Preparartion for UMAT : Stress
Management
Stress Management: Psychological states like
chronic stress, depression, anxiety and fear and our social
context produce profound effects upon the body. Over time negative
mental and emotional states take a heavy toll on the body and
are a significant risk factor for illness. The lack of time
available to students is one of the main causes of short-term
stress, which some students may develop during Yr 12. However
a degree of stress is beneficial for the student to have as
it motivates them into studying. It is important for the student
to be able to manage their stress levels to ensure optimum performance
without causing the student emotional distress. The student
will experience the ‘fight or flight’ response (a
release of hormones in the body which increase heart rate and
blood pressure, delivering more oxygen and blood sugar to power
important muscles, in response to a physical threat) which can
be experienced at any time he/she comes across something unexpected
or that which frustrates his/her goals. In this state the student
is anxious, irritable and is unable to focus his/her attention.
It reduces his/her ability to work properly, to execute precise
skills and to make fine judgments. It becomes easy for the student
to make simple mistakes and difficult to carry out important
decisions. Hence this ‘fight or flight’ response
must be kept under control to avoid unnecessary anxiety and
irritation.
To manage the stress levels, the student
can confront the cause of the stress, changing the circumstances
or the situation, he/she can change the attitude with which
the stress is perceives, or just accept the stress and seek
to endure it for the duration of time it exists.
One helpful method for coping with stress is imagery. If the
student is powerless to change the circumstances which are causing
him stress, such as the number of assessments that are due at
one particular time or the amount of time he has to study per
night, then this is a useful technique to help him relax and
make the most of the time he has available to him and work effectively.
The student can try to mentally remove himself from the stressful
or irritating environment by picturing a serene scene which
recreates an environment that is soothing. The more effort the
student places into this meditation, the more rewarding the
exercise will be.
Similarly, if the student imagines an environment or a situation
which is frustration or worrying, the student will begin to
experience these emotions. Thus it is helpful for the student
to adjust their attitude to view their timetable, exam schedule
and assignment due dates positively, with a can-do attitude.
Visualising handing in a completed assignment or receiving great
results in an exam will motivate the student into actualizing
the goal and will increase the positivity in the student’s
present state.
How to do this: the student can picture a surrounding they
have experienced in the past which was peaceful or joyful to
them at the time. They can also create a place where they would
like to be. The more details the student pictures, the more
effective the meditation will be. For example, you can imagine
a scene at the beach with the waves crashing against the rocks,
smelling the sea weed, and feeling the cool evening breeze on
the skin. The images are individual to each person – what
works for someone may not work for anyone else.
Other imagery techniques involve picturing stress as an object
which you can manipulate and discard from your body. For example,
you can visualize breathing in the peace and serenity through
your nose as a bright stream of light, and breathing out the
stress and anxiety through your mouth as black smoke and pollution.
The student may also use imagery to plan out their performance
in an exam, such as the UMAT. For example, the student can visualize
their goal – for example, to aim for 95+ in each section
of the UMAT. He can then imagine how he will prepare for the
UMAT in the available time. Finally he can picture entering
the UMAT centre, beginning the test and how positive and relaxed
he will feel during the exam. He can picture the speed and efficiency
with which he will complete the test. If the student spends
enough time visualizing how this will occur, he will eventually
begin to believe it and soon enough this will become the only
possible way in which the event could unfold.
The student can also prepare himself for unpredictable elements
in the UMAT through imagery. For example, the student can predict
a different shape to be introduced in Section Three of the UMAT,
or for Section Two of the UMAT to examine interpersonal skills
in a form other than short scenarios and dialogues. This will
minimize stress and frustration on the day of the UMAT if something
similar and unexpected occurs.
Imagery can be used to allow UMAT candidates to pre-experience
their UMAT success, for an additional boost of self-confidence.
Another method which the UMAT candidate can use to limit the
amount of stress during Yr 12 studies as well as on the day
of the UMAT is through physical relaxation techniques. For best
results, the student can combine these with the mental relaxation
techniques. A physical stress management technique includes
taking deep breaths. This helps to minimize the ‘fight-flight’
response and helps calm the body so that the student can think
and act effectively. Deep breathing is not very complicated
– it involves the student taking a few deep breaths and
loosening the body more and more with each breath.
Another method of physically relaxing the body is tensing a
group of muscles until they are as tight as they can be, holding
this tension in the muscles for a few seconds, then releasing
all the tension and relaxing the muscles as much as possible.
This can be combined with deep breathing to relax the whole
of your body. For about 20 minutes, the student can relax each
part of his body, working from the bottom up, combined with
taking deep breaths in between.
The mind has the key role in eliciting the stress response
through its functions of perception, cognition, interpretation
and conditioning. Learned patterns of coping and personality
styles are possibly more important than a situation itself and
so its evident how important techniques such as meditation and
relaxation are in helping to reverse the effects of this inappropriate
stress by attacking it at its cause – thought. This places
a responsibility on the individual for their own psychological
health by empowering them to understand themselves better and
take charge of the responses to stress. Any response to stress
which only places blame to the environment will be of very limited
success as it ignores the most important element in the process
– the person responding to the environment.
In summary, here are some tips on how to combat stress:
1.Identify the symptoms of the stress and how they are caused
2.Prioritise your time, do that which is most urgent first
3.Accept the situations and the environment which you can’t
change – learn to change your attitude instead
4.Try meditation or relaxation exercises
5.Organise and plan future dead lines and assessment due dates,
and actively work towards them
Stress occurs if the person is aware of a difficulty or pressure
in their environment which is threatening them, and if they
are aware that they do not have the ability to meet the demands
of the pressures. The degree of stress depends on how much the
person thinks the situation will harm them. Hence it is the
way the person perceives the situation around him that causes
the stress. In some situations, the stress is justified, as
the situation is in fact threatening, and the ‘fight or
flight’ response kicks in to protect the person. However
very often the person is very critical of himself, which can
lead to unhappiness and depression.
A person can modify the way he perceives himself and his situation
through thought awareness, where he observes his stream of consciousness
regarding a particular situation which is causing him grief.
Another method is to write down the thoughts and feelings as
they take place – such as anxiety, worry, difficult memories
and negative situations. Afterwards, these negative thoughts
and feelings can be analysed and the destructive pattern of
thinking can be dealt with.
One way of dealing with this negative thinking pattern is to
criticize every unpleasant idea that was written down and ask
if it is reasonable.
The person can then use positive thinking and affirmations
to counteract the negative thoughts. Affirmations will also
help boost self-confidence by undoing the damage that was previously
done by the destructive thinking pattern.
Continued in further articles :
UMAT test preparation & time management
UMAT
test preparation & stress management
UMAT
test preparation & setting goals
Section
I : Logical Reasoning and Problem Solving
Section
II : Interaction Skills
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