SCHOLARSHIP

How to Pass Your Exams in 30 Days (Even If You Have Done Nothing Yet)

You have thirty days until your first paper. Your textbook is almost untouched. Past questions are still in their plastic wrapping. And the panic is starting to set in.

Stop right there.

You can still pass. Not just scrape through — actually pass well enough to move on to the next class or get that admission. Thousands of students have been exactly where you are right now. The ones who passed did not have magic powers. They had a plan.

Here is yours.


First: Accept That Perfection Is Dead

You do not have time to master everything. And that is fine.

Exams do not test everything in your syllabus. They test a fraction of it — the most important topics, the ones that appear year after year. Your job in the next thirty days is not to know everything. Your job is to know enough.

Let go of the idea that you need to read every page of every textbook. You do not. You need to be strategic.


Week 1: Gather Your Weapons (Days 1-7)

Do not start reading yet. First, you need to know exactly what to focus on.

Day 1-2: Collect Past Questions

Get at least the last five years of past questions for every subject you are sitting for.

If you do not have physical copies, search online for each exam board:

  • WAEC past questions
  • NECO past questions
  • Cameroon GCE past questions
  • KCSE past questions

Print them or save them where you can write on them.

Day 3-4: Identify Repeated Topics

Go through each past question paper and mark every topic that appears. Do not solve the questions yet — just look for patterns.

You will quickly notice that certain topics appear every single year. For example:

  • In Mathematics: Algebra, Trigonometry, Statistics
  • In Biology: Photosynthesis, Cell Division, Reproduction
  • In English: Comprehension, Essay, Summary

These repeated topics are your gold mine. Focus on them first.

Day 5-7: Create Your 30-Day Timetable

Divide the next thirty days into three blocks:

BlockDaysFocus
Block 1Days 1-10Learn the repeated topics (60% of exam content)
Block 2Days 11-20Practice past questions and identify weak areas
Block 3Days 21-28Attack weak areas and revise everything
FinalDays 29-30Rest and light revision only

Do not plan to study every waking hour. Plan for 4-5 focused hours per day. That is enough.


Week 2: Learn What Actually Appears (Days 8-14)

Now you start studying. But only the topics that matter.

Days 8-10: Cover Repeated Topics

Take the list of repeated topics you identified from past questions. For each topic:

  1. Find a simple explanation (use our subject posts or your textbook)
  2. Write down the key points on one page only
  3. Learn three or four past questions on that topic

Do not spend more than two hours on any single topic. Move fast.

Days 11-12: First Past Question Attempt

Take one complete past question paper for each subject. Do not check your notes. Try to answer everything.

You will get many answers wrong. That is good. Wrong answers show you exactly what you do not know.

Days 13-14: Mark and Analyse

Mark your answers using the marking scheme. For every question you got wrong:

  • Write down the correct answer
  • Note why you got it wrong (did not know the topic? misread the question? ran out of time?)
  • Review that specific topic again

Week 3: Attack Your Weaknesses (Days 15-21)

Now you know what you do not know. Time to fix it.

Days 15-17: Focus on Weak Topics

Take the topics where you lost the most marks. Study only those for three days. Use:

  • Simplified notes from our subject pages
  • Worked examples for calculation subjects
  • Diagrams for sciences

Do not try to master everything. Just aim to understand enough to get a passing mark on those topics.

Days 18-21: Timed Practice

Take another set of past question papers. This time, time yourself exactly as you would be timed in the real exam.

If the exam gives you two hours for 50 questions, give yourself exactly two hours. No more.

After each paper, mark it immediately. Track your score. If you are scoring below 50%, repeat the weak topic strategy for one more day.


Week 4: Lock It In and Rest (Days 22-30)

Days 22-25: Mixed Revision

Each day, revise two subjects. For each subject:

  • Review your one-page notes for repeated topics
  • Solve 10-15 past questions (not full papers)
  • Focus on speed — answer quickly and accurately

Days 26-28: Final Weakness Attack

Look at your last three practice papers. Are there any questions you keep getting wrong? Spend these three days on only those specific questions and the topics behind them.

Day 29: Stop Learning New Things

Do not open a new topic. Do not read a chapter you have never seen before. It will only confuse you and destroy your confidence.

Instead:

  • Read through your one-page notes
  • Review the marking schemes to understand what examiners want
  • Organise everything you need for exam day (pens, pencils, calculator, ID)

Day 30: Rest

Study for one hour in the morning — just light reading of your notes. Then stop. Eat well. Sleep early. Your brain needs rest to recall everything on exam day.


What to Do If You Have Even Less Time

What if you do not have thirty days? What if you have only two weeks? Or one week?

Same strategy, compressed:

Time LeftWhat to Do
14 daysSkip Week 1. Go straight to past questions. Learn only from your mistakes.
7 daysOnly study repeated topics. Do not touch anything else.
3 daysMemorise marking schemes. Learn what examiners want, not the whole subject.
1 dayRead our post on what to do the night before and morning of your exam

Common Mistakes That Will Ruin Your 30 Days

Avoid these completely:

MistakeWhy It Kills You
Starting a new topic on Day 29Wastes time and creates panic
Studying with friends who distract youTurns 4 hours into 1 hour of real work
Reading without writing anythingYou will forget 80% within 24 hours
Sleeping less than 6 hoursA tired brain cannot recall information
Checking social media during study blocksEach distraction costs you 20 minutes of focus

Your 30-Day Cheat Sheet

Here is your one-page summary. Copy this into your notebook or save it on your phone.

text

WEEK 1 (Days 1-7): Gather
- Collect 5 years of past questions
- Identify repeated topics
- Make your 30-day timetable

WEEK 2 (Days 8-14): Learn
- Study repeated topics only
- Attempt first past question paper
- Mark and analyse wrong answers

WEEK 3 (Days 15-21): Attack
- Focus only on weak topics
- Timed practice (real exam conditions)
- Track your score

WEEK 4 (Days 22-30): Lock & Rest
- Mixed revision (2 subjects per day)
- Final weakness attack (Days 26-28)
- Stop new topics on Day 29
- Rest on Day 30

Conclusion

Thirty days is plenty of time if you stop wasting it on panic and perfectionism. You do not need to be the smartest student in your class. You do not need to read every page of every textbook. You need a plan, past questions, and consistent daily effort.

Start today. Not tomorrow. Not next week. Today.

Gather your past questions. Identify the repeated topics. Make your timetable. Then follow it one day at a time.

You have everything you need to pass.

For more help with your exam preparation, read our posts on how to create revision notes that actually help you pass and how to handle exam anxiety and stress.

Ready to test yourself? [Take our free quiz] and see where you stand today.

1 thought on “How to Pass Your Exams in 30 Days (Even If You Have Done Nothing Yet)”

  1. Pingback: How to Handle Exam Anxiety and Stress (Stay Calm and Write) - Brainfueler

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top
⚠️ Ad Blocker Detected
BrainFueler is 100% free thanks to ad revenue. Please disable your ad blocker to keep this site running.
Close available in 15 seconds
🤝 Or support us directly instead
Select Your Exam
🎓 Cameroon GCE📝 WAEC📝 NECO📝 KCSE