Struggling to memorize textbooks? Learn how focusing on practicals and command words can boost your exam marks with a smarter study strategy.

It’s about being a tactician, not a memory machine. If you master active recall, spacing, and past papers, you aren't just working hard; you’re working with the data.
The "Big Three" pillars are Active Recall, Spaced Repetition, and the strategic use of Past Papers. Active Recall involves pulling information out of your brain through methods like "blurting"—writing everything you know on a blank sheet of paper—rather than passively rereading notes. Spaced Repetition helps combat the "forgetting curve" by reviewing material at increasing intervals, such as one, three, seven, and fourteen days. Finally, Past Papers should be used from day one to act as a "searchlight," helping you learn the specific language of the mark scheme and how different exam boards word their questions.
To protect your marks in calculations, which can make up twenty to thirty percent of higher-tier papers, you should follow a "Safety Net" protocol. First, always show every step of your working to qualify for "Error Carried Forward" marks, even if your final answer is wrong. Second, ensure you include the correct units and convert them before starting your calculation (e.g., converting centimeters cubed to decimeters cubed). Finally, pay strict attention to significant figures as requested by the question, as failing to round correctly can cost you the final mark.
Understanding the distinction between these words is vital for efficiency and accuracy. "Describe" asks you to state what is happening, such as identifying a trend on a graph or a sequence of events, without needing to provide a scientific reason. "Explain" requires you to provide the why by detailing the underlying scientific mechanisms or cause-and-effect chains. Providing an explanation when only a description is asked for will not earn extra marks and can waste valuable time during the exam.
Instead of memorizing every experiment as a unique recipe, you should deconstruct them by focusing on variables and validity. You must be able to identify the Independent Variable (the one "I" change), the Dependent Variable (the one you measure), and the Control Variables (the ones kept the same to ensure a "valid" test). When writing a method, use specific equipment names and always mention repeating the experiment to calculate a mean, which improves the reliability of your results.
A successful exam-day strategy involves "mark-hunting" rather than answering questions in strict chronological order. If you get stuck on a difficult question, skip it and move on to bank easier marks first; your subconscious will often continue working on the problem in the background. Aim for a pace of roughly "one minute per mark" and use the final ten minutes of the session for "micro-fixes," such as checking units and significant figures. Additionally, prioritizing sleep the night before is essential, as memory consolidation happens during rest, preventing "brain fog" during the test.
From Columbia University alumni built in San Francisco
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From Columbia University alumni built in San Francisco
