There's really no way to prepare. Just concentrate on enjoying your remaining time as a civilian.
Mike
True, true. Whatever you study for will be covered and tested within a matter of a few days. Its usually not the knowledge that some people have problems with, its the speed at which you have to "digest" it.
....but if you are really, really bored, and haven't already signed up to be a mechanic, you might want to find some lite reading on Electricity. Basic stuff like Ohm's law, Kirchoff's voltage/current laws, things like that. If you took any highschool/college level physics classes, it may have been covered already. Read about capacitors, inductors, and basic solid state componants, things like that.
If you are going in knowing you will be a mechanic, look at fluid-flow equations involving mass flow rate, volume displacement, density/pressure/volume relationships, gate/globe/check valve constuction......the list keeps going.
Keep in mind that the Navy Nuclear program covers a lot of topics, but it has narrowed and distilled these topics to cover only the material that is applicable to its own designs. Many of these designs may seem inefficent, laborious, and overly complex (think anti-buisness), but they are meant to be that way.
You may have been taught that the world see's the glass half-full. In the Nuclear Navy, you will be taught to see it as half-empty; ready to spontaneously break at any moment.
...Good luck!
