it changes how your brain interprets the signal - from threat to challenge. That shift alone improves performance.
Box Breathing
Inhale 4 counts, hold 4, exhale 4, hold 4. Repeat 3–4 times. This directly activates your parasympathetic nervous system - the part that counters the stress response. Takes under 2 minutes.
The 15-Minute Pre-Exam Routine
Run this in the 15 minutes before you walk in. It won't teach you anything new - but it gets you into the right headspace to use what you already know.
During the Test: What to Do If It Hits Anyway
âš ï¸ If anxiety hits mid-exam
Stop writing. Take 3 slow breaths. Put your pen down if it helps. Then start with the easiest question you can find. Getting one right, even a small one, resets your brain's sense of competence and usually breaks the anxiety loop.
If test anxiety is something you deal with regularly - not just nerves, but genuine panic that affects your performance - talk to your school's student services office. Many schools offer accommodations (extended time, separate testing rooms) for anxiety disorders, and it's worth knowing your options.
And if you want to go deeper on the concepts giving you anxiety before the exam, our Simplifier Specialist prompt will break down any confusing topic in plain English until it clicks.
