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Learn about various revision strategies based on your learning style - visual, auditory, kinesthetic. Watch a tutorial on how to optimize your revision process. Discover engaging activities like creating custom Monopoly boards with educational content and incorporating revision questions in games like Snakes and Ladders. Get creative with revision cubes, acrostic poems, and paper doll chains to make studying more interactive and effective.
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Before we discuss revision strategies you must try to identify what type of learner you are… Visual? Auditory? Kinesthetic? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uQkTho2or8U&safe=true
MONOPOLY Print out a board template from the internet then create your own board rules, chance and community chest cards. Rules and question cards could focus on a whole subject or a topic? Best to create and play in small groups!
OR… Take an existing monopoly board, keep the rules and squares the same but change the community chest and chance cards? You could also include a rule that you must correctly answer a revision question in order to collect 200 as you pass go!
SNAKES AND LADDERS Print out a board template (or create your own!) and add your own rules/questions. Rules could focus on a whole subject or topic? All you then need is dice and counters – best to play in a small group.
P.E. revision examples… Make sure your questions get more challenging the higher up the board you go, consider the command words for your questions (i.e. name/list/identify is going to be an easier type of question to answer than an explain/evaluate).
The Cube Create a cube using the template. Leave the lid open. On each side of the cube write a key word and definition from a chosen topic. Create some revision questions on coloured card. Green card for easier questions, amber for medium difficulty questions and red for very difficult questions. Place them inside the cube. Pick out the questions and answer them. Or someone else can pick them out for you.
ACROSTIC POEMS Use to revise key words, concepts, topics, key individuals. It may be useful to help you remember key points and quotes for poems in your English Anthology.
PAPER DOLL CHAIN Create your own paper doll chain. Fill each paper doll with information, symbols and images linked to a key individual you need to revise (i.e. Alexander Fleming, Louis Pasteur). You could write content on one side and questions on the other side? Hang your chain somewhere up high where you will read it and test yourself!