Accounting 7110
Below is an 80-day study plan that integrates the exact chapters from your Accounting
textbook into a 2‑hours‑per‑day routine. It builds on the structure we discussed earlier (Phase 1
for thorough chapter coverage, Phase 2 for intensive past-paper practice) but now specifically
aligns with Sections 1–4 of your book and their respective chapters.
Phase 1 (Days 1–50): Master the Chapters
Goal: Read/understand each chapter in detail, build a strong conceptual base, and practice
short questions.
Daily Structure (2 Hours)
1. Hour 1: Reading & Summaries
○ Read the assigned chapter (or sub-chapter if it’s lengthy).
○ Make concise notes, focusing on definitions, formulas, and worked examples.
○ Highlight important formats (though you have a separate PDF for deeper format
study).
2. Hour 2: Practice & Reinforcement
○ Solve any end-of-chapter exercises from the textbook or teacher-provided
questions.
○ Work on a few short past-paper questions (if relevant to the day’s chapter).
○ Keep a log of mistakes and note the correct approach.
Chapter-by-Chapter Coverage
Below is a suggested order. You can adapt it based on your teacher’s pace or personal
preference:
Section 1
1. Introduction to Accounting
2. Double entry book-keeping – Part A
3. The trial balance
4. Double entry book-keeping – Part B
5. Petty cash books
Suggested Pace: About 1 chapter per day. If a chapter is short, you can move
faster; if it’s long, split it into two days.
Section 2
6. Business documents
7. Books of prime entry
Suggested Pace: 1 day each. These are fundamental for transaction
recording—do extra practice with real examples if you can.
Section 3
8. Financial statements – Part A
9. Financial statements – Part B
10.Accounting rules
11.Other payables and other receivables
12.Accounting for depreciation and disposal of non-current assets
13.Irrecoverable debts and provisions for doubtful debts
Suggested Pace: 1 day per chapter, but note that financial statements and
depreciation can be heavy topics—consider 2 days if needed.
Section 4
14.Bank reconciliation statements
15.Journal entries and correction of errors
16.Control accounts
17.Incomplete records
18.Accounts of clubs and societies
19.Partnerships
20.Manufacturing accounts
21.Limited companies
22.Analysis and interpretation
Suggested Pace: 1 day per chapter, but certain chapters—like incomplete
records or analysis and interpretation—may need extra time.
By allocating about 22–30 days to complete all chapters (depending on length/difficulty), you’ll
still have up to 20+ buffer days (out of the 50) for:
● Revisiting tough chapters (e.g., incomplete records, limited companies).
● Doing additional exercises in the book’s “Practice questions” sections.
● Catching up if you fall behind.
Phase 2 (Days 51–80): Past-Paper Intensive & Final
Revision
Goal: Strengthen exam techniques, polish weak spots, and practice full exam scenarios.
Daily Structure (2 Hours)
1. Hour 1: MCQ / Short Question Practice (Paper 1)
○ Work through past-paper MCQs or short structured questions.
○ Time yourself (e.g., 1 minute per MCQ), then review mistakes.
2. Hour 2: Long-Form / Numerical Questions (Paper 2)
○ Attempt longer past-paper questions (including those with ledger accounts, trial
balances, or final accounts).
○ Practice under exam conditions (timed, no notes).
○ Compare your answers to mark schemes or teacher solutions.
Weekly Mock Sessions
● At least once per week, devote the entire 2-hour block to doing a full Paper 1 or
Paper 2 under strict exam timing.
● Mark your work, identify weaknesses, and revise those areas the next day.
Key Topics to Revisit
● Complex calculations (depreciation methods, provision for doubtful debts, partnership
adjustments).
● Format accuracy (final accounts, balance sheets, income statements).
● Error correction (journal entries, suspense accounts, control accounts).
Additional Study Tips
1. Error Log:
○ Each time you make a mistake in a practice question, write it down along with the
correct solution.
○ Review this log weekly.
2. Active Recall:
○ Instead of just reading, ask yourself questions about each chapter’s content (e.g.,
“What are the steps for reconciling a bank statement?”).
3. Practice from the Book’s ‘Practice Questions’:
○ These are often similar in style to exam questions and will reinforce your chapter
learning.
4. Formats & Presentation:
○ You have a separate PDF for formatting. Schedule short sessions (e.g., 15
minutes every few days) to memorize and practice ledger layouts, final account
structures, etc.
5. Stay Flexible:
○ If you discover a chapter is especially challenging, give it extra time.
○ Shift the schedule as needed but maintain the overall 2‑hour daily commitment.
By following this plan—Phase 1 to thoroughly cover each chapter (Sections 1–4) and Phase 2 to
hone exam skills and time management—you’ll be well-prepared for both papers in your
Accounting exam.
Economics 2281
Below is an 82-day Economics study plan adapted to the specific chapters in your textbook
(as shown in your table of contents). It balances reading and understanding each chapter
with past-paper practice for both Paper 1 (MCQs) and Paper 2 (theoretical), all within 2 hours
per day.
Plan Overview
1. Phase 1 (Days 1–50): Chapter Mastery
○ Goal: Cover all the chapters (Sections 1–6) in depth, mixing shorter and longer
chapters.
○ Daily Structure (2 Hours):
■ 1st Hour: Read/Review a chapter (or sub-chapter if it’s long) and make
summary notes.
■ 2nd Hour:
■ Do practice MCQs (Paper 1 style) relevant to that chapter.
■ Write short structured answers (Paper 2 style) or essay outlines for
more complex topics.
2. Phase 2 (Days 51–82): Past-Paper Focus & Final Revision
○ Goal: Reinforce exam technique, practice under timed conditions, and fill
knowledge gaps.
○ Daily Structure (2 Hours):
■ 1st Hour: Timed MCQs from past papers (Paper 1).
■ 2nd Hour: Timed structured/essay questions (Paper 2). Focus on your
weaker areas, guided by mistakes noted in Phase 1.
Detailed Chapter Coverage (Phase 1)
Below is a suggested schedule for covering each section and chapter. You have 39 chapters
grouped into 6 sections:
Section 1: The Basic Economic Problem
● Ch 1: The nature of the economic problem
● Ch 2: Factors of production
● Ch 3: Opportunity cost
● Ch 4: Production possibility curves
Approx. 4 days. Use any leftover time in the same week to consolidate and attempt
short practice questions.
Section 2: The Allocation of Resources
● Ch 5: Microeconomics and macroeconomics
● Ch 6: The role of markets in allocating resources
● Ch 7: Demand
● Ch 8: Supply
● Ch 9: Price determination
● Ch 10: Price changes
● Ch 11: Price elasticity of demand
● Ch 12: Price elasticity of supply
● Ch 13: Market economic system
● Ch 14: Market failure
● Ch 15: Mixed economic system
Approx. 11 days. Some chapters (e.g., Price elasticity) may require extra practice
questions. If a chapter is shorter, combine it with another on the same day.
Section 3: Microeconomic Decision Makers
● Ch 16: Money and banking
● Ch 17: Households
● Ch 18: Workers
● Ch 19: Trade unions
● Ch 20: Firms
● Ch 21: Firms and production
● Ch 22: Firms, costs, revenue and objectives
● Ch 23: Market structure
Approx. 8 days. Chapters on firms, costs, and market structure can be more
detailed—budget extra time for notes and example questions.
Section 4: Government and the Macroeconomy
● Ch 24: The role of government
● Ch 25: The macroeconomic aims of government
● Ch 26: Fiscal policy
● Ch 27: Monetary policy
● Ch 28: Supply-side policies
● Ch 29: Economic growth
● Ch 30: Employment and unemployment
● Ch 31: Inflation and deflation
Approx. 8 days. Pay attention to policy comparisons (fiscal vs. monetary vs.
supply-side) and how each relates to macroeconomic aims.
Section 5: Economic Development
● Ch 32: Living standards
● Ch 33: Poverty
● Ch 34: Population
● Ch 35: Differences in economic development between countries
Approx. 4 days. Often tested in essays—practice structuring longer answers about
development indicators and issues.
Section 6: International Trade and Globalisation
● Ch 36: International specialisation
● Ch 37: Free trade and protection
● Ch 38: Foreign exchange rates
● Ch 39: Current account of balance of payments
Approx. 4 days. Combine your reading with diagrams (e.g., exchange rate
diagrams) and relevant MCQs.
Buffer Days & Catch-Up
● This schedule accounts for about 39 days of reading (one chapter per day). You have
some extra days within the 50-day window to:
○ Review tricky topics (like elasticity, macro policies).
○ Attempt full or partial past papers in small chunks.
○ Catch up if you fall behind.
Past-Paper Practice & Final Revision (Phase 2)
Days 51–82 (32 days total) should focus on:
● Daily MCQ Practice (Paper 1):
○ Spend 15–20 minutes per set of MCQs.
○ Review each question you miss and revisit that topic in your notes.
● Structured & Essay Questions (Paper 2):
○ Allocate 40–45 minutes to write full answers under exam conditions.
○ Review mark schemes or examiner reports if available.
● Identify Weak Areas:
○ Track which topics you frequently struggle with.
○ Revisit relevant chapters/notes or watch short explainer videos to reinforce
understanding.
● Simulate Full Exams:
○ At least once a week, do a full Paper 1 (MCQ) or full Paper 2 (essay/structured)
in one sitting.
○ Time yourself strictly.
○ Analyze your performance: note areas that lost you marks, and revise
accordingly.
Additional Study Tips
1. Active Recall & Spaced Repetition:
○ Use flashcards or self-quizzes.
○ After finishing each section, do a quick quiz 3 days later, then 1 week later, etc.
2. Practice Diagrams & Definitions:
○ Draw supply-demand diagrams, PPF curves, and macroeconomic circular flows
from memory.
○ Learn definitions (e.g., elasticity, externalities) precisely—examiners often award
marks for accurate definitions.
3. Use Error Logs:
○ Whenever you make mistakes in MCQs or essay plans, note them.
○ Review these mistakes weekly to avoid repeating them.
4. Time Management in the Exam:
○ For Paper 1, aim for under 1 minute per MCQ on average (go back if needed).
○ For Paper 2, plan your essay structure (intro, main points, conclusion) before
writing to stay focused.
By following this schedule—50 days to master chapters and 32 days for dedicated past-paper
and revision—you’ll have thoroughly covered all content and developed strong exam skills. Stick
to the 2-hour daily routine, use your buffer days wisely, and you’ll be on track for a top grade in
Economics.
Computer science 2210
Below is a 71-day plan that integrates the chapters from your Cambridge IGCSE & O Level
Computer Science (2nd edition) textbook into a 2‑hours‑per‑day study routine. The plan is split
into two main phases to ensure you:
1. Cover all sub-chapters (Section 1 for Paper 1, Section 2 for Paper 2) in a structured
way.
2. Build confidence in both theoretical and coding areas through practice, revision, and
mock exams.
Phase 1 (Days 1–45): Learn & Practice All Chapters
Daily Time Allocation (2 Hours)
1. Hour 1 → Paper 1 (Section 1: Computer Systems)
○ Read the assigned sub-chapter from the book.
○ Take concise notes (definitions, key diagrams, examples).
○ Answer any end-of-chapter or teacher-provided questions.
2. Hour 2 → Paper 2 (Section 2: Algorithms, Programming, and Logic)
○ Read the assigned sub-chapter.
○ Practice a small coding task or example that illustrates the concept (e.g., arrays,
file handling).
○ Keep an error log for any mistakes and note how you fixed them.
Suggested Chapter Order & Timing
You have 18 sub-chapters in Section 1 and 16 sub-chapters in Section 2 (total 34). A simple way
to tackle them is:
● Days 1–16:
○ Hour 1 (P1): Sub-chapters 1.1 → 1.2 → 1.3 → 2.1 → 2.2 → 2.3 → 3.1 → 3.2 →
3.3 → 3.4 → 4.1 → 4.2 → 5.1 → 5.2 → 5.3 → 6.1
○ Hour 2 (P2): Sub-chapters 7.1 → 7.2 → 7.3 → 7.4 → 7.5 → 7.6 → 7.7 → 7.8 →
7.9 → 8.1 → 8.2 → 8.3 → 9.1 → 10.1 → 10.2 → 10.3
● By Day 16, you will have covered all P2 sub-chapters (7.1–10.3) and 16 out of 18 for P1.
● Days 17–18 (P1 catch-up):
○ Hour 1 (P1): Finish 6.2 and 6.3 (Robotics, Artificial Intelligence).
○ Hour 2 (P2 practice): Use these two days to revisit tricky coding topics (arrays,
file handling, logic gates) or do extra coding exercises.
● Days 19–45:
○ Consolidation & Mixed Practice
■ Hour 1 (P1): Review your notes from Sections 1.1–6.3. Focus on any
weak spots (e.g., data representation, encryption). Practice short-answer
questions or topic-specific past-paper questions.
■ Hour 2 (P2): Continue coding practice. Attempt more challenging tasks
that combine multiple topics (e.g., arrays + file handling). Start
incorporating small, timed exercises to build exam stamina.
During Phase 1, you’ll build a thorough foundation of all topics while gradually improving your
coding skills.
Phase 2 (Days 46–71): Revision, Past Papers & Exam
Simulation
Daily Time Allocation (2 Hours)
1. Hour 1 → Paper 1 Revision
○ Timed Past-Paper Questions: Answer short-answer and structured questions
from actual or sample exams.
○ Review Weak Areas: If you miss any questions, revisit that chapter’s notes and
clarify misconceptions.
2. Hour 2 → Paper 2 Coding & Mock Questions
○ Full Coding Tasks: Practice the 15-mark style questions under timed conditions
(simulate exam format by writing code on paper first).
○ Logic & Algorithm Drills: Work on logic-gate diagrams, trace tables, identifying
errors in algorithms—still under timed conditions to improve speed and accuracy.
Final 1–2 Weeks (Days 60–71)
● Full Mock Exams:
○ On some days, set aside the entire 2 hours to do a complete Paper 1 or Paper 2
under strict exam timing.
○ Mark your work (or have someone check it) and note where you lost marks.
● Targeted Revision:
○ Focus on persistent problem areas.
○ Revisit your error log from coding practice to avoid repeating mistakes.
Key Tips to Boost Your Grade
1. Stay Consistent:
○ Even if you feel overwhelmed, do your 2-hour block daily. Consistency is more
important than cramming.
2. Use an Error Log:
○ Whenever you make a mistake (theory or coding), record it along with the correct
approach.
○ Review this log weekly to prevent repeating errors.
3. Active Recall & Spaced Repetition:
○ Regularly quiz yourself (flashcards, short tests).
○ Go back to tricky sub-chapters at increasing intervals (e.g., Day 7, Day 14,
Day 21…).
4. Peer or Teacher Feedback:
○ If possible, ask classmates or your teacher to review your code or answers.
○ Teaching a concept to someone else is one of the best ways to reinforce your
own understanding.
5. Mindset & Confidence:
○ Remember that mistakes in coding are normal. Each debugged error is progress.
○ Celebrate small wins (e.g., successfully completing a past-paper question under
time).
By following this adjusted plan—covering all sub-chapters systematically in Phase 1 and then
drilling past-paper and coding tasks in Phase 2—you’ll be well-prepared for both the theoretical
(P1) and programming (P2) components, aiming confidently for an A or top grade* in Computer
Science.
English 1123
Below is a detailed 58-day plan tailored to your English CAIJ exam needs. This plan
emphasizes strengthening your writing (P2) while maintaining your strong comprehension skills
(P1), with a daily study time of 2 hours.
Overview of Your Exam Components
● P1: Comprehension and summary
○ You already have strategies in place, so use this section as a warm-up and for
regular practice.
● P2: Writing
○ Section 1 (Compulsory): Article, formal/informal email, letter, report, and
speech writing.
○ Section 2: Narrative (preferred) vs. descriptive writing.
○ Focus: Build confidence in writing through practice, structure, vocabulary, and
format mastery.
Daily Study Structure (2 Hours Total)
● Warm-Up (20 minutes):
○ Practice a short comprehension or summary passage. This keeps your reading
skills sharp without taking too much time.
● Writing Practice (1 hour 40 minutes):
○ Split Your Writing Sessions:
■ Days 1–40 (Skill Building Phase):
■ Rotating Focus (Cycle over 5 days):
■ Day 1: Article writing – review format, write a short piece,
compare with model samples.
■ Day 2: Formal/Informal emails and letters – use your
available resources, practice writing responses to prompts.
■ Day 3: Report writing – study your sample, practice
drafting reports with clear structure and key details.
■ Day 4: Speech writing – practice outlining speeches and
then writing them, focusing on clear message and
persuasive language.
■ Day 5: Narrative writing – use your fancy vocabulary list
and samples to craft a short narrative piece.
■ Weekend (Day 6 or 7):
■ Choose one or two genres you find most challenging for
extra practice, or combine two shorter exercises.
■ Days 41–58 (Exam Simulation & Revision Phase):
■ Full Writing Sessions:
■ Alternate between timed writing exercises covering all
compulsory tasks and full mock papers.
■ Dedicate one session specifically to a full narrative writing
practice (if that’s your chosen option for Section 2).
Weekly Breakdown
Weeks 1–6 (Days 1–40): Skill Building
● Objectives:
○ Develop familiarity with each writing format.
○ Internalize formats and vocabulary.
● Actions:
○ Work through each writing type in rotation.
○ After each session, compare your work with model answers or sample formats.
○ Maintain a journal or log of feedback and areas for improvement.
○ Revise your fancy vocabulary list regularly, using them in your writings.
Weeks 7–8 (Days 41–58): Exam Simulation & Consolidation
● Objectives:
○ Transition from practice to exam readiness.
○ Build endurance with timed tests and full-paper simulations.
● Actions:
○ Conduct full mock writing sessions, simulating exam conditions.
○ Focus on time management: allocate time per section as per your exam strategy
(e.g., plan for 10 minutes for planning, 40 minutes for writing, 10 minutes for
reviewing each piece).
○ Review each mock answer critically, checking structure, language, and
adherence to format.
○ Use the feedback from previous weeks to target any recurring weaknesses.
Additional Tips for Boosting Confidence and
Performance
● Structure and Formats:
○ Create a one-page cheat-sheet for each writing format with key components
(introduction, body, conclusion, etc.).
○ Practice writing these formats from memory until they become second nature.
● Vocabulary and Expression:
○ Use your fancy vocabulary and expressions regularly in your writings.
○ Record sample sentences or paragraphs that incorporate these words naturally.
● Self-Review and Peer Feedback:
○ If possible, exchange writings with a study partner or tutor.
○ Reflect on your own work by reading aloud and noting areas of improvement.
● Exam Strategy for P2:
○ Before Writing: Spend a few minutes planning your answer. Outline the
structure and main points.
○ During Writing: Keep track of the time, ensure each section is clearly
developed, and avoid over-elaboration.
○ After Writing: If time permits, quickly proofread to fix obvious mistakes.
Following this plan with discipline and regular self-assessment will build your confidence in P2
and help you maximize your performance for an A-star or top grade in your English exam. Let
me know if you need any further customization or additional strategies!