Mock exams at KS3 feel daunting, but a clear revision plan turns them from a source of dread into a useful checkpoint. The key is to revise actively — testing yourself from memory — rather than rereading notes, and to start at least three weeks before the first paper.
Why do mocks matter at KS3?
Most secondary schools hold formal mock exams in Year 9 (and sometimes Year 7 and 8) to give students a genuine exam experience before GCSEs. The marks often feed into teachers' predicted grades and can influence GCSE set placements. More importantly, mocks reveal which topics need more work — provided students revise properly beforehand rather than going in cold.
The Education Endowment Foundation's review of metacognition and self-regulation — a body of evidence covering more than half a million pupils — shows that students who plan and monitor their own learning make on average seven months more progress than those who do not. Building a revision plan, rather than hoping to absorb information passively, is one of the highest-impact things a KS3 student can do.
Step 1: Find out what is being tested
Before anything else, collect the information you need:
- Which subjects have mocks, and on which dates?
- Which topics within each subject are in scope?
- What is the exam format (multiple choice, extended writing, calculation)?
Ask your class teacher or check your school's revision list. Some schools publish a mock specification; if yours does not, use the schemes of work from each subject's exercise book as a guide.
Step 2: Build a revision timetable
A timetable prevents you from running out of time on hard subjects and spending too long on comfortable ones. Follow these rules:
- Work backwards from your first mock date and count the weeks available.
- Allocate sessions per subject in proportion to how much content each has and how confident you feel — give your weakest subject the most slots.
- Keep sessions to 25–40 minutes with short breaks in between.
- Mix subjects across each day (this is called interleaving, and it is more effective than a whole day on one topic).
A simple example for a student with three weeks and four subjects:
| Week | Morning slot | Afternoon slot |
|---|---|---|
| Week 3 (earliest) | Science + Maths | History + English |
| Week 2 | Maths + English | Science + History |
| Week 1 (closest to exam) | Past papers for all | Review weakest topics |
Step 3: Use active recall, not rereading
The most common revision mistake at KS3 is reading through notes and feeling prepared. Research consistently shows that actively testing yourself from memory produces far stronger long-term recall than passive rereading.
Practical active recall techniques:
- Flashcards: write a question on one side, the answer on the other. Quiz yourself, then set aside only the ones you get wrong and return to them.
- Blank-page recall: close your notes and write everything you can remember about a topic. Check back and fill in gaps.
- Self-quizzing: cover the right column of your revision notes with a sheet of paper and try to recall the answers.
- Teaching aloud: explain a concept to a parent or friend. If you stumble, that is the gap to revisit.
Step 4: Use past papers under timed conditions
Once you have a working knowledge of each topic, practise answering exam questions — ideally under timed conditions. This is the most realistic form of mock preparation because it mirrors the exam environment. Most schools provide past papers or specimen questions; if not, BBC Bitesize offers practice questions for every KS3 subject.
When you finish a past paper:
- Mark it using the mark scheme (or ask a teacher to help).
- Categorise every mark you lost: was it missing knowledge, misreading the question, or running out of time?
- Revisit only the topics where you lost marks.
Step 5: Look after your energy and sleep
The Education Endowment Foundation's evidence on self-regulated learning also highlights the importance of managing cognitive load. Revision done while exhausted is almost as ineffective as no revision at all. During the mock period:
- Aim for 8–10 hours of sleep each night — this is the range recommended for young people aged 11–17 according to sleep research cited by NHS guidance.
- Eat a proper breakfast on exam days (evidence from multiple school-based studies links breakfast consumption to improved concentration and test scores).
- Build at least one full rest day per week into the timetable to avoid burning out.
Step 6: Review and adapt the plan as you go
After each revision session, take 60 seconds to ask: what did I learn today, and what do I still not understand? Adjust tomorrow's session to spend more time on the gaps. This habit — the "metacognitive check-in" — is precisely what the EEF evidence identifies as the high-impact component of self-regulated learning.
What does a realistic revision week look like?
Here is an example for a Year 9 student two weeks before mocks:
| Day | Session (25 min each) | Evening check-in |
|---|---|---|
| Monday | Flashcards: Biology keywords | What did I struggle with? |
| Tuesday | Blank-page recall: WW1 causes | Flagged: Schlieffen Plan |
| Wednesday | Maths: past-paper questions | Marked up: fractions |
| Thursday | English: planning a persuasive essay | Noted: need more connectives |
| Friday | Science: quiz a family member | OK — move on |
| Saturday | Rest or light flashcard review | — |
| Sunday | Full timed past paper (one subject) | Mark and review |
Twenty-five minutes of genuine active recall per day per subject, consistently applied over three weeks, outperforms a single long cramming session every time.
Frequently asked questions
When should I start revising for KS3 mocks?
Start at least three weeks before your first paper — four weeks is better if you have five or more subjects. Starting too close to the exams leaves no time to revisit topics you find difficult after doing practice questions.
How long should I revise for each day?
For KS3 students, 60 to 90 minutes of focused revision spread across two or three short sessions per day is more effective than a single two-hour block. Short sessions with breaks let your memory consolidate before the next session.
Is rereading notes a good revision method?
On its own, rereading is one of the least effective techniques. It creates a false sense of familiarity — the information looks familiar but cannot be recalled under exam pressure. Use active recall (testing yourself) instead, and treat your notes as a reference to check against, not the main method.
What if I run out of time before the mocks?
Focus all remaining time on the highest-yield topics — the ones most likely to appear and where you currently have the biggest gaps. Do not try to cover everything; a solid understanding of 70% of the content is more valuable than a shaky skim of 100%.
Should I revise the night before a mock?
A light review of key facts the evening before is fine, but a late-night cramming session is counterproductive. Sleep is when your brain consolidates memories, so a full night's rest before the exam is more valuable than an extra two hours of revision.
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