Exam Study Planning
How to create an effective exam study plan: 5-step method, 8-week calendar, sample weekly schedule, and tools to organize your revision.
An exam study plan is a structured calendar that distributes all subjects and chapters across the weeks leading up to the exam. It prevents improvisation, ensures complete syllabus coverage, and optimizes your time by prioritizing high-impact subjects. Here is how to build yours in 5 steps.
Why Is a Study Plan Essential for Exam Success?
Without a plan, most students fall into one of two traps: either they only study the subjects they enjoy (and neglect the rest), or they cram everything during the last week. In both cases, results fall well below their potential.
A study plan solves these problems by introducing three fundamental principles:
- Prioritization by weight: you dedicate more time to subjects that count the most toward your final grade
- Smart alternation: you alternate subjects and methods to maintain focus and avoid fatigue
- Spaced repetition: you review each chapter at increasing intervals to permanently anchor knowledge in long-term memory
Research in cognitive psychology shows that students who follow a structured plan score an average of 15 to 20% higher than those who study without a method. This is not about talent, it is about organization.
To learn more about the science behind these methods, check out our guide on how to study effectively.
How Do You Assess Your Priorities Before Creating a Plan?
Before planning anything, you need a clear map of your subjects, their stakes, and your current level. This is the foundation everything else rests on.
The Priority Table
Create a table with four columns for each subject:
| Subject | Weight | My level (1-5) | Priority score |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mathematics | 9 | 2 | 18 |
| Philosophy | 8 | 3 | 16 |
| History/Geography | 6 | 4 | 12 |
| Physics/Chemistry | 6 | 2 | 12 |
| English | 5 | 4 | 10 |
| Literature | 5 | 3 | 10 |
| Biology | 6 | 3 | 12 |
| Major 1 | 16 | 3 | 48 |
| Major 2 | 16 | 2 | 32 |
Priority score calculation: Weight x (6 - your level). The higher the score, the more revision time that subject needs. High-weight subjects where you are weak offer the best return on investment.
In the example above, the major subjects dominate the ranking by a wide margin. This makes sense: with a weight of 16 each, they alone represent half the final exam grade.
The Chapter Audit
For each priority subject, list all syllabus chapters and assess your mastery:
- Green: chapter mastered, needs light review only
- Orange: chapter partially understood, needs deep work
- Red: chapter not understood, needs to be studied from scratch
This mapping tells you exactly where to focus your effort.
How Do You Structure a Plan Over 8 Weeks?
Eight weeks is the optimal duration for comprehensive exam preparation. Here is how to divide this period into three distinct phases.
Phase 1: Building Foundations (Weeks 1-3)
Goal: understand and synthesize each chapter.
During these three weeks, your main work consists of:
- Re-reading each chapter while identifying key concepts
- Creating study sheets for each chapter (or generating them automatically with Revizly)
- Starting with the red and orange chapters of your priority subjects
- Asking your teachers questions about points you do not understand
Suggested time commitment: 2-3 hours per day on weekdays, 4-5 hours on weekends.
Time allocation:
- 60% of time on high priority score subjects
- 30% on medium priority subjects
- 10% on low priority subjects (light review)
Phase 2: Deep Practice (Weeks 4-6)
Goal: actively train and address gaps.
This is the most intensive phase. You need to:
- Complete exercises for each chapter, starting with the simplest
- Use automatic quiz generators to test your knowledge quickly
- Begin working through past exam papers by subject (last 3 years)
- Review your study sheets using spaced repetition
- Identify and work on weaknesses revealed by exercises
Suggested time commitment: 3-4 hours per day on weekdays, 5-6 hours on weekends.
Phase 3: Intensive Revision and Simulation (Weeks 7-8)
Goal: consolidate, simulate exam conditions, and build confidence.
The final two weeks focus on:
- Completing full past papers under real conditions (timed, no notes)
- Re-reading all your study sheets every 2-3 days
- Focusing on areas that continue to be problematic
- Reviewing writing methods specific to each subject (essay introductions, document analysis, etc.)
- The final week: light review only, no new learning
Suggested time commitment: 4-5 hours per day on weekdays, 6-7 hours on weekends. Reduce to 2-3 hours during the last two days.
What Does an Ideal Weekly Schedule Look Like?
Here is a sample weekly schedule you can adapt. This model alternates subjects and methods to optimize concentration.
| Time | Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday | Saturday | Sunday |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9-10:30 | Major 1 - Sheets | Math - Exercises | Major 2 - Sheets | Philosophy - Essay | Major 1 - Past papers | History - Sheets | Rest |
| 10:30-10:45 | Break | Break | Break | Break | Break | Break | |
| 10:45-12:15 | Physics - Quiz | Major 2 - Exercises | English - Reading | Math - Past papers | Biology - Exercises | Major 2 - Past papers | |
| 2-3:30 PM | Math - Sheets | History - Review | Major 1 - Exercises | Physics - Exercises | Philosophy - Sheets | Literature - Past papers | Spaced review |
| 3:30-3:45 PM | Break | Break | Break | Break | Break | Break | Break |
| 3:45-5 PM | Literature - Texts | Biology - Sheets | Spaced review | English - Writing | Buffer (catch-up) | Buffer (catch-up) | Spaced review |
| 5-5:30 PM | Exercise/relax | Exercise/relax | Exercise/relax | Exercise/relax | Exercise/relax | Exercise/relax | Exercise/relax |
Key principles of this model:
- Cognitive subjects in the morning: math, sciences, and major subjects when the brain is freshest
- Writing subjects in the afternoon: philosophy, literature, history
- Systematic alternation: never the same subject in two consecutive slots
- Buffer slots: planned time to absorb delays without disrupting the schedule
- Light Sunday: only spaced review to let the brain consolidate
- Daily exercise: physical activity improves memory and reduces stress
How Do You Integrate Spaced Repetition Into Your Plan?
Spaced repetition is the most powerful lever for long-term memorization. The principle: review a chapter just before you forget it, with increasingly longer intervals.
The Spaced Review Calendar
After studying a chapter for the first time, schedule recall sessions:
- Day +1: quick sheet review (10 minutes)
- Day +3: active test without looking at the sheet, then verify (15 minutes)
- Day +7: active test + application exercise (20 minutes)
- Day +14: quiz or exercise without help (15 minutes)
- Day +30: final check before the exam (10 minutes)
How to Track Spaced Reviews
Use a simple grid:
- Rows: chapters
- Columns: planned review dates (D+1, D+3, D+7, etc.)
- Check each cell after reviewing. If you fail the test, shorten the interval
This system seems complex to set up manually, but digital tools simplify it considerably. Revizly automatically generates quizzes for practice from your study sheets, making active test sessions much easier.
How Do You Alternate Subjects and Methods Effectively?
Alternation is a cognitive strategy called "interleaving." It involves mixing subjects and exercise types rather than working on a single topic for hours.
Why Alternation Works
When you switch between mathematics and philosophy, your brain must adapt to different modes of thinking. This adaptation, although tiring in the short term, strengthens neural connections and improves the ability to apply knowledge in varied contexts, which is exactly what an exam demands.
Alternation Rules
- Alternate science and humanities: after 90 minutes of math, switch to history or philosophy
- Alternate active and passive methods: after reading sheets, do exercises or quizzes
- Do not alternate too frequently: a minimum of 45 to 50 minutes per subject is needed to reach a state of deep concentration
- Vary your materials: handwritten sheets, online quizzes, paper-based past exams, oral review with a study partner
Effective Combinations
| Slot 1 (morning) | Slot 2 (morning) | Slot 3 (afternoon) | Slot 4 (afternoon) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Math - Exercises | Philosophy - Writing | Science - Quiz | Language - Oral |
| Major 1 - Sheets | History - Documents | Major 2 - Exercises | Literature - Analysis |
| Physics - Problems | English - Reading | Math - Past papers | Biology - Diagrams |
How Do You Handle the Final Weeks Before the Exam?
The last two weeks require a strategy shift. You move from learning to consolidation.
Week -2: Intensive Simulation
- Complete at least 2 full past papers per priority subject under real conditions
- Time yourself strictly
- Grade using the official marking scheme to identify lost points
- Dedicate 30% of your time to re-reading study sheets
Week -1: Calm Consolidation
- Monday to Wednesday: review sheets for high-weight subjects, complete one final past paper for your weakest subjects
- Thursday and Friday: light review only, no new learning
- Saturday (day before the exam): relax, quick review of your 10 most important sheets, early bedtime
- Exam day: full breakfast, arrive early, read a method sheet if needed
Absolute rule: do not start anything new during the final week. If a chapter has not been reviewed, it is too late to master it. Focus your efforts on what you already know to maximize points earned.
What Tools Should You Use to Organize Your Revision?
A good plan relies on the right tools. Here are the essential categories:
For Creating the Plan
- Google Calendar / Notion: schedule revision slots with reminders
- A wall chart: visualize all 8 weeks at a glance (very motivating)
- A logbook: note each evening what was done and adjust for the next day
For Creating Revision Content
- AI study sheet generator: transform your courses into structured sheets in seconds
- Automatic quiz generator: generate test quizzes for each chapter
- Past papers online: previous years' exam papers and answer keys
For Active Revision
- Flashcards: for vocabulary, dates, definitions
- Study groups: review with 2-3 people, testing each other
- Self-assessment: after each session, rate your mastery from 1 to 5
How Do You Adapt This Plan to Different Exam Tracks?
General Track
Concentrate 50% of your time on your two major subjects (weight 16 each). The rest is split between philosophy (weight 8), oral presentation, and core subjects.
Technical Track
Specific technical subjects require extensive practice. Dedicate 40% of your time to them with emphasis on case studies and practical exercises.
Vocational Track
Professional exams dominate. Focus 60% of your time on professional subjects and 40% on core subjects (literature, history/geography, mathematics).
Regardless of your track, the principle remains the same: identify high-stakes subjects, create your sheets with the AI study sheet generator, test yourself regularly, and stick to your plan.
Planning Mistakes That Cost Exam Points
Avoid these classic traps that undermine even the best-built plans:
- Planning without margins: if every minute is scheduled, any unexpected event derails everything. Keep 15 to 20% buffer time
- Neglecting low-weight subjects: even a weight-3 subject can tip a result. Give it at least the minimum
- Passive revision: re-reading your notes without testing yourself is very ineffective. Every session should include active testing (quiz, recall from memory, exercise)
- Ignoring sleep: sleeping less than 7 hours cancels the benefits of the day's revision. Sleep is when the brain consolidates learning
- Not adapting your plan: a plan is a guide, not a contract. Adjust it each week based on your progress and difficulties
The perfect plan does not exist. The best plan is the one you actually follow, even if it is imperfect. Start now: visit our 2026 exam prep page for subject-specific resources and discover how to study for exams with proven methods.
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Domande Frequenti
How far in advance should you start studying for exams?
Ideally, start your structured revision 8 to 10 weeks before the exam. This provides enough time to cover the entire syllabus with spaced review sessions. If you have less time, focus on high-weight subjects and your weak points.
How many hours per day should you study for exams?
During school weeks, aim for 2 to 3 hours of revision per day on weekdays and 4 to 5 hours on weekends. During holidays and the final week, you can increase to 6 to 8 hours per day, alternating subjects and including regular breaks.
Should you study every subject every day?
No, it is more effective to focus on 2 to 3 subjects per day while alternating. Plan a 3 to 4 day cycle that covers all your subjects, with more time slots for priority subjects (high weight + low proficiency).
How do you manage stress during exam revision?
Three essential techniques: maintain daily physical activity (30 minutes minimum), stick to a fixed sleep schedule (7 to 8 hours), and break your goals into concrete daily tasks. A well-defined plan reduces anxiety because you know exactly what to do each day.
How do you adjust your plan if you fall behind?
Build in a 2 to 3 hour buffer slot per week from the start to absorb delays. If you fall further behind, do not sacrifice high-weight subjects. Instead, reduce time spent on subjects you already know well and focus on chapters most likely to appear on the exam.
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