Practise like the exam will feel
Past papers only work when they are used deliberately. Begin open-book to learn the method, then move to timed sections, then mark harshly and re-attempt the exact questions that exposed weaknesses.
The best way to use this page is to read one section, then immediately apply it to a real school task, past-paper question or study session. Do not wait until you feel perfectly ready. Skill improves when you attempt, mark, correct and re-attempt.
Step-by-step method
- Choose the task. Pick one question, one paragraph, one formula set or one assessment section. Keep the focus narrow.
- Set a time limit. Use a short window such as 15, 25 or 40 minutes so the work has a clear edge.
- Attempt without over-help. Notes can be used in early practice, but gradually remove support.
- Mark with a rule. Decide what a strong answer must include: judgement, evidence, units, diagram, case study, source analysis or method.
- Write the correction. The correction should be better than the first attempt, not just a tick or cross.
- Re-attempt later. The second attempt is where learning becomes visible.
Worked example
Weak approach: “I will study exam preparation for two hours.” This sounds productive but does not say what skill will improve.
Stronger approach: “I will complete one timed question, mark it against three criteria, write a correction and add one mistake to my error log.” This creates evidence of progress.
Common mistakes
- Making the task too large and then avoiding it.
- Spending most of the session rewriting notes instead of testing memory or method.
- Ignoring feedback because it feels uncomfortable.
- Using a resource once and never returning to it.
- Measuring study by hours rather than improved answers.
Practice prompts
Use these prompts this week:
- What is the smallest question I can practise today?
- What would a marker reward in this answer?
- What mistake do I keep repeating?
- Can I explain the method without looking at notes?
- What will I re-attempt tomorrow?
How tutoring can help
A tutor can make this process faster by choosing the right level of question, modelling the method, marking the attempt and showing exactly what to fix. The aim is for the student to become more independent, not dependent on constant help.