8 July 2026
The goal of revision is simple: retrieve knowledge efficiently while avoiding cognitive overload. The habits below help students revise in a way that strengthens long‑term memory rather than wasting time on ineffective strategies.
✅ DO: Effective Revision Habits
- Start revision early.
- Work in 20–30-minute focused blocks with 5‑minute breaks.
- Stop after 3–4 blocks to avoid fatigue.
- Use each block for one specific retrieval‑based task from the four techniques below.
- Use the four techniques across many sessions.
- Mark your own work using official mark schemes.
- Find a quiet, distraction‑free space.
❌ DO NOT: Common ineffective practices
- Do not reread notes, knowledge organisers, or revision guides.
- Do not highlight or underline notes.
- Do not rely only on multiple‑choice questions.
- Do not cram.
- Do not revise a single topic for long periods.
- Do not multitask (music with lyrics, messaging apps etc).
- Do not rely on AI marking.
Four Revision Techniques That Actually Work
1. Self‑testing with Cornell notes (active recall through reconstruction)
Students should use the Cornell notes created during learning to drive retrieval practice.
How to do it:
- Cover the main notes so only student‑generated questions and 8 key words remain visible.
- Use the key words as prompts to reconstruct the full notes from memory.
- Use the questions to check for depth and completeness.
- Uncover the original notes and compare:
- Identify gaps.
- Note missing steps.
- Improve explanations for next time.
- Repeat this activity in a later revision block to strengthen the memory.
Why it works:
This is active recall, which significantly outperforms passive review methods. Reconstructing notes from prompts strengthens memory, improves metacognition, and provides clear insight into what still needs practice.
If students did not use the Cornell method during their course, they can use text books, Craig’n’Dave videos, knowledge organisers or revision guides as their reference material to make notes first.
2. Brain dumps with spider diagrams/mind maps
Use this to vary retrieval practice and avoid duplicating the Cornell notes process.
How to do it:
- Place the topic title in the centre of a blank page.
- From memory, create branches for all ideas, terms, diagrams, processes, and examples.
- Compare with class notes, textbooks, knowledge organisers or revision guides.
- Add missing content in a different colour.
- The missing branches form a priority list for the next revision cycle.
Why it works:
This technique uses visual, non‑linear retrieval to organise knowledge and reveal gaps. It’s low‑stakes, promotes metacognition, and strengthens recall.
3. Key‑term review using Smart Revise “Terms” Mode (Leitner System)
Flashcard practice works when spaced and retrieval‑based. Smart Revise automates this.
How to do it:
- Use Smart Revise → Terms mode to practise vocabulary and definitions.
- Initial flipping is passive; once confident, switch to interactive mode to write definitions.
- The built‑in Leitner system increases practice of weaker terms and reduces repetition of mastered ones.
- Review a small number of Terms every day, ensuring spacing.
Why it works:
Spaced retrieval is one of the most reliable ways to build long‑term retention. The Leitner system ensures time is focused on weaker areas, making revision more efficient.
If students don’t have Smart Revise they could be supplied with flashcards. Be wary of students making their own cards because they may miss some concepts, write incorrect definitions or misconceptions.
4. Practice papers under exam conditions + Smart Revise “Advance” mode
Past papers are essential but limited. Smart Revise adds extra high‑quality questions.
How to do it:
- Sit timed papers with no notes and no assistance.
- When past papers run out or you need variety, use Smart Revise Advance mode or Tasks to generate exam‑style questions.
- Always self‑mark or use Smart Revise peer marking using mark schemes. Do not use any AI marking options for revision. It is too unreliable.
Why it works:
Exam‑condition practice improves retrieval fluency, timing, and confidence. Marking answers with real mark schemes deepens understanding of criteria and strengthens memory through deliberate error‑correction, something AI marking cannot replicate reliably.
How to Use Revision Guides and Knowledge Organisers
Treat revision guides and knowledge organisers as reference tools, not revision techniques.
Use them to:
- Check whether a brain dump covered everything.
- Check whether notes are good enough for self‑testing.
They are supporting resources, not methods.
Should Revision Be Fun?
Effective revision is meant to be cognitively demanding. Enjoyable, game‑like activities often feel productive but reduce the desirable difficulties needed for durable learning.
Fun has a place during initial learning, but revision works best when it involves effortful retrieval, not entertainment. Making the activity memorable can sometimes overshadow the knowledge itself.
The most effective revision techniques are rarely the most entertaining, but they consistently produce better long‑term results.
Want to know more? Check out our ‘At the chalk face’ episode on YouTube.