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How to revise!
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Remember! Different strategies work for different people Learning styles: –visual, –auditory, –kinaesthetic (practical) You need to use a range of strategies!
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What strategies can you use? Flash cards Practice questions Internet Revising with / testing friends Labelled diagrams Writing notes Writing lists Underlining in notes Star diagrams Mind maps Mnemonics
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Writing notes It is better to rewrite notes than to simply read through work Don’t rewrite everything, you need to cut down on the amount of information Do make sure you have enough detail! Summarise!
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Writing lists Lists are a good way of remembering information or advantages / disadvantages for a topic Write lists as bullet points Use small pictures to help you e.g. Quarrying Limestone Advantages Disadvantages Used to make cement and glass Noise pollution and increased traffic
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When writing lists……. If you use a colour (e.g. green for good and red for bad) use the same colours every time Use a different colour to highlight 5 points is a good number to remember Little drawings are a good way of helping you remember points, even a silly drawing will help!
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Using numbers! You may be able to remember numbers more easily than names. If this is the case try to put figures with points where you can. E.g. ‘Recycling is good’ would become ‘Recycling uses only 5-10% of the energy used to extract a metal from its ore’
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Using labelled diagrams An excellent way to learn especially for visual learners!
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Underlining in notes Its difficult to remember a page of notes if they are all the same font and colour Use colour / different sizes for heading / key points Underline key points or draw borders round them like this! Use diagrams, lists and pictures to break up pages of notes
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Mind maps Like a star / spider diagram but contains much more detail and demonstrates links between material more clearly
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Revising with friends ADVANTAGES: can talk about the work can test each other easier to remember facts if spoken out loud DISADVANTAGES Too easy to talk about something more interesting instead!
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Exam questions 1.Use past questions as you revise to make sure you have the notes / case studies necessary to get full marks 2.Test yourself under exam conditions
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Mnemonics Use the first letter of a series of words to create another word The sillier the better! E.g. OILRIG ) O oxidationR reduction I is L lossG gain of electrons
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Revision cards Put separate topic / case study on each card Keep topics together Don’t try to put too much information on each card
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Revision card example Ionic bonding Metal bonds with a non-metal: Metal loses electrons to form positive ion Non-metal gains electrons to form a negative ion Oppositely charged ions attract Overall charge = 0
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Practical learners Post-it notes Walk around Use the rooms space e.g. one side of the room for good points, the other side for bad points Make shapes with your hands Make something (a mobile, a tower)
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Auditory learners Record your notes as an mp3 file (and listen to them!) Speak aloud Tell someone else what you have learned
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Visual learners Use pictures, video Use coloured pens / highlighters Remember white space Form a ‘mental picture’ to try to ‘see’ the whole topic e.g. Reaction rates.…. How do things link together? What affects rate and why? What make particles collide successfully? Use mind maps
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Other points! To get you started, make your first revision session 5-10 minutes – then have a break You should then find it easier to go back to Organise yourself Plan a revision timetable Take breaks of 5-10 minutes every 25 minutes If you are worried speak to someone! DON’T leave it all until the last minute
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Task! Do past exam questions – and get them marked! You need to know if what you are doing is working.
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Useful websites KS3 www.bbc.co.uk/schools/ks3bitesize KS4 www.docbrown.info www.creative-chemistry.org.uk/gcse KS5 www.rsc.org/learn-chemistry www.rsc.org/learn-chemistry www.succeedingwithscience.com/labmouse
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