The exam is approaching. You open your textbook, don't know where to start, practice a few familiar problems and feel "pretty good" — then walk into the exam room and hit a problem type you never drilled. This post helps you review the right way, without wasting time.
Core principle: Review your weak spots, not your strong ones
Most review time is wasted on things you already know. The brain prefers easy work — but your exam score comes from the things you aren't sure about.
First step: Take a practice test (old exam paper) with no notes, grade yourself honestly, and list the sections where you made mistakes.
A 7-day review plan
Here's a practical schedule for students reviewing one week before an exam:
| Day | Focus |
|---|---|
| Day 1 | Take a practice test, identify weak areas |
| Day 2–3 | Deep review of your weakest topic |
| Day 4–5 | Review second weakest topic, drill that problem type |
| Day 6 | Take a second practice test, compare with Day 1 |
| Day 7 | Light review, go over formulas, rest early |
Study techniques that actually work
1. Active recall
Instead of re-reading your notes, quiz yourself: "What's the formula for the surface area of a cone? When do you use the discriminant?"
Recalling information without looking at your notes creates far stronger neural connections than passive reading.
2. Spaced repetition
Review material right when it's about to be forgotten — not the next day, but after 2–3 days, then again after a week. This is the principle behind effective flashcard apps.
3. Interleaving problem types
Don't do 20 quadratic function problems in a row. Mix it up: 3 quadratic, 3 trigonometry, 3 geometry... Mixing types forces your brain to re-identify each problem from scratch — just like the real exam.
4. Explain it in your own words
If you can't explain a concept in simple language, you don't truly understand it. Try explaining it to a friend, or write it out in your own words in a notebook.
Things NOT to do when studying for an exam
- Don't over-highlight and underline — it feels productive but doesn't help you remember
- Don't redo problems you already got right — that's wasted time
- Don't pull all-nighters — tired brain, weak retention, blank mind the next morning
- Don't skip meals — your brain needs glucose to learn, not just caffeine
Using MathPal during review
When you hit a problem you can't solve while reviewing:
- Take a photo and upload it to MathPal
- Read every step of the solution carefully, understand why each step was taken
- Re-solve it yourself from scratch without looking
- If you still miss a step, take a photo of that step and ask MathPal specifically about it
This isn't "having AI do it for you" — it's active learning with support.
One final principle
"Better to review a little and truly understand it, than to review a lot and retain nothing."
Doing 10 problems while understanding every step is always more effective than doing 50 problems while just copying answers.
