Revision Year 11 Parents' Evening

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Revision Year 11 Parents’ Evening

What does not work well? Highlighting

Re-reading

Summarising texts

Why don’t these work? ● Low challenge ● Little thinking required ● Makes the student think they are “doing something”

Revising Revising must be an active process. It has a number of stages. Get organised •Get all the information you need: the specification, a revision guide, access to the VLE, Bitesize, your notes.

Redraft •Produce revision notes.

Reorganise •Get a folder and re-organise your notes into ‘chunks’ of information.

Review •Re-visit your notes at least twice to transfer your learning from short to long term memory.

Apply your learning: Practise exam questions and test yourself

Get them organised Make sure they have: • An organised workspace • The right resources - revision guides, pens, paper, flash cards • A revision timetable with regular breaks • No distractions - phones, games… • As little stress as possible • Rewards

Revision timetable

Revision tracker

Revision Activities • Mind-maps • Key words – post-its / lists • Flash Cards • Numbered / Bullet point lists

• Exam Questions and Mark Scheme • Write your own Quizzes • Family and Friends Test

Mind maps

art

Numbered lists

dep art

me nt

s

s Oathall

up o r g or

tut n io t a s year gro ani

org

ups

1.organisation a.departments

Oathall

i.art

clu

bs

ne

tball

b.tutor groups

rock orchestra

c.year groups 2.clubs a.rock orchestra b.netball

Flash cards

Interleaved Practice When you are revising a subject, the temptation is to do it in ‘blocks’ of topics. Like below:

It is much better done like this:

This encourages students to “chunk up” the topics and repeat, revisit and review.

After a one hour revision session: • • • • • •

10 minutes later revise the topic for 10 minutes 1 day later revise the topic for 5 minutes 1 week later revise the topic for 2-5 minutes 1 month later revise the topic for 2-5 minutes Before exams revise the topic as required. Each time knowledge is reinforced; it enters deeper into the long-term memory and becomes more stable.