The Assessment Alchemist Podcast

Episode 24: Are You an Overthinker? The Test-Taking Mindset Type That Knows the Answer, Then Changes It

17 min · 10 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Episode 24: Are You an Overthinker? The Test-Taking Mindset Type That Knows the Answer, Then Changes It

Descripción

If you've ever studied hard, felt confident going in, and then watched yourself change a correct answer to a wrong one, this episode is for you. In Episode 24, Tina Wiles breaks down the Overthinker mindset type, why it happens, and three skills you can use right in the middle of a test to stop the spiral. What You'll Learn in This Episode The five signs you're an Overthinker (and why high achievers are the most likely to fall into this pattern) Why the real problem isn't how much you studied, it's self-trust The science behind gut instinct and why your body processes information faster than your mind can analyze it How to use the 3-2-1 countdown technique to choose an answer and move forward Why separating your self-worth from your test score actually improves performance (and what the research says) The thought-stopping technique: a three-step method to interrupt overthinking in real time Mentioned in This Episode The Mel Robbins Five Second Rule (inspiration for the 3-2-1 countdown technique) Error-related negativity research published in Psychology Today The free two-minute mindset quiz at my2tor.com Try This Today The next time you catch yourself stuck between two answer choices, try this: reread the question slowly, take one slow nasal breath in and out, then count 3-2-1 and choose. Flag it if you want to revisit it, and move on. That's it. Trust the work you've done. Take the Free Quiz Not sure what your test-taking mindset type is? Take the two-minute quiz at my2tor.com to get personalized insights and strategies based on how you actually show up under pressure.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Assessment Alchemist Podcast!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

28 episodios

episode Episode 28: It's Not What You Think (From Panic to PE, Week 1) artwork

Episode 28: It's Not What You Think (From Panic to PE, Week 1)

This is Week 1 of From Panic to PE, a six-part series for engineers who have failed the PE exam and for those preparing to take it for the first time. In this first episode, Tina Wiles makes the case that failing the PE is almost never a knowledge problem. It is a performance problem, and the data backs it up. NCEES pass rate data shows that across Civil Construction, Civil Structural, and Electrical and Computer Power disciplines, roughly 56 to 58% of first-time takers pass, while only 36 to 39% of repeat takers pass. If more studying were the answer, that number would go up the second time. It does not. The reason comes down to fight or flight mode. When the brain perceives the exam as a threat, it floods the body with cortisol and adrenaline, hijacking the prefrontal cortex at exactly the moment you need it for focus, recall, and decision-making. This is not a knowledge issue. It is a physiological one. Tina introduces three gaps that cause engineers to fall short on the PE: The Knowledge Gap: Content matters, but the more powerful question is not "what was the right answer" but "why was my answer wrong." That shift moves you from memorization to understanding. The Strategy Gap: Test taking is a skill separate from intelligence. Pacing, focus, time management, and how you approach questions under pressure are all learnable techniques that have nothing to do with how smart you are. The Mindset Gap: This is the gap almost nobody talks about. The freeze, the blank, the spiral before the exam, during the exam, and even after. This is your nervous system protecting you at exactly the wrong moment, and studying more will not fix it. Tina also introduces the five test-taking mindset patterns: the Overthinker, the Shut-Downer, the Time-Watcher, the Avoider, and the Wall-Hitter. Naming your pattern is the first step toward closing the gap. What is coming in the series: Week 2: A deeper dive into the pass rate data and what it actually tells us Week 3: The mindset gap in detail Week 4: A guest episode with an engineer who failed the PE multiple times before passing Week 5: The strategy gap in detail Week 6: What actually closes the loop and gets you to passing Take the free two-minute quiz at my2tor.com to find out which of the five patterns is costing you the most points. And sign up at my2tor.com to get the full From Panic to PE series delivered to your inbox.

28 de may de 202623 min
episode Episode 27: Ready, STEADY, Go: The 6-Part Framework for Test Day Confidence artwork

Episode 27: Ready, STEADY, Go: The 6-Part Framework for Test Day Confidence

Ready to walk into your next exam feeling calm, prepared, and confident? In Episode 27, Tina Wiles introduces the STEADY framework, a six-part system built to help you bring everything you know into the actual test room. STEADY stands for: S — Study Anchors: Use sensory cues like scent, taste, touch, and sound during your study sessions so you can replicate them on test day and trigger memory recall when it counts. T — Test Content: Knowing your material matters, and the most effective way to lock it in is through the generation effect. Write it out or speak it out loud. Passive reading and highlighting are not enough. E — Exam Strategy: Know your test before you sit down. Format, timing, scoring rules, and what you will do if you get stuck. A plan made in advance means fewer decisions made in panic. A — Anchor Breath: The physiological sigh, a double nasal inhale followed by a long slow exhale through the mouth, is the most research-backed breathing technique for reducing stress fast. Dr. Andrew Huberman's 2023 Stanford study named it the single most effective method. D — Day-of Routine: Start the night before. Pack your bag, plan your route, prioritize sleep, and build a morning that warms your brain up gently without adding more stress on top of what is already there. Y — Your Why: When preparation gets hard, your why keeps you going. Keep it visual. Return to it often. It is the motivational anchor that carries you through the days you do not want to show up. STEADY works for every test taker, but which parts will matter most depends on how pressure shows up for you. Take the free two-minute quiz at my2tor.com to find out your test-taking mindset type and discover where to focus first.

22 de may de 202626 min
episode Episode 26: You Didn't Forget It, Your Brain Cut You Off artwork

Episode 26: You Didn't Forget It, Your Brain Cut You Off

You knew the material. You studied hard. And then you sat down for the test and your mind went completely blank. That is not you forgetting what you learned. That is your nervous system cutting you off, and in this episode, we talk about exactly why that happens and what you can do about it. In Episode 26 of The Assessment Alchemist Podcast, Tina Wiles breaks down the freeze response, the often overlooked third branch of fight or flight mode. Your brain performs differently when it senses it is being evaluated, and the threat it is responding to is not the content on the test. It is the test itself. Tina shares a personal story from her own week where she experienced a full freeze while writing a Reddit post about testing, a subject she has taught for 20 years, and the simple shift that unlocked everything instantly. In this episode you will learn: * Why freezing during a test is a stress response, not a knowledge problem * How thinking in your natural voice bypasses the freeze and unlocks what you already know * How to lower the stakes in your mind to reduce the pressure that triggers the freeze * A simple reset ritual using nasal breathing and sensory focus to activate your vagus nerve and recenter fast * Why practicing these tools consistently means they show up automatically when you need them most Try this today: The next time you freeze on a question, try rephrasing it in plain English, the way you would explain it to a friend or a young child. You will likely know a lot more than you think. Take the free quiz: Not sure what your test-taking mindset type is? Head to my2tor.com for a free two-minute quiz that gives you personalized insights and strategies based on how you actually show up under pressure.

24 de abr de 202610 min
episode Episode 25: Normalize the Fail: Why We Need to Stop Treating Exam Failure Like a Secret artwork

Episode 25: Normalize the Fail: Why We Need to Stop Treating Exam Failure Like a Secret

About the Episode 1 in 3 people fail a high-stakes exam on their first attempt. And when they go back to take it again, pass rates can drop below 50%. Those are enormous numbers, and almost nobody is talking about them. This episode is here to change that. In Episode 25 of The Assessment Alchemist Podcast, Tina Wiles shares the story of Mel, a professional engineer who failed her licensing exam 9 times before passing on her 10th attempt. In the year since that pass, Mel got promoted, sold her house, and finally moved forward with a life that had essentially been on hold. Her story is a powerful reminder that failing a test is not the same as being a failure, and that the shame and silence around exam failure is doing more damage than the failure itself. Tina walks through 3 things most test prep programs never address: separating your identity from your score, releasing the emotional weight stored in your nervous system, and rebuilding self-trust through small wins. If you have ever hit a wall with a high-stakes exam and wondered if something is wrong with you, this episode is your permission slip to try a different approach. Key Takeaways 1 in 3 candidates fail a standardized exam on their first attempt, and repeat test takers face pass rates below 50%. This is far more common than anyone talks about. Failing a test and being a failure are two completely different things. A test measures how well you take a test, not how well you know the material. The Wall Hitter mindset type describes someone who has put in the work and still not passed. The wall is not permanent, and you are not the problem. Unprocessed emotions like shame, embarrassment, and grief get stored in the nervous system and show up during future tests. You cannot study your way out of a nervous system in survival mode. Emotional regulation tools like breathwork, somatic release, and journaling are not optional extras. They are part of the preparation. Rebuilding self-trust after a failed exam starts with stacking small wins, both inside and outside of studying. Normalizing failure is not about lowering standards. It is about creating the psychological safety needed to keep going and eventually succeed.

16 de abr de 202612 min
episode Episode 24: Are You an Overthinker? The Test-Taking Mindset Type That Knows the Answer, Then Changes It artwork

Episode 24: Are You an Overthinker? The Test-Taking Mindset Type That Knows the Answer, Then Changes It

If you've ever studied hard, felt confident going in, and then watched yourself change a correct answer to a wrong one, this episode is for you. In Episode 24, Tina Wiles breaks down the Overthinker mindset type, why it happens, and three skills you can use right in the middle of a test to stop the spiral. What You'll Learn in This Episode The five signs you're an Overthinker (and why high achievers are the most likely to fall into this pattern) Why the real problem isn't how much you studied, it's self-trust The science behind gut instinct and why your body processes information faster than your mind can analyze it How to use the 3-2-1 countdown technique to choose an answer and move forward Why separating your self-worth from your test score actually improves performance (and what the research says) The thought-stopping technique: a three-step method to interrupt overthinking in real time Mentioned in This Episode The Mel Robbins Five Second Rule (inspiration for the 3-2-1 countdown technique) Error-related negativity research published in Psychology Today The free two-minute mindset quiz at my2tor.com Try This Today The next time you catch yourself stuck between two answer choices, try this: reread the question slowly, take one slow nasal breath in and out, then count 3-2-1 and choose. Flag it if you want to revisit it, and move on. That's it. Trust the work you've done. Take the Free Quiz Not sure what your test-taking mindset type is? Take the two-minute quiz at my2tor.com to get personalized insights and strategies based on how you actually show up under pressure.

10 de abr de 202617 min