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Study Skills and Revision

Welcome to Study Skills and Revision Course

This interactive course unlocks as you complete each activity, task, and quiz. Work through the sections in order, open the accordions, and complete the short activities. Your progress will be saved so you can return and pick up where you left off.

📖 Aims and Objectives (Click me to expand)

By the end of this course you will be able to:
  • Plan your study time using simple, realistic routines.
  • Take clear, organised notes that support your learning.
  • Use effective revision strategies to prepare for assessments.
  • Build confidence in your ability to manage coursework and exams.
  • Develop habits that support long-term, independent learning.

📖 What You Will Need

Suggested resources
  • A notebook or digital note-taking app.
  • Access to a quiet space where you can focus.
  • A calendar, diary, or planning tool (paper or digital).
  • Roughly 30–45 minutes per section.
  • Any current assignments, timetables, or assessment dates.

🧩 Start: Begin the course

Take a moment to think about why you are here. When you are ready, move into Section 1 and start exploring how to plan your study time.

Section 1: Planning Your Study Time

📖 Why planning makes study easier

Reducing stress

Planning your study time helps you avoid last-minute rushes, which can increase stress and make it harder to concentrate. A simple plan gives you a sense of control and makes your workload feel more manageable.

Seeing the bigger picture

When you map out your week, you can see how study fits alongside work, family, and other commitments. This helps you make realistic decisions about what you can do and when.

Staying motivated

Breaking tasks into smaller steps and ticking them off gives you regular wins. These small successes build motivation and confidence over time.

📘 Example: Sam has two assignments due in three weeks. Instead of waiting until the final few days, Sam spends 10 minutes planning three short study sessions each week. By the deadline, both assignments are finished with time to spare.

📘 Example: A learner working shifts uses a weekly planner to block out work hours first, then adds three 45-minute study blocks in the gaps. This stops study time clashing with work or family plans.

🧩 Activity: Map your typical week

On paper or on screen, sketch out a typical week and mark in your fixed commitments (work, childcare, appointments), then highlight where 30–60 minute study blocks could realistically fit.

📖 Simple planning tools you can use

Must / Should / Could

List your tasks under three headings: “Must” (essential), “Should” (important but flexible), and “Could” (optional extras). Start with the “Must” list when planning your study blocks.

Study blocks and breaks

Use focused blocks of 30–60 minutes followed by a short break. This helps you stay alert and reduces the temptation to multitask.

Daily and weekly check-ins

Spend a few minutes at the start or end of each day reviewing what you have done and what comes next. Adjust your plan if life changes.

📘 Example: On Sunday evening, Jordan writes a “Must / Should / Could” list for the week. Each day, Jordan chooses one “Must” task to complete during a planned study block.

❓ Quick Quiz: Planning Your Study Time

Planning short, regular study blocks across the week is usually more effective than one long cramming session.

It is best to plan only on the day of the deadline so everything is fresh.

Study plans should never be changed once written.

Including work and family commitments in your plan helps you set realistic study goals.

💭 Reflect: Your current planning habits

How do you currently plan your study time, and what is one small change you could make this week to improve it?

Section 2: Taking Effective Notes

🧩 Warm-up: Think about your note-taking

Recall the last time you took notes for a lesson or assignment—were they clear and useful later, or did they feel messy and hard to follow?

📖 What makes notes effective?

Active listening and reading

Effective notes are not a word-for-word copy. Instead, you listen or read actively, pick out key ideas, and put them into your own words.

Clear structure

Using headings, bullet points, and spacing makes your notes easier to scan when you come back to them during revision.

Purposeful detail

Good notes capture main ideas, key terms, and examples, without becoming overloaded with every single sentence.

📘 Example: During a lesson, Priya writes short headings for each topic, adds bullet points for key ideas, and leaves space to add extra notes later from reading.

📘 Example: Instead of copying slides word-for-word, a learner writes a brief summary in their own words and adds one example for each main point.

📖 Note-taking methods you can try

Cornell notes

Divide your page into three sections: a narrow column for cues or questions, a wider column for notes, and a space at the bottom for a short summary. After the session, add questions and a summary to help with revision.

Mind-mapping

Start with a central topic in the middle of the page and draw branches for subtopics and details. This is especially helpful if you like to see how ideas connect visually.

Digital notes

Using a digital tool or app can make it easier to search, reorganise, and back up your notes. You can still use headings, bullet points, and colour to keep things clear.

📘 Example: For a complex topic, Alex creates a mind map during class, then later rewrites the key points as Cornell notes to prepare for an assessment.

❓ Quick Quiz: Effective Notes

Good notes should capture every word the tutor says.

Using your own words in your notes can help you understand and remember information better.

Headings and bullet points make it easier to revise from your notes later.

Highlighting whole paragraphs is the best way to study.

🧩 Try This: Practice a note-taking method

Choose a short video, article, or lesson you are working on and experiment with either Cornell notes or a mind map, then look back and decide which parts of your notes are most helpful.

💭 Reflect: Your preferred style

Which note-taking method feels most natural to you, and how could you adapt it to suit your course or subject area?

Section 3: Revising With Confidence

📖 What revision really is

More than re-reading

Revision is not just reading your notes again and again. Effective revision means actively working with the material so your brain has to retrieve and use the information.

Building long-term memory

When you revisit topics over time and test yourself, you strengthen the pathways in your memory, making it easier to recall information in assessments.

Preparing for the task

Good revision also means becoming familiar with the format of your assessment—whether it is a written exam, practical task, or portfolio.

📘 Example: Instead of reading a chapter three times, a learner reads it once, closes the book, and writes down everything they can remember, then checks what they missed.

📘 Example: Before a practical assessment, a learner practises the steps out loud and then performs them in real time to mirror the assessment conditions.

🧩 Quick Exercise: Check your current revision habits

List the revision methods you usually use (for example, re-reading, highlighting, making flashcards) and mark which ones involve actively testing yourself and which ones are more passive.

📖 Powerful revision techniques

Active recall

Test yourself by covering your notes and trying to write, say, or sketch what you remember. Then check against your notes and fill in any gaps.

Spaced repetition

Review key topics several times over days or weeks instead of all at once. Short, repeated sessions are more effective than one long cramming session.

Teaching someone else

Explain a topic to a friend, family member, or even to yourself out loud. If you can teach it clearly, you probably understand it well.

Practice questions and past papers

Use practice questions, past papers, or sample tasks to get used to the style of questions and the timing of the assessment.

📘 Example: In the weeks before an exam, Taylor creates a small set of flashcards and reviews them for 10 minutes every other day, testing recall rather than just reading the answers.

❓ Quick Quiz: Revision Strategies

Active recall means testing yourself on what you know rather than just re-reading notes.

Spaced repetition means doing all your revision the night before the exam.

Using practice questions can help you get used to the format of an assessment.

Teaching someone else is not useful for revision.

💭 Reflect: Confidence and preparation

Think about a future assessment—what one revision strategy from this section could you start using now to feel more confident?

Section 4: Your Personal Study and Revision Plan

🧩 Task: Create your mini study plan

Choose one upcoming week and draft a simple study plan that includes at least three study blocks, one note-taking strategy you will use, and one revision technique you will try.

📖 Putting the skills into practice

Combining planning, notes, and revision

When you plan your time, take clear notes, and revise actively, each part supports the others. Your plan tells you when to study, your notes give you something useful to work from, and your revision techniques help you remember and apply what you have learned.

Staying flexible

Life happens, and plans sometimes need to change. It is fine to adjust your study blocks, try new note-taking methods, or switch revision techniques as you discover what works best for you.

Building long-term habits

Small, consistent actions—like planning your week, reviewing notes, and testing yourself—add up over time. These habits will support you not only in this course but in future learning and work.

📘 Example: Over a month, a learner experiments with different note-taking methods and settles on Cornell notes for theory lessons and mind maps for big-picture topics, using both in their weekly study plan.

📘 Example: After trying active recall with flashcards, a learner notices they remember more in class discussions and feels less anxious before tests.

❓ Quick Quiz: Bringing It Together

A realistic study plan should include your other life commitments as well as study time.

Once you choose a note-taking method, you should never change it.

Active revision strategies help you feel more prepared for assessments.

Study skills only matter for exams, not for everyday learning.

💭 Reflect: Your next step

What is one concrete action you will take in the next 48 hours to improve how you plan, take notes, or revise?

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