It's one of the most common โ and most frustrating โ stories we hear from parents: "My child does brilliantly in class. They top their practice tests at school. Then the real exam comes, and the mark doesn't match the student." If that sounds familiar, you're not alone, and more importantly: it's fixable.
The class-versus-exam gap is real
Doing well in class and doing well in exams are two different skills. Classwork is low-stakes, familiar, and supported โ the teacher is nearby, time is flexible, and the material was just taught. A real exam strips all of that away and adds a ticking clock, an unfamiliar room, and the feeling that everything rides on the next two hours.
So when a capable student gets an average mark, the problem is usually not knowledge. It's one of three things: anxiety, time management, or unfamiliarity with exam conditions. All three respond well to training.
1. The "brain blackout"
Many students describe the same experience: they read the first question, their mind goes blank, and material they knew perfectly the night before is suddenly out of reach. This is a well-understood stress response โ under pressure, the brain's working memory gets crowded out by anxiety, and recall genuinely suffers. It is not a sign your child "didn't really know it".
What helps
- Practise retrieval, not re-reading. Re-reading notes feels productive but builds recognition, not recall. Closed-book practice questions force the brain to retrieve under mild pressure โ which is exactly the skill the exam demands.
- A calm-down routine that's been rehearsed. Slow breathing (in for four, out for six, repeated a few times) reliably settles the stress response โ but it works far better if the student has practised it during mock exams, not just on the day.
- A "blank protocol". Agree on a rule in advance: if your mind goes blank, skip the question, answer two easy ones to rebuild confidence, then come back. Knowing there's a plan removes the panic about panicking.
2. Time pressure
The second silent mark-killer is pacing. Students lose more marks to the clock than to difficulty: too long on early questions, no time for late ones, no minutes left to check. School rarely trains this explicitly โ exams punish it ruthlessly.
What helps
- Know the time budget per question before walking in, and practise to it. If a section gives 30 minutes for 30 questions, train at one minute per question with a visible timer.
- The two-pass method. First pass: answer everything quick and confident, flag the rest. Second pass: return to flagged questions. This guarantees easy marks are banked before hard questions eat the clock.
- Timed mocks, often. Pacing isn't learned from advice โ it's learned from repetitions under a real clock.
3. Unfamiliar conditions
Anything new on exam day costs marks: an unfamiliar question style, a different answer-sheet format, even sitting still and silent for two hours. Top performers aren't braver โ they've simply made exam day boring by simulating it many times.
What we do about it at Iris
This is exactly why our GATE and ATAR programs are built around realistic, timed mock exams rather than worksheets alone. Students sit full-length papers under proper conditions, get instant scoring, and review their mistakes systematically โ so anxiety, pacing and unfamiliarity are dealt with months before the real thing.
But mock exams are only half the answer โ because no two students underperform for the same reason. One child freezes on the first question; another knows everything but runs out of time; a third loses marks to misread questions. That's why at Iris Tutoring Centre, every student gets a personalised plan. We start with a free assessment to find out exactly where the marks are being lost, then tailor the tutoring to that child โ their pace, their gaps, their confidence. No batch worksheets, no one-size-fits-all classes: each and every student is taught as an individual, and we track their progress week by week so parents can see the gap closing.
If your child knows the work but the marks aren't showing it, don't accept "they just don't test well". Exam performance is a skill. Skills can be trained โ and with the right personal support, every child can learn them.