On test day you want zero surprises. The exam is hard enough without logistics adding stress. Here's what to sort in advance and what to expect when you sit down.
Before the day
Confirm your booking, the exact location or online setup, and the start time. Check the ID requirements carefully — the name on your ID must match your booking exactly. Plan your route and aim to arrive early; rushing spikes your heart rate before you've answered a single question.
What the exam is like
You'll get on-screen instructions, a timed section structure, and access to a noteboard and an on-screen calculator. There's a short non-disclosure agreement and brief instructions before each section. Knowing the interface in advance is a genuine advantage — practice in a faithful replica so the layout, flagging and navigation feel familiar.
Tools to lean on
Use the flag button generously, keep your noteboard working for DM and QR, and remember keyboard shortcuts speed up navigation. The countdown is your friend, not your enemy — glance at it at planned checkpoints rather than constantly.
Managing nerves
A little adrenaline sharpens you; too much tips into rushing. Have a simple reset for when you feel it spike: a slow breath, eyes off the screen for two seconds, then back to the method. If one section goes badly, park it — every section is scored independently and a wobble in one doesn't have to spread.
The morning routine
Eat something steady, hydrate, and avoid cramming new techniques. Re-read your one-page method summary, not a textbook. Bring your ID, arrive early, and trust the preparation you've already done.