Science & technology | Exam nerves’ real effect

Anxiety does not cause bad results in exams

The problem is in the run-up, not the main event

DNG74E Beijing China,Chinese,Haidian District,Peking University,PKU,Beida,higher education,campus,library,study hall,computer monitors,Internet terminal acce

Exams are nerve-racking, especially for those already of an anxious disposition. The silence of the hall; the ticking of the clock; the beady eye of the invigilator; the smug expression of the person sitting at the neighbouring desk who has finished 15 minutes early. It therefore seems hardly surprising that those who worry about taking tests do systematically worse than those who do not. What is, perhaps, surprising, according to research published recently in Psychological Science by Maria Theobald at the Leibniz Institute for Research and Information in Education and her colleagues, is that it is not the pressure of the exam hall which causes the problem. It is the pressure of revision.

This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline “High anxiety”

Say goodbye to 1.5°C

From the November 5th 2022 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Science & technology

A person sat in a drinking glass full of ice

Are ice baths good for you?

They won’t hurt. Actually they might, a bit

A silhouette view of the peloton

Why carbon monoxide could appeal to the discerning doper

Professional cycling is debating whether to ban the poisonous gas


Drainage canals (linear features that drain into a small meandering river) seen from above.

A sophisticated civilisation once flourished in the Amazon basin

How the Casarabe died out remains a mystery


Heritable Agriculture, a Google spinout, is bringing AI to crop breeding

By reducing the cost of breeding, the firm hopes to improve yields and other properties for an array of important crops

Could supersonic air travel make a comeback?

Boom Supersonic’s demonstrator jet exceeds Mach 1

Should you worry about microplastics?

Little is known about the effects on humans—but limiting exposure to them seems prudent