Time to revisit a few old posts on this topic. The first I wrote in 2013 when I was working at Woodford House. The second is from 2017 when I was at OneSchool Global. I think they are still relevant for my students at Hastings Boys' in 2025.
Exam revision time is a challenge in so many ways.
To avoid getting into a Mr. Bean examination scenario...
...there are many study tips out there and really the only decent two are (apart from learning by osmosis with the book placed under your pillow at night) - be active, not passive in your approach and create a study timetable to cover all aspects/all subjects and when the exams are on.
That means rewriting stuff and rereading primary sources (texts), not glancing over notes or pretending to engage in revising things or being distracted by social media.
The girls that I am teaching run the full continuum from fully motivated (redoing/ improving essays and answering textual questions, then getting my feedback) to doing zip zilch nothing (sitting on a computer looking at Spotify for songs to download). Thankfully only one or two in that last category, so most of them are in between those two extremes.
Startling revelation 1: some students don't seem to want to improve. They are unmotivated to do well in external exams for whatever reason.
Startling revelation 2: some students who want to improve are difficult to help. When I've suggested on a couple of occasions to individuals that they do something more focused than they are engaged in they have reacted negatively.
I get it - revision is an individual thing but teachers are experienced in sitting/setting exams and preparing students for exams.
All part of being a teenager I guess.
NCEA provides some challenges too - students have different strengths and weaknesses in the different external standards so for focused revision they need to have individual programmes - tough to work through as a teacher but great differentiated learning.
So - back to motivation. I came across this nifty talk about what motivates people and found myself nodding along. I can also vouch for the message as the blog can attest - bonus schemes (yes - you, Cognition Education), DO NOT WORK!!!!!!
Number 2
The revision trick is all about focus. Qui Gon-Jinn's phrase is overused by me, I know, but it's so apt: your focus determines your reality.
To help focus I offer these great ideas from an Edutopia article on 'brain breaks'.
I've heard our students use this term but they regard it as a break from study and not a sharpening of their focus.
There are some great activities in the article. Read it! What have you got to lose? And you could gain some focus.
It's within your grasp!
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