Overview
This lesson is about learning from the test rather than just looking at the mark. The most useful
revision happens when you can explain what went wrong, fix it properly, and leave with a clear plan
for what to revisit.
What You Need to Know
- Corrections are most useful when you rewrite the physics clearly, not when you just copy the right
answer.
- A weak answer might come from missing knowledge, a diagram error, a direction-rule mistake, or a
poor exam method.
- By the end of the lesson, you should know exactly which parts of electromagnetism still need more
practice.
How to Work Through It
- Start by sorting mistakes into categories such as knowledge, diagrams, directions, or
calculations.
- Rewrite the answers you missed with enough detail that you could use them for revision later.
- Revisit one or two weak topic areas with short follow-up questions.
- End by writing a focused revision plan for anything that still feels insecure.
Check Your Understanding
- Can you explain why each corrected answer is right?
- Have you fixed the method error as well as the final answer?
- Which topics would you revise first if you had another assessment tomorrow?
Common Mistakes
- Copying corrections without understanding the reason behind them.
- Focusing only on the lowest-scoring question instead of spotting repeated patterns across the test.
- Leaving the review lesson without a clear plan for what to revise next.
Next Steps
- Keep your corrected answers and use them as revision material for later cumulative revision.
- Revisit the electromagnetism lessons that match your weakest areas until the explanations and
diagrams feel secure.