Revision works best when the plan fits real life. This page is about structure, not motivation speeches: a few decisions that help you cover the syllabus without pretending you can study twelve hours a day forever.
Start from what the exam actually rewards
List the topics that carry weight. If you are not sure, use past papers, learning objectives, or a teacher outline. Then work backwards: which areas need recall practice versus a quick skim?
That keeps you from spending half your time on material that is easy but low impact.
Block time, not heroics
Shorter focused blocks with breaks usually beat one endless sitting. You can use a timer, or simply decide in advance: "two sessions today on this unit" and stop when each session is done.
Mixing subjects within a week can feel slower than drilling one chapter, but it reduces the illusion of mastery and helps transfer for exam-style questions.
Use practice that matches the test
If the exam is multiple choice, you still need understanding - but you also need practice recognising distractors. If it is written, practise writing short answers under time pressure.
LedaLearn modes are built around that idea: same material, different ways to retrieve it, so you are not only practising the easiest path.