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Reclaiming your exam confidence: Catch-up checklist

9 June 2026 3 min read admin

A note for the student: This checklist isn’t about your parents or teachers nagging you. This is about you taking the controls back. Use this resource to find the shortcuts and strategies that actually work for your brain.

1. Map the Gaps (The “No Surprises” Step)

Before you can move forward, you need to know where the holes are.

  • Audit your subjects: Pick your three “scariest” subjects.
  • The 2026 Goal: Look at GCSE grades explained to see exactly what the examiners are looking for in 2026. Don’t aim for “perfection”; aim for the next grade up.
  • The Benefit: Once the “scary unknown” is written down, it starts to look like a manageable list instead of an impossible mountain.

2. Master the “How,” Not Just the “What”

If you’ve fallen behind, it’s often because the way you’re studying isn’t sticking.

  • Consider ditching the highlighter: Reading and highlighting is “passive.” It doesn’t help everyone to remember or learn. Especially when you’re trying to recall knowledge in a hall full of desks.
  • Instead, build your Exam skills: Focus on “active recall” and “spacing”. Spend 10 minutes testing yourself for every 20 minutes you read.
  • The Benefit: You’ll remember more in less time, which means you can actually close your laptop by 8:00 PM without feeling guilty.

3. The “Low-Stakes” Mock Practice

Don’t wait for the school’s big hall to find out you’re struggling with time management.

  • Mini-Mocks: Take one practice question and set a timer for 10 minutes.
  • Focus on Mock exams: Practice the feeling of being under pressure in short bursts at home.
  • The Benefit: You build Exam confidence so that by the time the real thing arrives, you’ve already “failed” and “recovered” a dozen times in private.

4. Protect Your Brain (The Foundation)

You cannot catch up if your brain is running on three hours of sleep and a sugar rush.

  • The “Digital Sunset”: Phone goes in a different room 30 minutes before bed. No exceptions.
  • Movement: 15 minutes of being outside. It sounds cliché, but it clears the “brain fog” that makes catching up feel impossible.
  • The Benefit: A rested brain processes information 40% faster. Sleep is literally a shortcut to better grades.

5. Know When to Outsource

You don’t have to be an expert on everything. If you’re stuck, ask for a different kind of help.

  • Exam coaching: This isn’t tutoring where someone talks at you for an hour. It’s working with a mentor who helps you build a system that works for your life.
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  • Expert Guidance: Someone like Tej Samani has spent years figuring out the science of how students actually win. Use that knowledge to your advantage.
  • The Benefit: You stop guessing and start following a proven roadmap to success.

 

How to use this as a parent:

I suggest printing this off and leaving it somewhere low-pressure (like the kitchen counter) with a note that says: “I found this—it’s not about doing more work, it’s about making the work you do easier. Let me know if you want to look at any of these ‘shortcuts’ together.”

It moves you from being the “enforcer” to being the “facilitator”.