What to Do If You Study the Whole Weekend and Still Fail the Quiz

Your teacher starts class with a 10-question quiz based on the weekend’s reading. You read the textbook, but the questions still seem foreign. After 15 minutes that pass way too fast, you swap papers for grading.

As the answers are revealed, you notice your quiz is being marked more wrong than right. The results aren’t pretty - 3 out of 10 correct.

You might think, “I don’t care. It’s only a quiz and one bad grade won’t hurt my average.” But those bad quizzes can add up fast. And most subjects build on previous lessons, so you may be at risk of falling behind.

But you know what’s worse? Your parents can see your grades, too. And they’re going to care.

Needing some extra help isn’t a sign of weakness - we all need some help now and again. I’ve been in your place before, and I know what teachers are looking for. All the information they want you to know is right in front of you and at your fingertips.

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What if I could help you know what was going to be on that quiz and where you could find the answers - before you even saw the questions?

What if you knew exactly what to study and didn’t feel it was a waste of time? What if you walked into class knowing the answer instead of guessing ‘C’?

No, I’m not talking about cheating. I’m talking about a proven strategy to find what’s important and what’s not so you can remember the material. It’s surprisingly simple, and I can teach you.

My students tell me there’s no better feeling than the moment when they “get it” and have the confidence to walk into class knowing they truly understood the material or can hang up an A+ unit test on their fridge.

If you’re interested in feeling that same way, let’s work together and I can teach you how to get that 3 up to an 8 or even a 10! But most importantly, have you walk into school knowing math or science isn’t as hard as you thought.