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Student Well-Being Opinion

Tests Often Stress Students. These Tips Can Calm Their Nerves

How rituals help people bounce back from their inevitable mistakes
By Michael Norton 鈥 April 10, 2024 2 min read
What can students do to help with stress before a test?
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What can students do to help with stress before a test?

Rituals are a common choice to help calm the nerves. Here鈥檚 something I wrote about the topic for as a Tip of the Week:

A professor at Harvard Business School I鈥檝e known for many years always does the exact same thing before class. Because the school uses the case method, an open-ended discussion that can go in any direction at any time, class can be very unpredictable鈥攁nd stressful. This professor paces back and forth in his office 30 minutes before class starts, running the discussion plan through his mind. He then writes down that plan on a pad of paper (that must be yellow) in a black-leather binder his father gave him 25 years ago, which he鈥檚 used every single day he鈥檚 taught at the school.

This person, of course, is me. What was I up to in my pacing and scribbling?

In times of stress and uncertainty, people often turn to rituals. And these rituals can be helpful in how we end up viewing our performance. In one , researchers asked people to complete this ritual every day for a week:

Bring your fists together at your chest, slowly raise them above your head, and as you do, draw in a large inhale through your nose. Return your fists to your chest while drawing out an exhale through your mouth. Repeat this three times.

People then had to complete a series of difficult tasks that they were bound to make mistakes on. The researchers measured a pattern of brain activity that tracks the feelings that emerge in response to how well we did versus how well we thought we would do鈥攂asically, an 鈥渦h-oh鈥 reaction to errors. They found that rituals decreased people鈥檚 negative response to their mistakes, suggesting that rituals help us move past our inevitable mistakes whenever we perform.

Here are two steps to help you explore the potential of performance rituals. First, take an audit of your existing ones. The next time you鈥檙e gearing up for a presentation, notice the little things you do to get yourself 鈥渞eady to go.鈥 Second, consider honing your existing rituals and even trying new ones in moments where you haven鈥檛 before. The stuff you need is already around you. Pacing, yellow paper, and black binders do it for me, and you know best what might resonate for you.

顿辞苍鈥檛 be embarrassed if you use rituals to try to calm your nerves.

Do experiment with using rituals to prepare yourself before performing, whether it鈥檚 taking a test or competing in a sport, and help young people do the same. Even small acts can provide comfort if and when you make a mistake so you feel ready to face what鈥檚 to come.

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