How to Create a Revision Timetable That Works: IGCSE & A Level Guide

Introduction

You have seen them on Pinterest – beautiful color-coded revision timetables with every hour planned. You spend 3 hours making one. Then you never follow it. Sound familiar?

You are not lazy. The problem is that most revision timetables are designed to fail. They ignore how your brain actually learns, they overestimate your focus, and they leave no room for life.

This guide is different. You will learn a practical, science-backed system to create a revision timetable that you will actually stick to – for IGCSE, A Level, or any Cambridge exam.

Plus, discover how freeStudy.pk’s live Math classes can fit perfectly into your timetable. Visit freeStudy.pk/time-slots for upcoming sessions.


Why Most Revision Timetables Fail

MistakeWhy It Fails
Too detailed (e.g., “9:00-9:30 Biology, 9:30-10:00 Chemistry”)Life happens. One interruption destroys the whole day.
No breaks or unrealistic breaksYour brain needs rest every 50-90 minutes.
Same subjects every dayBoredom kills motivation.
No prioritizationYou spend hours on easy topics and ignore hard ones.
Rigid and unforgivingOne missed session leads to guilt, then abandonment.

The Science of Effective Revision Timing

1. Use the 50/10 Rule (Not 60/0 or 120/30)

Your brain’s attention span for focused study is 50 minutes. After that, performance drops sharply.

The 50/10 method:

  • Study for 50 minutes (phone off, no tabs open)
  • Break for 10 minutes (stand, walk, drink water, no screen)
  • Repeat 3-4 times, then take a longer 30-minute break

2. Study Difficult Subjects in the Morning

Your willpower and focus are highest in the morning (for most people). Schedule Math, Physics, or Chemistry in the first 2 hours. Leave easier subjects like English or Sociology for the afternoon.

3. Interleave Different Subjects (Don’t Block Same Subject for 3 Hours)

Studying the same subject for hours creates illusion of mastery – you recognize it because you just saw it, but you haven’t really learned it.

Instead:

  • 50 minutes Math → break → 50 minutes Biology → break → 50 minutes Math again.
    This forces your brain to retrieve information, strengthening memory.

4. Spaced Repetition – Review After 1 Day, 1 Week, 1 Month

You forget 50% of what you learn within 24 hours. Fight this with spaced repetition:

Revision sessionWhen
FirstDay you learn it
SecondNext day
Third3 days later
Fourth1 week later
Fifth1 month later

Build these reviews into your timetable.


Step-by-Step to Build Your Revision Timetable

Step 1 – List All Your Subjects and Topics

For each Cambridge subject (e.g., IGCSE Physics 0625), write:

  • All 10-12 chapters/syllabus points
  • Rate each topic as: Easy / Medium / Hard

Step 2 – Prioritize Hard Topics First

Many students do the opposite – they revise easy topics because it feels good. But hard topics need more time and better focus.

Allocate:

  • Hard topics: 3-4 sessions each
  • Medium topics: 2 sessions each
  • Easy topics: 1 session each

Step 3 – Decide Your Available Hours

Be honest. Do not plan 8 hours of study if you have school/college from 8 AM to 2 PM.

Example for a Cambridge student:

  • After school (3 PM – 6 PM): 3 hours
  • Evening (7 PM – 9 PM): 2 hours
  • Total: 5 hours per weekday + 8 hours on weekends = 33 hours per week

Step 4 – Use Time Blocking (Not Hour-by-Hour)

Instead of “9:00-9:30 Biology”, write “Morning Block 1: Biology – Cell division (50 min)”
This gives you flexibility. If you start at 9:10, you still finish at 10:00.

Step 5 – Schedule Fixed Events First

  • School/college hours
  • Meals
  • Sleep (8 hours – non-negotiable)
  • freeStudy.pk live Math classes (check freeStudy.pk/time-slots for exact times – e.g., Tuesday & Thursday 6 PM UK time)

Then fit revision around them.

Step 6 – Leave 20% Empty Space

Do not fill every slot. Leave white space for:

  • Unexpected homework
  • Feeling tired
  • A friend calling
  • Catching up on a topic that took longer than expected

A timetable without empty space is a timetable that fails.


Sample Weekly Revision Timetable (IGCSE Student)

TimeMondayTuesdayWednesdayThursdayFridaySaturdaySunday
8-9 AMTravel/schoolSchoolSchoolSchoolSchoolSleep inSleep in
9-3 PMSchoolSchoolSchoolSchoolSchoolFree live Math class (check site)Family time
3-4 PMBreak + snackBreakBreakBreakBreak50 min Physics (hard)50 min Chemistry (hard)
4-5 PM50 min Math (hard)50 min Physics (hard)50 min Chemistry (hard)50 min Math (hard)50 min Biology (hard)50 min Math (hard)50 min Physics (hard)
5-5:10 PMBreakBreakBreakBreakBreakBreakBreak
5:10-6 PM50 min English (easy)50 min Biology (medium)50 min English50 min Biology50 min Chemistry review50 min Past paper50 min Past paper
6-7 PMDinner + restDinner + restLive Math class (check site)Dinner + restDinner + restDinnerDinner
7-8 PM50 min Past paper50 min Past paperFree50 min Weak topics50 min Weak topics50 min Spaced repetitionFree
8-9 PMFreeFreeFreeFreeFreeFreePlan next week

Note: Adjust for your own school hours and live class timings.


Question-Answer Section (Google Snippet Optimized)

Q1: How many hours should I revise per day for IGCSE?
A: For Year 10, 2-3 hours daily. For Year 11 (exam year), 4-5 hours daily. Quality > quantity. A focused 3-hour session beats a distracted 8-hour session.

Q2: Should I revise every day including weekends?
A: Yes, but lighter on weekends. Study 4-5 hours on Saturday, take Sunday mostly off (only 1-2 hours of review). Your brain needs rest.

Q3: What is the best revision timetable app?
A: Google Calendar (free), MyStudyLife (for students), or a simple paper planner. Do not overcomplicate. A notebook and pen work perfectly.

Q4: How do I stick to my timetable?
A: Start small. Follow your timetable for only 3 days. Then reward yourself. After 2 weeks, it becomes a habit. Also, join freeStudy.pk live Math classes – the fixed schedule builds discipline.

Q5: What if I fall behind my timetable?
A: Do not panic. Use your 20% empty space to catch up. If you fall far behind, revise the timetable – you probably overplanned. Reduce hours, not quality.


Free Tools to Help You

  • Google Calendar – Set reminders for each study block
  • Forest app – Grow a tree while you focus (prevents phone use)
  • Pomodoro timer – Online timers for 50/10 sessions
  • freeStudy.pk – Live Math classes at specific time slots. Add these to your calendar now.

Conclusion

A revision timetable is not about perfection – it is about consistency. Start with the 50/10 rule, prioritize hard topics in the morning, and leave empty space for life. Review and adjust your timetable every Sunday.

And most importantly: show up. The best timetable in the world is useless if you do not open your book. Begin today. Open your notebook. Write down tomorrow’s first block.

For live, interactive Math revision, join freeStudy.pk’s free live classes . No videos, no recordings – just real teaching when you need it.


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