Year 10 Revision Booklet
Year 10 Revision Booklet
GCSEs are the most important exams of your life. They are the key to unlock the door to the future.
At GCSEs you learn for the exam, at A level and university you need to study. At university you read
for a degree –this implies students have to work for themselves.
Universities are telling us, work places are telling us and teachers are telling us that students are
too reliant on being told what to do. They need to learn to be independent learners.
Students who perform poorly in GCSE miss homework and coursework deadlines, forget their notes
and folder, don’t interact in class and cram in revision in the last weeks before exam.
The information in this booklet will help you to make a good start to your revision and
journey to success. Remember:
You will find a two example template Revision Timetables annexed with this revision handbook. These can be
adapted / used to structure your revision.
Template 1 – Appendix 1
This shows the working week when you are at school, therefore that time has been blocked off. You will
see that there is plenty of time remaining after school / at weekends!
Firstly, write all of the tasks / revision you wish to complete in the week in the box on the right.
This then needs transferring to the available time after school / during the weekend.
Colour code each of the subjects as this will give you a visual aid as to how much time you have
committed to revision on each subject.
Template 2 – Appendix 2
This timetable is better for when you have finished school for study leave.
Make enough copies of the weekly timetable to take you up to the end of your exams
Enter all your commitments such as lesson, clubs, work and most importantly time to relax.
When drawing up your revision timetable remember the following:
-Leave time for leisure activities
-Balance revision time between different subjects, however if you have an exam coming up, plan
appropriate revision leading up to it.
-Vary the subjects revised on one day
-When it comes to the end of the week, review how well it worked and make changes to the next week
if you need to.
-Review and re-do each weekly timetable until your last exam.
Put copies of the timetable up at home for everyone to see. If they know you are revising they will leave you
alone to get on.
If these timetables don’t work for you, make your own, however do not spend hours making it look pretty!
Organising your revision
Make a topic checklist
For each subject make a list of the major topics you have covered – this is called a topic check list. If you
find it difficult to list the topics ask your teacher, however many will provide this.
For each subject look at the topics and decide the order. Start with a topic you liked or found easy.
Remember you do not have to revise the topics in the same order you were taught them.
Re-write the topic check list in the order you want to revise. Pin up the topic check list in your bedroom.
Write the topics on your timetable too.
Check your timetable to see which subject you have chosen to study and check the topic list for which
specific part you have chosen to revise.
Studies suggest that the optimum time for working is 40 minutes followed by a 3-5 minute break (a
complete change of activity).
You will have lots of different pieces of information to remember as your course
progresses. In order to use your time effectively you need to employ effective
memory techniques which can be used when note taking or revising.
Learning Styles
Different people learn in different ways. Decide which style you prefer and use the following techniques. If
you don’t know which you are, try each and see which style works best for you.
VISUAL
Use pattern notes/mind maps/posters/leaflets/Dvds/YouTube/Pictures/Diagrams
Visualisation of information and outcomes
Highlighting
Transform information into cartoons
Subject specific vocabulary / key words on cards
Computer – revision sites like www.khanacademy.org / bitesize
Use key words – display key words and key information around your room just above eye level
Attach pictures or images to keywords/information to improve memory
Covert text/key information into a picture or a diagram
AUDITORY
Any activities involving reading AND listening or speaking
Group discussion/debate
Describe out loud what you are doing as you do it
Describe something either in writing or orally, in your own words
Make rhymes, jingles, songs etc.
Use mnemonics (see memory page)
Discuss your plans/ideas/answers with a partner
Report back / present / teach someone else what you have learnt
Use podcasts, record yourself speaking and listen to them whilst on bus etc.
Use rhythm to learn key information e.g. spelling
Put key words to a familiar or popular tune – e.g. Happy Birthday, favourite song
Write poems
Create your own questions and use these for quizzes, bingo, nought and crosses and board games.
PRACTICAL
Use role play, re-create or re-enact an event,
Use models – create a model of the human heart, plan a battle etc.
Use paper based activities – write notes/key words on post its, post cards or scrap paper then use
to arrange, organise, plan, sequence, classify and prioritise or turn into pattern notes/mind maps
Use movement – walk, dance, run while listening, reading, talking out aloud
Games: bingo, noughts and crosses, pairs
Fiddle with blue tack, ball etc. to keep yourself in appropriate learning state or to energise/relax
yourself.
Not all these strategies are appropriate for all subjects or all tasks. Write down 3 strategies you
already use that work and one that you will try.
SMASHING SCOPE
This is another set of memory techniques – not all will work for you, it is important to identify what works
and go with it.
Your memory works best when it associates a piece of information with something memorable – see
examples below:
SENSES – Use all your senses – vision, smell, hearing, taste, touch/movement (all learning styles)
MOVEMENT – move images around, walk or space out the thing to be remembered
ASSOCIATION – link the information to something that is already stable in your mind – make up a story
SAUCY – we all have almost a perfect memory of things that are a bit “saucy” or that have sexual
connotations
HUMOUR – the more funny, ridiculous, absurd, weird you make your images, the more memorable they
will be
IMAGINATION/IDEAS – Einstein said, “Imagination is more important than knowledge”. The more you
apply your imagination and memory, the better your memory will be – Use it! For example Mnemonics are
often a useful way to remember. Take the first letter of each key word and make up a silly phrase. E.g. to
remember the points of the compass in the right order Never Eat Shredded Wheat = North, East, South,
West
NUMBER – numbering adds efficiency to order and sequence
GOALS – remind yourself WHY you need to remember e.g. to pass exam, get into uni, get a job etc.
SYMBOLS – use symbols (signs, pictures, graphs) instead of words – your brain remembers pictures much
more easily than words
COLOUR – most people find colour helps make things more memorable
ORDER and/or SEQUENCE – in combination with other techniques it allows for more immediate reference
POSITIVITY – the brain tries to shut out negative feelings or memories so be positive to open up your brain
and memory bank.
EXAGGERATION – in all your images, exaggerate size, shape and sound
Mind Maps
Why do a mind map? Notes often end up being the book repeated word for word (unless, of course, you
have taken good notes using the techniques above).
This is an alternative way to make notes because your brain likes colour and pictures which help your
memory. A study in the US gave participants 10,000 images to look through. They then added 10 other
images. 95% of participants could identify the foreign images. Conclusion? Pictures stay in your brain.
EXAM BOARDS
AQA http://web.aqa.org.uk/
Edexcel http://www.edexcel.com/Pages/Home.aspx
OCR http://www.ocr.org.uk/
WJEC http://www.wjec.co.uk/
GENERAL
On the day
Get up in plenty of time.
Make sure you have everything you need before you leave home.
If you want to, do some last minute revision by flicking through your notes.
Don’t spend too long waiting outside the exam room as this can make you feel more nervous.
Make an agreement with your friend not to talk about the exam.
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.
So in the exam you think — "aha, quadratic equations, they were on the fridge..."
7. Get yourself drinks and snacks
So you don't make excuses to stop every 10 minutes...
Don't try to revise in bed — you'll be in the land of pink igloos and elephants before you can say
"Captain Birdseye".
You have to WRITE STUFF DOWN. This is real basic "how to revise" stuff.
11. 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.
This is especially important as you get close to the exams — CGP has plenty available (another
blatant advert).
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.
Appendix 1
Appendix 2