I have the same problem but with my MSc. I did not take a year out before studying the MSc and came straight off the back of gaining a bachelors in mechanical engineering. So I felt exhausted and on top of this I had a major operation 13 days before I started my course which prevented me from eating solid food for 6 weeks so my energy levels were basically none existent for the first semester. I've flunked all but one of my exams and my thesis is in tatters, I really don't know whether to just call it a day or go back next year and resit.
I believe this has happened because I've had enough of education and should have given myself some time out in the working world and perhaps done an MSc (if I felt I needed it) in 4-5 years. I basically have no passion for education right now and rue my decision to start this course, I can't even force myself to open my books and study I would rather climb mount Everest than do this. Can anyone offer me some advice? Sorry for hijacking the thread.
I know how you feel about going straight into an MSc. I'll be handing in my dissertation in about 2 months. I just want to get my MSc over with tbh. The whole routine gets a bit monotonous and dull when you reach a certain point.
As for the op, i buggered up some of my AS exams and got less than satisfactory grades, but i stuck with it and persevered with hard work. I Passed my A2's with decent grades, got into uni, got my degree and now i'm months away from hopefully gaining an MSc as well. Keep at it.
In fact I'm pretty sure i failed my one exams at Geography A2, taught by shall we say a woman that was evil incarnate, but a fantastic teacher. I stuck with it, worked my arse off and i found i got an A iirc in that exam when i retook it.
I know exactly how you feel with sitting down to do some work and then giving up tbh. I've felt like that a dozen times when trying to produce a decent 3d model/2d work for my MSc. It's only after several attempts that i've really managed to make some headway. You hit a brick wall sometimes, you just have to knock it down. Excuse the cheesy metaphor but it's true.
Plenty of people bugger up and fail at school/uni/exams. If you fail, the key is to go back and give it another shot, not walk away. The personal satisfaction in that alone is a great motivator for work.
Also
1. Agree with the WoW point, for anyone playing it and doing exams, burn it with fire. Seriously.
2. Working in a stimulating environment is a good idea. Revising on your own while productive can get incredibly boring. I think i was more efficient at doing work when i was having lectures and had people next to me doing the same work that i could bounce ideas/criticism off of.
Good Luck with whatever you do OP

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