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Top 5 revision techniques! (and the bottom 5) How to manage your time so you can revise all your subjects! Content Intro and Titles: In this video I'm going to Tell you the five top revision techniques and the five bottom revision techniques. Essentially I've got 5 dos and five don’ts for revision. Thanks to Tassomai for sponsoring this video. Tassomai is a quizzing app which is based on the best evidence of how students learn. Stay tuned to the end when I'll tell you how Tassomai makes use of the top revision techniques. https://www.tassomai.com/ Evidence based; on a meta study Dunlosky et al. 2013. A Paper called Improving Students’ Learning With Effective Learning Techniques: Promising Directions From Cognitive and Educational Psychology. https://pcl.sitehost.iu.edu/rgoldsto/... First up the most important one to do; practice testing - self quizzing Was the only one of the 10 techniques that the study looked into which showed a positive efficacy, which means it works, in all the situations tested. Next is distributed and or spaced revision. Simply this means giving a bit of time before revising a topic, returning to a topic after a day after a week after a month after a couple of months. Those are the two those are the only two that they listed as high utility which means that there are two that you should definitely do. “alright fine but that sounds hard… that sounds like a lot of effort”. But those two are definitely the quickest ways, so you have to think “right yes self-quizzing will take a lot of mental effort but it will take less time!” Interleaved practice this is just the idea that you shouldn't just study one topic at a time, but do practise questions and quizzing across multiple different topics, mixing up the order of them as you go. Self-explanation which is one that I’ve always advocated. That is putting yourself in the role of the teacher and trying to explain the topic or explain a method to solve a problem. it's often called the Feynman technique, and I have video on it just here. Elaborate interrogation is another one, and what this means is the learner has to try and justify a concept or challenge a misconception. next it's the five don'ts, in order from don't… unless all the way to definitely don't. Summarising or making notes, and yeah you can probably hear your teacher telling you to do this. And this is the only don't unless, the study found that this was normally more effective in older learners who have more experience of making notes. and the recommendation was that you only do this if you're explicitly following a note taking method or you are you have been taught a way to summarise texts and information. if you're interested in learning effective note taking then perhaps look into the Cornell method of note taking Keyword mnemonics or making up stories and poems around lists of words work if you've rehearsed them loads and loads of times. Using imagery - This is a really popular one for example trying to visualise hey explanation linked to images which remind you of itI'm afraid mind mapping falls into this one here as well. Highlighting texts - this is often sold to students as an active way to read. and it is true that you do need to find ways to keep yourself focused when you're reading this was the only technique in the study which was given a negative rating i.e. it had a negative impact on learning! And lastly simply re-reading something. Reading is important to understand something but it isn't the way that we internalise and memorise facts. if your school isn't already using Tassomai for science, maths or English, talk to your teachers. You can sign up as a private subscriber, but if your school signs up you'll probably get it for free. Tassomai uses three of the top five revision techniques that you should be using to ensure that your revision is fast and effective. It is based on an AI algorithm which selects the right questions for you at the right time. It makes sure that you are doing practice quizzing, spaced revision and interleaving your topics. And all you have to do is ten minutes a day, three times a week. The more you do of Tassomai, the better your memory will get. What is more, is that you can use Tassomai to identify your key priority areas, and then you can target them with the two other techniques that the evidence recommends; self-explanation and elaborate interrogation. Buy my book to help you memorise all the equations for GCSE Physics or Combined Science, for AQA, OCR A and B, Edexcel and Eduqas exam boards. On Kindle https://amzn.to/2vamd7r Paperback https://amzn.to/2HB0qZ5 You can have the kindle edition for free on your phone with a free trial of kindle unlimited: https://www.amazon.co.uk/kindle-dbs/h...