Improving Revision Materials: Why Good Notes Are Never Finished
A good revision sheet is not written once. It is improved every time a student gets stuck.
The Myth of the “Finished” Revision Pack
There is a comforting idea that a set of revision notes can be completed, printed, filed neatly in a folder and declared finished.
Sadly, teaching does not work like that.
At Philip M Russell Ltd, our GCSE and A-Level revision materials are constantly changing because students are constantly showing us where the difficult bits really are. A topic may look perfectly clear when written by a teacher. It may even look clear to a student when they first read it. Then comes the exam question — and suddenly the neat explanation collapses under the weight of one awkward phrase, one hidden assumption, or one bit of algebra that the student thought they understood but did not.
That is why good revision notes are never really finished. They are tested in lessons, challenged by real questions, improved by mistakes, and rewritten when a better explanation is needed.
Why Revision Resources Need Updating
Science and maths teaching is not just about having information available. Students already have textbooks, websites, videos, apps and revision guides. The real challenge is helping them know what matters, how to use it, and how to apply it under exam pressure.
Revision materials need updating for several reasons.
Exam specifications change. Question styles evolve. Mark schemes reveal patterns. Students find new ways to misunderstand old ideas. Sometimes a diagram that seemed useful turns out not to help. Sometimes a worked example needs two extra lines because too many students miss the same step.
A revision sheet on electricity, for example, might begin with the basic formula:
V = IR
That is useful, but not enough. Students also need to know when to use it, how to rearrange it, what the units mean, and how it connects to practical circuits. If several students keep mixing up current and voltage, then the notes need improving. If students can do the calculation but cannot explain the physics, then the notes need improving again.
The material improves because the lesson reveals the weakness.
Making Explanations Clearer
One of the most important jobs in creating good revision notes is removing unnecessary confusion.
A poor explanation may be technically correct but still not useful. It might use too much language, assume too much prior knowledge, or jump over the very step the student needs most.
For example, in chemistry, students often struggle with mole calculations. A textbook may explain the method correctly, but many students still freeze when faced with a question involving mass, relative formula mass and moles.
A better revision sheet might break the process down into:
- Write down what the question gives you.
- Identify what it asks for.
- Choose the correct equation.
- Substitute the values.
- Check the units.
- Ask whether the answer is sensible.
That sounds simple, but it is exactly the structure many students need. Good notes do not just contain facts. They model thinking.
Adding Diagrams That Actually Help
A diagram should not be decoration. It should make something easier to understand.
At Philip M Russell Ltd, diagrams are added or improved when they help students see a process, relationship or structure more clearly. In biology, this might mean a labelled diagram of the heart, the lungs, the digestive system or a plant leaf. In physics, it might mean circuit diagrams, force diagrams, wave diagrams or ray diagrams. In chemistry, it might mean particle models, electrolysis diagrams or reaction profiles.
The best diagrams are simple enough to revise from but accurate enough to support exam answers.
For example, a revision sheet on transpiration may include a plant diagram showing water moving from the roots, through the xylem, and out through the stomata. But that diagram becomes much more useful when it is linked to key exam phrases such as:
evaporation from leaf surfaces
diffusion through stomata
cohesion between water molecules
transpiration stream
A diagram should help the student write a better answer, not just make the page look attractive.
Worked Examples: Showing the Hidden Steps
Worked examples are one of the most valuable parts of revision material, especially in maths and science.
Students often say, “I understand it when you do it,” but the real test is whether they can do it when the teacher is not there. A good worked example bridges that gap.
For A-Level Physics, a question involving moments might look straightforward to an experienced teacher. But students may struggle with choosing the pivot, identifying clockwise and anticlockwise moments, converting centimetres to metres, and knowing which forces matter.
A worked example needs to show those decisions, not just the final calculation.
The same is true in GCSE Maths. A factorising question may only need a few lines, but if students repeatedly make sign errors, the notes should include a warning box:
Common mistake:
Do not forget that two negative numbers multiply to make a positive number.
Those small additions often make the difference between a student recognising the method and actually using it correctly.
Turning Common Mistakes Into Revision Sheets
Some of our best resources begin with student mistakes.
If one student makes a mistake, it may be a one-off. If five students make the same mistake, it becomes a teaching opportunity. If a whole group of students make the same mistake, it deserves its own revision sheet.
Examples might include:
- confusing independent and dependent variables
- forgetting units in physics calculations
- writing vague biology answers that do not earn marks
- using the wrong formula in maths
- failing to describe trends from graphs properly
- mixing up oxidation and reduction
- giving everyday explanations instead of scientific ones
A revision sheet based on common mistakes is powerful because it speaks directly to the problems students actually have.
For example, in biology, students may write:
“The enzyme works better when it gets warmer.”
That is not enough for a strong exam answer. A better answer might include collision frequency, active sites, enzyme-substrate complexes and denaturation at high temperatures.
So the revision sheet can show:
Weak answer: The enzyme works better when it gets warmer.
Better answer: As temperature increases, enzyme and substrate particles have more kinetic energy, so there are more successful collisions and more enzyme-substrate complexes form. Above the optimum temperature, the active site changes shape and the enzyme becomes denatured.
That sort of comparison helps students see exactly how to improve.
Topic Checklists: Knowing What Has Been Covered
Students often revise by doing the topics they like most. Unfortunately, examinations usually include the topics they hoped would quietly disappear.
Topic checklists help students see the whole course clearly. They are especially useful for GCSE Science, A-Level Biology, Chemistry, Physics and Maths, where the specification can feel enormous.
A good checklist is not just a list of headings. It should help students judge confidence.
For each topic, students can mark:
Red: I do not understand this yet.
Amber: I partly understand it but need more practice.
Green: I can answer exam questions on this.
This is simple, but it changes revision from vague worrying into practical planning.
Instead of saying, “I need to revise physics,” a student can say, “I need to practise circuits, transformers and required practical questions on resistance.”
That is far more useful.
Exam Tips: Teaching Students How Marks Are Won
Knowing the science or maths is only part of the challenge. Students also need to understand how exam marks are awarded.
Revision materials should include exam tips that help students avoid common traps.
For example:
Biology: Use precise key words. “Stuff” and “things” do not usually appear in mark schemes.
Chemistry: Always balance symbol equations carefully and check state symbols when required.
Physics: Write the formula, substitute values, include units and show working.
Maths: Do not skip algebraic steps if there is a risk of making a sign error.
A-Level subjects: Read the command word carefully. “Describe,” “explain,” “compare” and “evaluate” do not mean the same thing.
These tips are often added after marking real student work. The exam paper reveals what the student thought the question was asking. The mark scheme reveals what it was actually asking.
The revision notes then improve.
Lessons Reveal the Weak Points
The classroom is the testing ground for revision materials.
A sheet may look excellent until a student uses it. Then the truth appears.
Perhaps the explanation is too wordy. Perhaps the diagram needs labels. Perhaps the example question is too easy. Perhaps there needs to be a harder question underneath it. Perhaps the student understands the theory but cannot apply it to a practical investigation.
That feedback is invaluable.
Every lesson gives clues:
- Where did the student pause?
- Which word caused confusion?
- Which step needed repeating?
- Which topic looked secure but fell apart in an exam question?
- Which explanation finally made the idea click?
Those clues are then fed back into the resources.
This is one of the advantages of producing our own materials. They are not static. They grow out of real teaching.
From Lesson Notes to Revision Packs
Many of our revision resources begin as lesson notes.
A student struggles with a topic. We explain it on the board or tablet. We add a diagram. We work through a question. We mark an answer. We identify the mistake. Then, if the explanation works well, it can become part of a more polished revision sheet.
Over time, these lesson notes become structured resources:
- topic summaries
- worked example sheets
- exam technique guides
- practical method sheets
- key word lists
- formula sheets
- common mistake sheets
- checklists
- model answer comparisons
The aim is not to produce pretty paperwork. The aim is to create resources that help students become more confident, more accurate and more independent.
Printed Notes, Digital Notes and Real Teaching
There is still something very useful about a printed revision pack. Students can highlight it, annotate it, fold the corners, stick it on a wall, or bring it to a lesson covered in questions.
Digital notes are equally valuable. They can include colour diagrams, links, photographs of practical work, screenshots from simulations and worked solutions produced during lessons.
The best approach is often a mixture.
At Philip M Russell Ltd, revision materials can be used alongside practical science, online teaching, exam practice and individual feedback. A student might see a live demonstration, discuss the theory, complete a calculation, annotate a diagram and then take away a clear revision sheet to use later.
Good resources support the lesson. They do not replace the teacher.
Revision Materials Should Build Confidence
A good revision sheet should not intimidate a student. It should make the subject feel more manageable.
Students often arrive with the feeling that they are “bad at physics” or “not good at maths” or “can’t do biology exam questions.” Sometimes the problem is not ability. Sometimes the problem is that the material has never been organised in a way that makes sense to them.
Clear notes help students see progress.
They can look at a checklist and tick off topics. They can compare a weak answer with a stronger one. They can practise a worked example and then try a similar question. They can see that mistakes are not disasters. They are information.
That is one of the most important messages we try to build into our resources:
Getting stuck is not failure. It is the starting point for improvement.
Why Good Notes Are Never Finished
The best revision resources are living documents.
They change because students change. They improve because lessons reveal what is missing. They become clearer because someone asked a good question. They become more useful because someone made a mistake.
A finished-looking revision pack may be tidy, but a constantly improving revision pack is more valuable.
Every added diagram, every clearer explanation, every worked example, every warning about a common mistake, and every topic checklist has the same purpose: to help students understand more, revise better and perform with greater confidence.
Conclusion: Better Notes, Better Learning
At Philip M Russell Ltd, improving revision materials is not an occasional job done at the end of term. It is part of the teaching process.
When a student gets stuck, the notes get better.
When an exam question exposes a weakness, the resources get sharper.
When a diagram helps an idea click, it becomes part of the next version.
When a common mistake appears again and again, it becomes a revision sheet.
Good notes are never finished because good teaching is never finished.
And that is exactly how it should be.

