Vertech Editorial
The single best thing you can do before an exam is take a fake one. Here is how to build and use realistic practice tests.
Most students finish studying and think “I feel like I know this.” But feeling like you know something and actually knowing it are two very different things. The only way to bridge that gap is to test yourself under realistic conditions before the real exam.
Practice testing is the single most effective study technique identified by cognitive science research, and AI makes it ridiculously easy to do.
How to Build a Realistic Practice Test
The Practice Test Prompt
“Create a practice exam for [course name] covering [topics]. Include [X] questions that match the format my professor uses: [multiple choice / short answer / essay / mixed]. Make the difficulty realistic - not too easy, not impossible. Give me a time limit recommendation. Do not show me the answers until I ask for them.”
How to Take the Practice Test
Simulate real conditions - set a timer, close your notes (unless it is open book), put your phone away. The more realistic the practice, the more accurate the results.
Answer every question before checking - do not look up answers mid-test. The point is to see what you actually know under pressure.
Grade yourself honestly - ask AI to grade your answers and explain why wrong answers are wrong. This feedback is where the learning happens.
Study only what you got wrong - then take a second practice test the next day. Your score should improve significantly.
The research
A meta-analysis of 118 studies found that practice testing produces larger learning gains than any other technique, including rereading, highlighting, and summarizing. It is not close.
Our Generalist Teacher prompt can generate practice tests and grade your answers with detailed feedback in real time.
