How to Plan Engaging & Impactful Revision Lessons (That Actually Show Progression)

teach & tell Jun 05, 2025

Let’s be honest—revision lessons can feel flat.
Silent students, repetitive tasks, and worst of all, trying to show progress when your lesson is being observed? Nightmare.

I used to dread it too—until I challenged myself to completely rethink what a revision lesson could look like. And guess what? It worked.

Whether you're planning for A-level, GCSE, or KS3, here’s how to design revision lessons that are dynamic, engaging, and observation-worthy.

🎧 Prefer to Listen or Watch?

This post is based on S1 E06 of my Teach & Tell podcast.
Want to hear the full story, teaching tips, and ideas in action?

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β˜• Quick Coffee Catch-Up

This week’s been such a joy! I had a long weekend in Luxembourg visiting the Christmas markets (yes, wildly off-season by the time you're reading this—but still magical 🧣✨). It made me reflect on how grateful I am for the freedom that self-employment brings.

And this weekend? It’s time for our annual “Christmas Day” with uni friends—20 people, 10 children, 2 dogs, games, gifts, and a chaotic group sleepover. I say “sleep”… but let’s be honest, 10 kids in one house? Not happening.

🚫 The Problem With Traditional Revision Lessons

For years, I avoided having revision lessons observed.
Why? They didn’t feel like a fair representation of my teaching—mostly independent exam questions, minimal engagement, and little visible progression.

But one day, I couldn’t avoid it: my headteacher (also my line manager) was set to observe an A-level Biology lesson during revision week. So I asked myself:

What if a revision lesson could be just as engaging and impactful as any other lesson?

Spoiler: it can be—and here’s how.

πŸ”„ 5 Steps to a High-Impact Revision Lesson

1. Start With Active Recall

Kick things off with a quick-fire whiteboard task.
Example: “List all the biological molecules you can think of.”
It’s simple, zero prep, and perfect for warming up student memory—an essential part of effective revision.

2. Deepen Thinking With a Flexible Card Sort

I created a card pack of biological molecules and used it three different ways:

  • Sort by type (e.g. carbs, proteins, lipids)

  • Sort by bonds, functions, or reactions

  • Explain their grouping and challenge peers

This gradually increased difficulty and encouraged paired discussion—great for building confidence and visible progression.

πŸ’‘ Pro Tip: Reduce pressure by pairing students. Discussion builds clarity and keeps energy up.

3. Add Depth With a Diamond 9

Ask students to rank concepts—like biological molecules—by importance to survival.

This activity sparks debate, promotes evaluative thinking, and links directly to essay skills. I played devil’s advocate to push reasoning and challenge assumptions.

4. Focus on Exam Technique

Give students jumbled model answers and ask them to:

  • Sort answers into two sets

  • Reconstruct the original question

  • Identify command words (“describe,” “explain,” “evaluate”)

  • Justify their groupings

This exercise builds familiarity with exam structure and key terminology, reinforcing both content and technique.

5. Finish With a TARSIA Quiz

Wrap it up with a TARSIA puzzle—a fast-paced, high-energy team activity that reinforces learning in a fun way. Bonus: even A-level students still love a sticker prize πŸ†

🧠 Plenary + Homework Strategy

End with a SMART target task: students create a personal revision goal to work on before the next test.
Their homework? Focus on that target. Clear, focused, and easy to track.

⚑ Quick Tip of the Week

Create one card sort—but use it in multiple ways.
My simple card set filled 30 minutes of lesson time, and my headteacher called it a “differentiation masterclass.” Versatile, effective, and easy to reuse!

πŸ“š Resource Roundup

🎁 Free Resource: Download my TARSIA quiz template to use in your own lessons. It’s fully editable and adaptable to any topic.

πŸ‘‰ Grab your quiz template here

πŸŽ“ Free Online CPD Sessions – Sign Up Now!

I’m running three FREE online CPD sessions packed with strategies, templates, and teacher hacks you can use immediately:

🧠 ChatGPT in Education & Streamlining Workload
πŸ“… Tuesday 21st January 2025 | 4–5 PM
Topics: Whole-class feedback, AI prompts, PowerPoint templates, saved email replies, and more.

πŸ“˜ Teaching the AQA Biology Essay
πŸ“… Tuesday 4th February 2025 | 4–5 PM
Includes a full walkthrough of the A-level essay bundle and real marking examples.

πŸ› οΈ Ready-Made PowerPoint Lessons + Essay Bundle Tour
πŸ“… Tuesday 4th March 2025 | 4–5 PM

πŸ”— Sign up via the link in the show notes or DM me on Instagram @miss.estruch.teach.and.tell

πŸ’¬ Final Thoughts

Revision lessons don’t have to be quiet, linear, or uninspiring. With just a few creative tweaks, you can build a revision session that’s fun, deep, and full of visible progression—whether it’s observed or not.

If you found these tips helpful:

βœ… Subscribe to the Teach & Tell podcast
βœ… Leave a review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify (it truly helps so much!)
βœ… Follow me for more resources on Instagram: @miss.estruch.teach.and.tell

You bring the coffee, I’ll bring the Teach & Tell.
See you next week!

- Katie