I posted this on the L3 board, but since it's relevant to all levels I thought I'd repeat it here.
I managed to pass all 3 levels first time, even though my only degree was in History. Based on my experience, the following advice may help you:
The main message is there are no short-cuts - well, not many. You've got to put the hours in. Train hard, fight easy.
Different methods work for different people - but for the following worked for me:
Make yourself sit a full mock exam, in exam conditions, the first weekend of May. Even if you haven't finished the readings yet.
Use the results of that mock, and others that you do in later weeks, to analyse which areas you should concentrate on. Above all, make sure you understand how you lost every single mark, and write down what knowledge and/or exam technique would have enabled you to get that mark.
Keep a file of all those bits of knowledge that you failed to apply in the mocks. Learn it by heart - it's a list of the gaps in your defences that need to be filled.
The day before the exam - sort out all your materials, ID, food, transport etc early, so you can relax later in the day.
The evening before the exam - I found that every hour of rest, relaxation and sleep was much more valuable than every hour of last-minute cramming. Having said that, I got less than two hours' sleep the night before L3 due to nerves, and somehow the adrenalin kept me going and I made it.
Don't panic if it feels like you're in a tailspin in the exam - it felt like that for everyone in the afternoon of L3 last year.
Again - train hard, fight easy.
Good luck!
I managed to pass all 3 levels first time, even though my only degree was in History. Based on my experience, the following advice may help you:
The main message is there are no short-cuts - well, not many. You've got to put the hours in. Train hard, fight easy.
Different methods work for different people - but for the following worked for me:
Make yourself sit a full mock exam, in exam conditions, the first weekend of May. Even if you haven't finished the readings yet.
Use the results of that mock, and others that you do in later weeks, to analyse which areas you should concentrate on. Above all, make sure you understand how you lost every single mark, and write down what knowledge and/or exam technique would have enabled you to get that mark.
Keep a file of all those bits of knowledge that you failed to apply in the mocks. Learn it by heart - it's a list of the gaps in your defences that need to be filled.
The day before the exam - sort out all your materials, ID, food, transport etc early, so you can relax later in the day.
The evening before the exam - I found that every hour of rest, relaxation and sleep was much more valuable than every hour of last-minute cramming. Having said that, I got less than two hours' sleep the night before L3 due to nerves, and somehow the adrenalin kept me going and I made it.
Don't panic if it feels like you're in a tailspin in the exam - it felt like that for everyone in the afternoon of L3 last year.
Again - train hard, fight easy.
Good luck!