Skip to content

Regular revision

 

Revision

Revision begins in the first week of the semester. Topics are presented logically and sequentially so you need to build on your knowledge and understanding throughout the semester.

Examples of regular revision are:

  • reading of required texts
  • revising after each lecture
  • summarising your notes
  • developing a weekly study timetable
  • establishing regular study habits.

Revision strategies

Just reading is too passive. Your understanding and ability to recall information will improve if you study more actively. If you actively use what you have read or heard, you will find it much easier to remember and understand in the future. If you don't do anything with the information you have learned in a lecture:

  • you will forget 50% within one hour
  • you will forget 75% within 24 hours.

So, don't just read—write notes, talk, listen and make sure what you have seen or heard is learned.


How to make revision more 'active'

  1. Write summaries and use mind maps

    • File your lectures, essays, research under topics.
    • Write bullet point summaries of each topic—use notes from lectures, tutorials, reading and assignment materials.
    • Further reduce your notes using highlighting.
    • Rewrite you notes as mind maps—note key ideas and supporting examples or evidence.
  2. Revise with others

  3. Practise answering past exam papers

  4. Analyse exam questions

    Example
    Analyse the reasons for the fluctuations in the Australian dollar over the past two years. Look at the different components that make up this question.

    • Instruction
    • Keywords
    • Limitations

  5. Instruction Key words Limitations
    Analyse
    • The reason for
    • The fluctutation in
    • The Australian dollar
    • Australian
    • Over the past two years