analyzing what went wrong (like actually wrong) - part 2/5 🎀
1st post
posted by: glowettee
hey study besties! ♡ mindy here!!!!!
welcome back to my little grade recovery series! now that we've processed our feelings and dried our tears, it's time to put on our detective hats (make it pink, obviously) and figure out exactly what happened. this is where we get super real but super helpful!
♡ the pre-test investigation
let's look at everything that happened before the test/assignment:
study method audit:
were you just reading and highlighting? (spoiler: that's not actually studying)
did you try to memorize instead of understand? (guilty of this in my first year)
were you doing practice problems or just looking at them?
did you create your own study materials or just rely on reading?
i learned this the hard way - highlighting things in pretty colors isn't the same as actually learning them. what helped me was creating my own practice questions and pretending i was teaching the material to my stuffed animals (don't judge, it works!).
♡ the time management tea (sorry for these weird titles, lol <3)
be brutally honest about your study timeline:
last-minute cramming or consistent studying?
how many actual focused study hours? (scrolling through #studytok doesn't count)
did you have a study schedule?
were you taking proper breaks?
i started tracking my actual study time using a cute timer app and realized i was only doing about 20 minutes of real studying in what i thought was a "2-hour study session." yikes!
♡ the environment check
your study space matters so much:
where were you studying? (your bed doesn't count, bestie)
how was the lighting? (dim lighting = sleepy brain)
what distractions were around?
did you have all your materials organized?
i created a dedicated study space with good lighting, my favorite scented candle, and zero phone access. it literally changed everything.
♡ the content breakdown
this is where we get super specific:
which topics gave you trouble?
what patterns do you see in wrong answers?
were there specific types of questions you missed?
did you understand the basics before moving to complex stuff?
(IMPORTANT) make a chart (make it cute but functional) listing every topic and rate your understanding from 1-5. this becomes your study guide!
♡ the test-taking trauma
let's analyze the actual test experience:
did you read all instructions carefully?
how was your time management?
did anxiety take over?
were you physically prepared? (proper sleep, food, etc.)
i started doing mock tests under real conditions and found out i was spending way too much time on early questions and rushing through the rest.
♡ the resource reality check
what help did you actually use?:
did you go to office hours? (they're literally free tutoring)
did you use study groups effectively?
were you using all available resources?
did you ask for help when needed?
confession: i used to skip office hours because they scared me. now they're my literal secret weapon for acing classes.
♡ creating your analysis document
grab your favorite notebook or digital doc and create these sections:
concept confusion list
study technique evaluation
time management analysis
resource gaps
test-taking troubles
improvement ideas
♡ the action plan prep
based on your analysis, start thinking about:
which study methods you'll keep/change
what new resources you'll use
how you'll manage time differently
what help you need to seek out
how you'll prepare differently next time
this analysis isn't about beating yourself up - it's about creating the perfect strategy for your comeback. think of it like analyzing why your skincare routine isn't working - once you know what's wrong, you can fix it!
xoxo, mindy 🎀










