21 Killer Revision Tips

 
Welcome friend, you have chosen Option A. You may think you've chosen the easy option. Sure, the
probability of having your brain sucked out through your nose and digested is a lot lower, but exams
are no pushover. However, if you follow these 21 simple revision tips, you'll stroll through the exams...
and through life... earning millions along the way... becoming a household name... eventually getting
your own chat show. Remember, these 21 tips are the key.
 
1) Start revising early — i.e. months,
not days before the exam.
Make a timetable (see samples) to plan
your revision and stick to it.
     
2) Don't spend ages making your notes look pretty
— this is just wasting time. For diagrams, include all the
details you need to learn, but don't try to produce a work
of art. Limit yourself to 2 or 3 colours so you don't get
carried away colouring things in.
   
3) Take short breaks
— every hour, not every 10 minutes.
 
     
4) Use revision guides
— CGP ones are the best you can buy
(blatant CGP advert, I know, but what do
you expect — you're on our website...)
   
     
    Brain: low fact concentration
5) Sleep on your exam notes
— this will enable you to revise by osmosis.
If you are going to do this , it's best not to
learn anything until the night before the exam.
Stick a revision guide under your pillow and
when you wake the next day, you'll find the
full contents of the book have been absorbed
into your brain.
Movement of
fact particles
    Revision notes: high fact concentration
6) In study leave, start revising early
i.e. 9am — that way you'll get your day's work done
much quicker and will have time to relax in the evening.
 
     
7) Stick revision notes all around your house
so in the exam you think — "aha, quadratic
equations, they were on the fridge..."
   
8) Get yourself drinks and snacks
so you don't make excuses to stop every
10 minutes...
 
     
9) Try reading difficult bits in funny accents
— Australian is particularly good... It worked
for my friend Alice (the weirdo).
 
   
10) Sit at a proper desk
Don't try to revise in bed — you'll be in
the land of pink igloos and elephants
before you can say "Captain Birdseye".
   
11) Don't put it off
"Procrastination" is the long word for it. And it means
rearranging stuff on your desk, getting a sudden urge after
16 years to tidy your room, playing the guitar, thinking
about the weekend, writing love poems about that
girl/boy you fancy, painting your toenails, etc, etc, etc,...
Sit down at your desk and GET ON WITH IT.
 
     
12) Don't just read your notes
— you have to WRITE STUFF DOWN. This is real basic
"how to revise" stuff. For the full details, get yourself
a copy of our "How to Revise" book.
   
13) Take in a beer mat
To beat the wobbly exam desk — this will do your
nerves and general mental state no end of good...
 
   
  Sadly, it's too late for Daniel.  
     
  Before   After  
14) Don't turn yourself into a revision zombie
— if you stop doing anything else but revision you'll
turn into a zombie. It's really important that you
keep time to do things you enjoy... like cinema,
shopping, sports, frisbee, rock-climbing, making model
planes, nose-picking, whatever tickles your ferret...
When you're doing these try to relax and totally
forget about revision.
     
15) Do lots of practice exam papers
This is especially important as you get close to
the exams — CGP has plenty available (another
blatant advert).
   
16) Read the exam timetable properly
— double-check so you don't miss an exam
and have plenty of time to prepare for it.
 
     
17) If really stuck in the exam...
play the earthquake game
— throw all your pens in the air and they'll
form the name of a city about to be hit by
an earthquake.
 
     
18) Find the right environment to revise
NOT in front of the TV
NOT listening to the radio
Music can sometimes be OK, but you need to find the
right kind. It's got to be something that's just there in the
background that you're not thinking about at all.
Music without singing is better as you won't be tempted
to dance around your bedroom like a big fool.
 
19) Don't hang around with the nervous paranoid
people on the morning of the exam.
— they'll just stress you out, which doesn't help at all.
 
     
20) Look at the new CGP tips books
— to get advice specific to your subject,
e.g. Maths tips.
   
 
21) Dress as a medieval knight and demand ale
— this is an old tradition, which states that anyone
attending the examination in full knight's costume has
the right to demand a tankard of ale.
Unfortunately, you need to be carrying a sword and if
you try this you'll be arrested and sent to prison.
 
 
You may have noticed that 5 of these aren't entirely sensible.
A true revision meister will spot all 5 in a jiffy. Have a bash by
putting the numbers (in ascending order) in the boxes.
 
                                           

 

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