How to Plan Final IB Revision Using the Official Timetable

4 min read

Introduction

Many IB students download the official exam timetable — and then don’t actually use it properly.

They look at dates, feel stressed, and continue revising randomly.

The timetable is not just a list of exams.
It is a revision planning tool — if you know how to use it correctly.

The Purpose of the Official Timetable

The IB timetable helps you:

  • See exam spacing
  • Identify high-pressure periods
  • Understand which subjects require sustained focus
  • Plan energy, not just study time

It should shape how you revise, not just when you revise.

Step 1: Identify Pressure Blocks

Look for:

  • Consecutive exam days
  • Writing-heavy sequences
  • Calculation-heavy sequences

These blocks require:

  • Early preparation
  • Lighter revision closer to exams
  • Strong energy management

Ignoring pressure blocks leads to burnout.

Step 2: Group Exams by Demand, Not Subject

Instead of grouping by subject, group by:

  • Mental demand
  • Writing vs problem-solving
  • Length and intensity

This helps you:

  • Avoid stacking heavy tasks
  • Balance cognitive load
  • Maintain consistency

Revision should alternate effort levels.

Step 3: Plan Backwards From Exams

Final revision should work backwards.

This means:

  • Light review closest to exams
  • Technique and practice before that
  • Content mastery much earlier

If you are learning new content close to exams, the plan is too late.

Step 4: Protect the Final Phase

The final phase of revision should focus on:

  • Accuracy
  • Confidence
  • Routine

Avoid:

  • Full new topics
  • Overloading days
  • Comparing schedules with others

The goal is stability, not intensity.

The Biggest Mistake Students Make

The biggest mistake is using the timetable only as information, not as a planning framework.

Knowing exam order without adjusting revision order leads to:

  • Peaking too early
  • Crashing late
  • Inconsistent performance

How High-Scoring Students Use the Timetable

Top students:

  • Adjust revision intensity based on exam spacing
  • Finish heavy work early
  • Use the timetable to manage fatigue
  • Treat revision as a long sequence, not isolated tasks

They plan with the timetable, not around it.

Using the RevisionDojo Study Planner

The RevisionDojo Study Planner turns the official timetable into a clear, usable revision plan.

It helps students:

  • Visualise pressure periods
  • Balance heavy and light subjects
  • Avoid last-minute overload
  • Stay consistent through the final phase

Plan effectively here:
https://www.revisiondojo.com/study-planner

RevisionDojo Call to Action

The IB timetable should reduce stress — not create it.

Use the RevisionDojo Study Planner to:

  • Translate the timetable into action
  • Revise in the right order
  • Stay calm and focused

Start planning here:
https://www.revisiondojo.com/study-planner

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Should my revision intensity stay the same throughout?

No. Intensity should decrease closer to exams to protect performance.

Is it bad to revise one subject heavily right before its exam?

Yes. Heavy learning close to exams increases fatigue and errors.

Should I ignore the timetable until exams start?

No. The timetable should shape your revision weeks in advance.

Can planning really reduce exam stress?

Yes. Uncertainty causes stress — clear planning removes it.

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