Every parent knows the frustration:
your child spends hours revising⌠yet their grades barely move.
Itâs not because they arenât trying.
Itâs because many students unknowingly use study habits that feel productive but do very little to prepare them for IGCSE or A-Level exams.
The good news? Most of these mistakes can be fixed with one simple habit that transforms revision no matter the subject.
Here are the ten mistakes teachers see most often, followed by the single habit that corrects them all.
The 10 Most Common Study Mistakes Students Make
1. Re-reading notes instead of practising questions
Students think âIâve read this, so I know it.â But re-reading only creates familiarity not exam readiness.
2. Highlighting everything (which means nothing stands out)
Highlighting feels useful, but research shows it doesnât build understanding.
Trusted resource:
- Education Endowment Foundation (EEF) âStudy Strategies That Workâ (retrieval > highlighting)
3. Revising only the topics they already like
Students naturally gravitate toward the comfortable. This leaves weak areas untouched until exam day.
4. Copying notes neatly instead of practising recall
Beautiful notes look impressive, but copying is a low-impact activity. It doesnât prepare students for unfamiliar exam questions.
5. Avoiding past papers because they âdonât feel ready yetâ
Many students think past papers are the final step. Teachers know theyâre the starting point for real progress.
6. Not reading the question properly
The biggest mark-loser of all. Students answer what they think the question asks, not what it actually says, especially with command words like âanalyse,â âevaluate,â and âcompare.â
Trusted resource:
- AQA Command Words clear explanations of what each requires.
7. Not showing working in maths and science
Students jump straight to the final answer, and lose marks even when theyâre right.
8. Giving general, vague answers in essay subjects
Teachers see it constantly: good ideas, but weak structure and insufficient explanation.
9. Not using teacher feedback to improve
Students often read feedback but donât use it. They repeat the same errors, especially in application and exam technique.
This is where InstantTutor supports parents: it surfaces the patterns behind the mistakes, repeated topics, question types, and skills your child struggles with, so feedback becomes clearer and easier to act on.
10. Thinking âtime spentâ equals âprogress madeâ
A student can revise for two hours and learn nothing. Progress depends on effective strategy, not effort alone.
The One Habit That Fixes All Ten Mistakes: Retrieval Practice
Retrieval practice means actively pulling information out of your brain, not passively absorbing it.
It is the single most powerful study method according to cognitive science and it directly addresses every mistake above.
When students test themselves before they feel ready, they strengthen every skill needed for exam success:
- memory
- application
- reasoning
- problem-solving
- command word recognition
- exam technique
- structured thinking
Itâs how high-performing students revise and how teachers design their lessons.
Why Retrieval Practice Works Better Than Anything Else
Retrieval forces the brain to:
- struggle productively
- connect knowledge
- spot weak areas quickly
- build long-term memory
- reduce exam anxiety
- improve exam technique through repetition of question formats
This is why even 5â10 minutes of retrieval practice is more effective than an hour of note copying.
Trusted resource:
- The Learning Scientists âRetrieval Practiceâ Overview Clear, parent-friendly research explaining why retrieval is powerful.
How Students Can Practise Retrieval (In Any Subject)
Here are simple, high-impact ways to build retrieval into daily study:
1. Do two past-paper questions before revising a topic
Teachers call this âcold recall.â It makes weaknesses visible instantly so revision becomes targeted.
InstantTutor does this naturally by letting students ask a question first and revealing the thinking step theyâre missing.
2. Write down everything you know about a topic then fill the gaps
A 3-minute brain dump shows whatâs understood vs memorised.
3. Use flashcards (digital or paper)
But only if they use active recall not flipping through passively.
4. Explain the topic out loud to a parent in 30 seconds
If they canât explain it, they donât know it yet.
5. Practise one exam-style question daily
Small, consistent practice beats cramming every time.
How InstantTutor Supports Retrieval Practice Automatically
InstantTutor works in a retrieval-friendly way because it gives:
- provides weekly conversation prompts for parents based on their childâs recent homework
- step-by-step guidance
- support that helps thinking, not shortcuts
The app helps students build the exact skills retrieval improves without replacing thinking.
Final Thought: A Smart Student Isnât the One Who Knows the Most Itâs the One Who Practises Retrieval
Most study mistakes come from good intentions but ineffective strategy.
Retrieval practice transforms revision because it:
- fixes weak areas fast
- builds confidence
- reduces exam stress
- makes learning stick
- prepares students for unfamiliar exam questions
Itâs the closest thing to a âmagic habitâ in education and it works for every student, in every subject, at any level.