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How to Get a High Score with Only 3 Days to Study

Three days isn't ideal — but it's not nothing. Here's an hour-by-hour framework for maximising your exam score when time is critically short.

E
Examo Team
3 May 20257 min read

Let's be honest about what three days can do

Three days of focused revision won't turn a complete knowledge gap into full mastery. But it can absolutely move you from a fail to a pass, from a C to a B, or from a B to an A — depending on where you're starting.

The key insight: most exam marks are concentrated in a small fraction of the syllabus. If you spend three days on the right material in the right way, you can capture a disproportionate share of available marks. This guide tells you exactly how.


Before you start: the 30-minute audit (do this first)

Don't open a textbook yet. Spend your first 30 minutes doing this:

1. Get the mark scheme. Download the official mark scheme from your exam board's website (AQA, OCR, Edexcel, IBO, etc.) for the last three years of past papers. Skim through the top-scoring answers. What do they all have in common? Note it down.

2. Identify the high-value topics. Look at the last five past papers. Which topics appear every year? Circle them. These are your priority. In most subjects, 60–70% of marks come from 30–40% of the syllabus.

3. Be ruthless about what you're skipping. With three days, you cannot cover everything. Choose your battles based on: likelihood of appearing + marks available + how quickly you can get to a passable level on this topic.

You're now working a strategy, not just revising.


Day 1: Cover the highest-value topics

Goal: get to a "good enough" level on your two or three highest-priority topics.

Morning (3 hours):

  • Topic 1: Read your notes (or a summary — revision guides are fine here). Max 45 minutes.
  • Close everything and write a brain dump: what do you remember?
  • Attempt one past paper question on this topic. Time yourself.
  • Mark it. Note exactly what you missed.

Afternoon (3 hours):

  • Repeat the same process for Topic 2.

Evening (1.5 hours):

  • Review both topics using active recall only (no re-reading). Use flashcards if you have them.
  • Write the key facts, formulas, or arguments you need to remember for each topic on a single A4 sheet. This becomes your revision sheet.

Sleep. This is not optional. Sleep is when memory consolidates. Staying up until 3am on Day 1 will impair Days 2 and 3.


Day 2: Extend coverage + past paper practice

Goal: cover two more topics, then do a full timed past paper.

Morning (3 hours):

  • Topics 3 and 4, using the same process as Day 1: notes → brain dump → past paper question → mark.

Afternoon (2.5 hours):

  • Sit a full past paper under timed exam conditions. No notes. Phone away. Real timing.
  • Mark it immediately after. Use the official mark scheme.

Late afternoon (1.5 hours):

  • Go through every mark you dropped. Categorise: wrong content, wrong format, ran out of time, misread the question.
  • Add anything you need to remember to your revision sheets.

Evening (45 minutes):

  • Review your Day 1 material using active recall. This is your spaced repetition — Day 1 content reviewed on Day 2 is the first scheduled interval.

Day 3: Consolidation and exam preparation

Goal: sharpen what you know, simulate exam conditions, prepare your mindset.

Morning (2.5 hours):

  • Second full past paper, timed.
  • Focus on applying what you identified from Day 2's marking. Are you hitting the mark scheme better?

Late morning (1 hour):

  • Mark the paper. Note improvements. Note persistent gaps.
  • Review your revision sheets — both days. Can you recall the key points without looking?

Afternoon (1.5 hours):

  • Go through your weak points one final time.
  • For any topic you keep getting wrong: write a model answer yourself. Don't look at it again — just writing it helps encode it.

Evening:

  • Stop studying by 8pm.
  • Lay out everything you need tomorrow: ID, equipment, confirmation, directions.
  • Get 7–8 hours of sleep. This is the single highest-leverage thing you can do on the eve of an exam.

The tactics that matter most under time pressure

Focus on structure, not just content

Examiners award marks for specific things. In most subjects, a well-structured answer with partial knowledge scores higher than a disorganised answer with complete knowledge. Learn the expected format for each question type (definition → explanation → example; point → evidence → analysis; claim → counter → evaluation) and apply it consistently.

Learn the command terms

"Describe" and "evaluate" are different instructions. Students who ignore command terms consistently underperform. Spend 20 minutes identifying the command terms your exam uses and what each one requires.

Mark your own work honestly

The temptation is to be generous with yourself. Don't. Give yourself only the marks the mark scheme would give. This is the only way to accurately identify what needs fixing.

Practise the high-frequency question types

Every exam has questions that appear in similar forms every year. Identifying and practising these is the highest-leverage activity available under time pressure.

Don't start new topics on Day 3

New information introduced 24 hours before an exam is rarely retained well enough to be useful. Day 3 is for consolidating what you already covered on Days 1 and 2.


On the day

The night before: prepare everything. Sleep. Don't study after 8pm.

The morning of: eat. Don't cram in the hour before — it raises anxiety without helping retention.

In the exam:

  • Read all questions before starting. Plan your time allocation.
  • Start with the question you're most confident about — it builds momentum and settles nerves.
  • If you blank: skip and come back. Write whatever fragments you have — partial credit exists in most mark schemes.
  • Leave five minutes at the end to check for missed questions or calculation errors.

Realistic expectations

Starting point Three days of focused work Realistic outcome
Some knowledge, poor exam technique Strategy + past paper practice +1 to +2 grade boundaries
Good knowledge, not revised recently Structured recall + past papers Solid performance
No prior engagement with the material Hard prioritisation of high-value topics Pass to low B possible

Three days of the right work beats two weeks of passive re-reading every time. Use the time well.

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