As Term 3 of the HSC Year draws to a close, Year 12 students across NSW are navigating one of the busiest periods of their HSC journey. With a flood of assessment tasks, the pressure to finish syllabus content, and the ongoing demands of school sport, part-time jobs, and social lives — it’s no surprise that many are feeling stretched to their limits.
But here’s the catch: once this intense period ends and the school holidays begin, motivation can often drop. The Trials feel “weeks away,” and students can easily slip into a false sense of security and the mentality of needing to ‘have a holiday’. But as anyone who’s lived through the HSC knows, those weeks can vanish in a flash — and suddenly the Trial exams are just 14 days away.
What 29 Years Has Taught Us
At HSC CoWorks, we’ve spent nearly three decades supporting students through this critical period — and one thing is clear. The students who fall into ‘holiday mode’ and avoid the challenge ahead are far more likely to feel overwhelmed and anxious as the Trials approach.
In contrast, the students who maintain momentum enter the Trial period with calm, clarity, and confidence. They’ve built familiarity with exam-style questions. They’ve simulated the pressure of timed tasks. And most importantly, they’ve proven to themselves that they can do hard things.
This doesn’t mean you need to study all day, everyday! However having a strong study plan, incorporating daily exam room training and using your time wisely will support you in the weeks before your Trial Exams.
Trial Success Isn’t About Being “Smart”
There’s a common misconception that strong Trial results are all about intelligence. They’re not. Success comes from consistent action and the correct training — not just in the week before, but in the weeks before. It’s those who show up daily, chip away at their weaknesses, and engage with practice tasks who walk into the exam room ready for anything.
When you practice under pressure, you prepare your brain to perform under pressure. That’s why every exam-style task you complete now is a deposit into your Trial confidence bank 🙂
Writing notes and reviewing flashcards might feel productive, but on their own they don’t prepare you for the real challenge of the exam room. If you want to perform on the day, you must train like you’re already in it.
What to Do Over the July Break
Our 4 recommended actions that you can take during the holidays to prepare for your Trials.
1. Plan your holiday study schedule.
When everything feels urgent, it’s easy to feel paralysed and do nothing. That’s why decluttering your study life is essential.
Brain Dump Everything – Use the HSC CoWorks Planning Pad to write down ALL the tasks you need to do over the break. Getting them out of your head makes them feel less overwhelming.
Sort by Priority – Not everything matters equally.
- Urgent & Important → Do these tasks first (Eat Frogs First). These are likely to be the tasks you least want to do which is another reason why you should do them first
- Important, Not Urgent → Plan these into your week allocating specific time periods to each task.
- Not Important, Not Urgent → Move to the bottom of your list
Pick Your Top 3 for the Day – Each day, focus on three high-impact tasks. Once you finish those, you’ve won the day and time leftover can be spent making your way further down your list of tasks.
2. Strengthen your foundation.
Avoid the mistake this holidays of passively re-reading notes or highlighting textbooks. Instead students must use active recall techniques such as practice questions, mind maps, and self-testing to ensure that the content covered last term ‘sticks’.
By doing this students will also clearly identify where any gaps are before the exam room.
3. Apply your knowledge.
This is key. Success in Trials comes down to application. Complete as many practice questions and past HSC papers as possible — especially under timed conditions. Train like it’s game day.
4. REVIEW AND REFLECT.
After each task, ask yourself: What would I do differently in the actual exam? Learn from each attempt so that every mistake moves you closer to success.
The only way to be ready for the exam room is to train for it. So don’t just prepare — prepare with purpose. Keep the momentum going, and walk into Trials knowing you’ve done the work that counts!