I’m currently in Year 10, but here’s a lot of stuff they’ve been telling us at my school (and stuff my older friends say work):- Flashcards! Bullet point all the key-words, equations and vocab you can, write the answers on the back and flick through them when revising.- Revising what you’ve learnt during school at the end of the day/week. Taking things a bit at a time and memorising them when you first learn them helps big-time. - If you’re creative, use that to your advantage! Make songs with the facts, do illustrations to remember things, or little rhymes. Puns helped me loads in Year 7.- Past papers! As your teachers what exam board you’re using for each of your subjects, go onto their websites and find example papers. Do those more towards the end of Year 9, throughout Year 10 and regularly in Year 11. You’ll probably have mocks autumn term Y11. We were told to start off doing our papers open-book and open-time. This makes you get used to the question styles and all. Then, gradually wean yourself onto fixed time and closed book. You probably don’t know lots of the stuff in the exams yet - we’re still learning new stuff now. - Copying out your notes is good, apparently. Fixes them in your mind. - They suggested to us to use folders onstead of exercise books - apparently exercise books jump about between topics too much. Personally, I don’t agree. - The official revision textbooks and question books. Again, ask which exam boards you’re sitting. Hope this helped