Exam study plan: your 7-day plan for more points
An exam in a week — and the material is piling up? With the right 7-day study plan, you can avoid last-minute panic and walk into the exam relaxed. Here's how to structure the last seven days so you not only learn, but actually remember.
Day 1–2: Get an overview
Before you start, you need clarity. List every topic that could appear on the exam. Mark what you've nailed (green), what's wobbly (yellow), and what you can't do at all (red). That way, on days 3 to 5 you focus on the red and yellow topics — not on what you already know.
Day 3–5: Active practice
Now for the substance. Take two or three topics per day and work through real exercises. Don't read, don't highlight — calculate, write, explain. Active recall is the most effective learning method, confirmed in study after study.
Day 6–7: Review and rest
On the second-to-last day, run through every topic again — briefly but precisely. The day before the exam: no new topics. Light review only, early to bed, good breakfast. Your brain needs sleep to consolidate what you've learned.
Common mistakes when revising
The most common mistake: starting too late and pulling an all-nighter. Sleep deprivation halves your memory performance — even if you cram a lot in those last hours. Second classic: only re-reading what you already know because it feels good. Real learning happens where it's wobbly. Third: planning no breaks. Your brain needs breaks to consolidate — they aren't a luxury, they're mandatory.
How to stay on track
On Sunday evening, jot down briefly what you want to do each day — three bullet points are enough. Tick them off. This small act releases dopamine and keeps you motivated. If you don't finish everything one day: no drama. Don't push everything to the last day, just stretch the plan by a day.
Frequently asked questions
When should I start revising for an exam?
7 days ahead is enough for most school exams. For larger exams like A-Levels, plan 4–6 weeks.
How many hours per day should I study?
2–3 focused hours per day are more effective than 6 fragmented ones. Plan breaks and stop when you can no longer take in new content.
What should I do if I panic before the exam?
Breathe deep, briefly write down your worries, take a 10-minute walk in fresh air. Studies show: 5 minutes of free writing about exam anxiety measurably reduces it.