▲ 9 r/IGCSE2024+3 crossposts

Business studies tips

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🌸 Hello everyone!

I hope you're all doing well! 😊

Here's today's Business tip that can help you avoid losing easy marks in your exams.

✦ 📚 Business Study Tip of the Day 📚 ✦

🌟 Many students lose marks in Business not because they don't know the answer... but because they don't APPLY it!

Here's a simple structure that can help you score higher:

📝 Point → Explain → Apply

❌ Example

"Training improves productivity."

This is correct... but it isn't enough.

✅ Better Answer

"Providing employee training improves productivity because employees become more skilled and efficient. This helps the business produce goods more effectively and improve customer satisfaction."

💡 Examiner's Tip

Always connect your answer back to the business in the question. That's where many application marks come from!

🌸 Mini Challenge

Can you improve this sentence using Point → Explain → Apply?

"Advertising increases sales."

Write your improved answer in the comments! 👇

✨ Learn something today that your future self will thank you for.

I designed this to be interactive rather than just informative. The mini challenge encourages students to participate, while the consistent layout and signature aim to make the series recognizable over time.☺️

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u/tiw_official — 12 hours ago
▲ 20 r/The_IGCSE_Workaholics+3 crossposts

A level study tips

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  1. Very obviously, you need to write all the important mps by hand when checking your homeworks and use a red pen to underline the mps gained + adding the missing mps so it helps you while studying

  2. Study from the official text book (if you're doing CIE) and do your own handwritten notes neatly. It's always very important because it'll be your main source of studies. Check out channels and animations, particularly to topics that require lots of visualization, such as topics involving channel ions or excretion. It always helps you grasp the information and helps a lot with memorization. If you need suggestions for channels, I'll be happy to share some.

  3. . Side note that I personally use before every subject's exam --> I'd write every- baffling idea/ ideas that I find difficulty in memorizing/ easily forgotten / anything important, down in A4 papers and stick it to the wall infront of my desk. I revise these before every mock exam till they stick to my head before the exam. I'd write down page numbers that I need to look over again before any exam too.

  4. Never rely fully on tutors notes or solving homeworks. Always exceed as much as you can, draw a table in your excel sheet and mark out every exam you solved + studied from the ms & examiner report so I can see my progress which encouraged me to do more. Solve as much as you possibly can and don't waste too much time on studying notes. Solving is always more important

  5. Never procrastinate on revising topics. Keep up consistency so you revise on the entire syllabus every 2 weeks or so, but not longer because details are very easily forgotten. Highlighting the important lines also saves time when you do a quick revision from your notes

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u/tiw_official — 1 day ago