Did you follow a study timetable or did you only study for the subjects you had on that day?
Hi PopeXIII,
I have to admit - I'm terrible with timetables. Can't follow them, never been able to! I do have a friend for whom it works though, but only one.
The only thing I can really advise here is to constantly re-evaluate which subjects require the most time for you personally, and study with that in mind. This could change week by week or month by month, but it always pays to pick up on your weaker subjects (especially if you only have 10 units). Getting a band 6 is significantly easier than getting a high band 6, so for the same amount of time and effort you'd get a better result from focussing on weaker units!
I'm one of those people who study one subject at a time - so I'll do one whole day of chemistry, and if I'm not done I'll do the next day full of chemistry, and then move onto a whole day of physics, etc. For some people, they get bored of doing the same thing all day and choose to do, say, 3 subjects a day, with particular goals in mind. Both have their merits, but I prefer continuous study to avoid scattered-mindedness.
If you do create a timetable, be flexible with it as often you will over or underestimate the amount of time you need. But definitely try to set aside some time for every subject every week
and a quick half-hour revision before and after a lesson is always amazingly useful for consolidating information. I can't say I did that myself very often (revision is boring), but the times I did even just run through concepts or information after a lesson really did help with long-term memory.
The other problem I've always had with timetables is sometimes I'm just not in the mood for a subject! In which case my advice is don't force it, sitting there 2 hours being unproductive is a lot worse than sitting there 2 hours doing another subject you would rather be doing. I believe some people call that "productive procrastination"
don't do it all the time, but definitely don't force it too hard if it's just not working that day.
In the end, study methods differ from person to person. What works for me may not work for you, just have to find a healthy balance you can personally deal with. I could tell you all about how I studied but I assure you I only know a handful of others who study the way I do!