I believe strongly that many of the exams we do through our academic life are failed outside the examination room. The moment we notice that we did not follow the plan that we set out at the beginning of our studies, we quickly conclude that we shall not be able to make it. Some of us even attempt to think about what we shall do differently in the next examination sitting. We promise ourselves that we shall stick to the plan next time and 'nothing shall stand in our way that time round………'.
With only a few days to the exam, thoughts like these can cloud our vision and quickly get us worried, shaken and unsettled. We quickly start thinking about the money and time we have invested and spend big chunks of our study time wondering whether we shall ever get over this hurdle. These thoughts soon drive us to thinking that there isn’t enough time and we should prepare ourselves for defeat. By the time we get to the paper, we are 50% convinced that we shall not make it and may even fail to pick out those questions which we would have otherwise passed.
The thoughts that we let into our minds at this time are very crucial for our success. We should endeavour to have a positive attitude and encourage ourselves every morning.
These are a few practical things that you may consider doing;
- Confess a victory – 'I am going to pass P2 (or any paper you may be sitting for)….……..'
- Encourage others – convince your friends that they are going to make it (this shall also give you confidence in yourself)
- Look back at the effort you have put in under your circumstances and you will notice that you were actually doing your best and 'your best is good enough'
- Look at the time left as an opportunity to hit your target and not a constant reminder of how little the time left is
- Keep you mind on what you can do now and not what you have not yet done.
The moment your registration is accepted for a given paper, you are capable of passing it. We should ensure that we give ourselves the best chance of a pass by believing that we have got what it takes. We should take our eyes off our inadequacies and put them on our capabilities. As you get into that paper, look at it as an opportunity to pass and not just another failure.
Finally, when you are getting into that examination room, keep in mind that you are as prepared as you can be for the exam. The confidence that you build from inside shall propel you though the paper and give you a fair chance against the examiner.
Good luck and God bless.
Thanks for the great words. Had dropped out mainly due to financial challenges in Zim. Am reregistering for the Dec 2009 seating. I believe I will make it!
Posted by: Richard | 21 July 2009 at 16:51
Dear Ravi,
Thanks for sharing with us your challenge and I believe you speak for many when you say the 'its just not working out!'
I believe the most important thing is NOT to stop believing in yourself. Go back and make a self assessment, find out what to change and believe that you are the up to the task. Then give it your very best.
Posted by: Ronald Mukasa | 16 October 2008 at 17:30
its great to get such inspirational words, am very sure one is able to pass an exam even before they enter the exam room, the mind has to be set to pass as long as god preparation was done.
Good luck this December people.
Posted by: Joseph Tuliraba | 15 October 2008 at 13:40
Hi, I am a serial failure of acca papers and I am really getting discouraged with it because I had been doing the best during the revision but in exams nothing worked. Please, help me, do acca want me to write exactly like in the textbooks or revision kit.
Posted by: Ravi | 14 October 2008 at 18:46
Hi Mark,
I guess all of us had those moments of fear when we think that we are inadequate. But I believe that we should all over come that by facing our greatest fear. If you are worried about how to communicate what you know, gain comfort in the fact that ACCA has a global coverage and they shall appreciate your answer whereever you are from given that you are correct. Simply do your best
Posted by: Ronald Mukasa | 18 July 2008 at 17:37
pls i want you to tell me the secrets of passing the acca exams,i am just starting now but i feel i know enough to make me pass but i think i dont know how to write them down correctly.
mark korede.Nigeria
Posted by: mark | 14 July 2008 at 20:08
Hi Lawrence, I believe that the starting point is choosing not to hate accounting. The fact is that accountants are not accountants because they found Accounting simple but they are accountant because they choose to run the whole race. Please choose to start and paper by paper you shall reduce the burden.
Posted by: Ronald Mukasa | 03 July 2008 at 18:41
hi am a previous student of Bachelor of Commerce (Accounting option) i passed this degree with a second class lower and wasnt happy with this result. Accounting was one of my hardest papers and it made me hate it but its what i wanted to professionalize in but am having second thoughts because i feel weak in this field. could you pliz give me some advice as my dream is halted.
Posted by: ntambazi Lawrence | 09 June 2008 at 13:59