It is almost unimaginable to think that excellent students fail more than others. But that does not stop it from being true. It's strange, yes. It's unexpected, yes too. But it is still true. They get more questions wrong, make more mistakes but still score more marks than their peers. How they do this is an open secret, but many are not aware because they do not pay attention; they don't observe closely enough. But that's why I am here, to help you figure out how they do it so that you too can benefit from applying it.
KNOW WHEN FAILURE MATTERS, AND WHEN IT DOESN'T
All forms of failure do not have the same consequences, and these students know this. They take that knowledge and spurn it into an advantage that yields tremendous positive rewards for them. So what's that secret? What's that hidden recipe that makes them prepare better and achieve excellence? What exactly makes them standout?
It's simple. They fail more before the exams.
They fail more when it doesn't matter and that helps them get prepared for when it does matter. They activate practice mode early enough, try more questions and exercises and fail a lot of them. But the good news is that it doesn't affect them there. There are never marked down for the number of questions they failed or for the things they have no answers to during this period. In order words, they can fail with ease.
THE PARADOX OF JOYFUL FRUSTRATION
I don't know about you, but for me I would rather pass than fail. I would rather be tops than bottom. I absolutely prefer having less answers wrong, or less questions unknown. I would love to be on top of my game, everytime. But you see, it doesn't always happen that way. We all do slip from the ideal. But if given the choice, I'll rather fail now, if it will stop me from failing later. And that's the choice excellent students take.
They enjoy the frustration of spending time studying, practising more questions and taking mock tests because it makes them better for it. Admittedly, they get many answers wrong and are often confused when served with certain academic exercises. But due to the exposure they now have, they go ahead to work on areas they are weak and this helps them to be well prepared when it absolutely matters. They fail when it doesn't matter, and that makes them succeed when it matters.
Excellent students are less prone to be caught unawares by seemingly strange questions during exams. This is because they already met similar ones while preparing. Someone you have met before can be a stranger to others, but not to you. Interaction is what separates strangeness from familiarity. And because they have interacted with such questions before, it becomes very easy to them. It may not have been that way the first time they saw it. It may have been strange to them then; they may have failed it. But that gave them an insight on areas they should read on, and that is what makes the difference.
In other words, they have learnt to use failure to their advantage. They get frustrated before the exams so that they do not get frustrated in the exams. This is what makes them stand out. They become masters of success because they have learnt to master failure by knowing when to fail. They get better grades, not because they don't fail more questions but because they know when to fail successfully. They have learnt to use failure and setbacks to their advantage.
And if they have, and if they can, so can you. So must you.