You are going to hate the answer to this. You talk about "kids". A lot of your classmates left childhood a while ago and have embraced this world called "adulthood". So, a lot of the differences in performance that you see are due to this.
Other factors?
- I've been studying science nearly full-time for the past 8 years. Undergrad, work, and now, post-bacc. This probably sounds arrogant, but I'm better at this because I've been doing it longer. Learning science and math is a skill that one learns over time and some of us have simply been doing it longer than you have.
- This isn't high school. You aren't the smartest kid in the class anymore. High school tends to reward a different set of skills which are typically useless in college.
- I study a lot. You study a lot. I study more effectively than you do because I have far less time to study.
[*]Office hours. You spend your time in coffee shops and the library. I spend my time talking to our professor finding out what is important to know for the exam.
[*]Integration. The trend that I've seen a lot with a lot of my classmates is that they tend to think of courses as standalone entities that have to be passed by hook or by crook. You should really strive to incorporate all the courses you study into one large body of knowledge.
You want to do better? Find the people that do well in your courses and emulate them. Some of it is natural talent, but most of it is due to working
differently than you do.
Here are my pointers:
- If you're making notecards, you're doing something wrong.
- When do you start studying for the exams? I start at least a week before the exam. Case in point, I had a biochemistry exam today that I started reviewing for 9 days ago. Do you do this?
- My physiology textbook is 984 pages long. My biochemistry textbook is 1382 pages long. Neither professor expects me to know all of the information in those two textbooks. I know exactly what information both professors want me to know - do you? Have you asked them? I have.
- I spend an average of 5 minutes a day on my personal Facebook page. I've run into scores of pre-meds that study 8 hours a day but a lot of that is wasted time. Get rid of distractions.
So, you want to compete with me? Here's what you do - and understand that I'm writing this post with a few beers onboard, so I apologize if this sounds a bit abrasive:
- If you spend more than 10 minutes on your Facebook page, delete it.
- Start reviewing for exams 9 days prior to the exam.
- Find a way to encapsulate course material in a way that makes sense to you - this might be through writing out length answers to basic questions, drawing pictures, etc. It really depends upon the material.
- Put yourself in a position to teach others. I feel a bit guilty about this - I spend a huge proportion of my time teaching other people about the topics covered in my classes, so come exam time, I'm far better prepared than most of my classmates.
Back to my beer.