How to Get Good Grades: 10 Simple Tips That Actually Work | IB Demystified

How to Get Good Grades: 10 Simple Tips That Actually Work (2026)

Getting good grades is not about being the smartest student in the room.

It is about having the right habits, using your time well, and knowing how to study in a way that actually sticks — not just what feels comfortable in the moment.

At IB Demystified, we have worked with students from over 55 countries. Many of them came to us after months of working hard but still not seeing the results they wanted. Almost every time, the problem was not ability. It was strategy. Once we helped them shift how they studied — not how much — the grades followed.

In this guide, we share the 10 most important things any student can do right now to start getting better results. These tips work whether you are studying for IB Diploma exams, A Levels, IGCSEs, GCSEs, or any other programme.

Why Good Grades Matter — and What Actually Drives Them

Good grades open doors. To universities, to scholarships, to career paths, and to the quiet confidence that comes from knowing you gave it your best effort and it paid off.

According to the International Baccalaureate Organisation, IB Diploma graduates are among the most sought-after applicants at leading universities worldwide. But the students reaching those offers are rarely the ones who studied the most hours. They are the ones who studied the right way.

Research from Cambridge University Press consistently shows that study habits, sleep quality, and self-testing have a far bigger impact on academic performance than the total number of hours spent with a textbook open. Hours matter — but only when they are spent well.

The key insight: Grades are a result of habits, not talent. Every single tip in this guide is something you can start doing today — no special resources, no particular school, and no perfect timetable required.

10 Tips on How to Get Good Grades

Here are the 10 habits that make the biggest difference — based on what we see working for real students, session after session.

Tip 01
Go to Every Class and Be Fully Present

This sounds obvious. But it is the foundation that everything else builds on.

When you miss a class, you do not just miss the notes. You miss the explanation, the examples your teacher chose, the questions other students asked, and the emphasis on what is likely to be tested. Those things do not appear in any textbook.

Show up. Sit near the front if you can. Put your phone face-down. When your teacher is speaking, your only job is to listen and write. Students who are genuinely present in lessons consistently need less revision time later — because the information went in properly the first time.

Quick Win After every class, spend 5 minutes writing down the 3 most important things covered — from memory, with your notes closed. This small habit is one of the highest-return things any student can do.
Tip 02
Take Notes in Your Own Words, Not Word for Word

Good note-taking is not transcription. If you are copying everything your teacher says verbatim, your hand is moving but your brain is not really engaging with the content.

Instead: listen first. Understand the idea. Then write it down in your own words, as briefly as you can. This forces your brain to process what it just heard, rather than simply recording it.

Research published in Psychological Science (SAGE Journals) found that students who take handwritten notes in their own words understand and remember material significantly better than those who type notes word for word. The act of summarising is itself a learning activity.

Quick Win Use a two-column layout. Left column: topic or heading. Right column: your explanation in plain, simple language. When revising, cover the right column and try to reconstruct it from the heading alone.
Tip 03
Build a Study Schedule and Stick to It

Without a plan, most students revise the subjects they enjoy most, at the times they feel like it, for however long seems right. That is a reliable way to neglect your weakest subjects — which are usually the ones that need the most attention.

A proper weekly timetable changes this. Block out specific subjects on specific days. Deliberately give more time to your weaker areas. And treat your study sessions the same way you treat a lesson — as something you simply do not skip.

Our full guide on how to plan your study time for IB success walks through how to build a realistic schedule around school commitments, IA deadlines, and exam dates without burning out.

Quick Win Every Sunday evening, plan your coming week in writing. Decide what you will study, when, and for how long. Students who plan their week on Sunday consistently outperform those who decide what to study day by day.
Tip 04
Test Yourself Instead of Re-Reading Your Notes

Re-reading notes is the most common revision activity — and one of the least effective. Your brain recognises the content and tells you it already knows it. But recognition is not the same as recall. Exams test recall.

The most effective revision activity is closing your notes and writing down everything you know about a topic from memory. What flows easily, you know well. What you struggle to write — that is your gap.

This technique is called active recall, and it is one of the most studied methods in learning science. Research from the American Psychological Association confirms it outperforms re-reading, highlighting, and summarising in almost every test of long-term retention.

Quick Win Take any topic. Close everything. Set a 10-minute timer. Write everything you know. Then open your notes and fill in the gaps. Repeat this for every topic you are not confident in — it is simple, uncomfortable, and it works.
Tip 05
Do Past Papers Under Timed Conditions

Nothing prepares you for an exam better than doing one. Past papers let you practise under real time pressure, understand the specific question style your examiner uses, and see exactly what the mark scheme rewards — and what it does not.

Most students use past papers incorrectly. They look through a paper, check their score, and move on. That misses the entire point.

The correct method is to complete each paper under strict timed conditions, mark it line by line against the official mark scheme, log every mark lost and the reason why, and then go back to those questions one week later and try again without looking at the answers. This process — done consistently — is the single biggest driver of grade improvement we see across all of our 1:1 tutoring sessions.

For a full breakdown of how to use past papers effectively in IB, read our guide on how to get a 7 in IB exams.

Quick Win Start doing one past paper per subject per week from 8 weeks before your exams. Mark it, log your errors, and re-test those exact questions one week later. Aim for 10 to 15 complete papers per subject by exam day.
Tip 06
Ask for Help Before You Fall Behind

One of the clearest patterns we see: students who get good grades ask for help early. Students who struggle wait until they are completely lost — and by then, catching up is much harder and much more stressful.

If you do not understand something after class, speak to your teacher before the next lesson. If the same question type keeps costing you marks in past papers, find out exactly why — either through a teacher, a study group, or a tutor who can explain it in a way that finally makes sense.

There is nothing to be embarrassed about. Every student has gaps. The only real question is whether you find them before the exam or during it.

Our IB examiner tutors offer 1:1 online sessions in every IB subject. Because they mark the actual exams, they can tell you precisely what the mark scheme looks for in your answers — not just what the right answer is, but how to write it so that it earns full marks.

Quick Win After every past paper, write down your top 3 recurring mistakes. If the same topic or question type appears more than once in your error log, that is your sign to ask for targeted help on that specific area.
Tip 07
Stay Organised — It Saves More Time Than You Think

Disorganisation costs marks in ways that are easy to overlook. When you cannot find your notes, do not know when an essay is due, or spend 15 minutes searching for a past paper before you can start studying — all of that is time and mental energy wasted before revision has even begun.

Keep one dedicated notebook or folder for each subject. Record every deadline and exam date in a single place — a wall planner, a Google Calendar, or a paper diary. Have everything you need within reach before you sit down to study, so there is nothing pulling you up from your desk once you start.

Organisation is not a natural trait some students have and others do not. It is a skill built through deliberate habits. The most organised students are not the tidiest people in general — they have just built the routine of putting things where they can always find them.

Quick Win Right now, write down every upcoming deadline, test, and exam date in one place. Keep it visible — on your wall or on your phone. Update it at the start of every week so nothing catches you off guard.
Tip 08
Sleep 8 Hours — It Directly Affects Your Grades

This is the most underrated tip on this entire list. And it is also one of the most evidence-backed.

During sleep, your brain processes and stores what you learned during the day. This is called memory consolidation — and it happens in the deeper stages of sleep, not while you are awake. Students who sleep well retain more of what they studied. Students who stay up late revising wake up remembering less of it than they did the night before.

The Sleep Foundation recommends 8 to 10 hours of sleep per night for teenagers. Studies consistently show that students who meet this target outperform those who do not on memory tasks, problem-solving, and timed exam performance.

If you are currently sacrificing sleep to study more — stop. It is making your studying less effective, not more. The best revision happens during the day, when your brain is fresh. The best consolidation happens at night, while you sleep.

Quick Win Set a firm stop time for studying — 10pm or earlier. Do this for two weeks and notice how your focus and energy during study sessions changes. Most students who try this are genuinely surprised by the difference.
Tip 09
Review Every Mistake — Not Just Your Score

Getting a question wrong is not the problem. Walking away without understanding why you got it wrong — that is where grades stall.

Every lost mark on a test, assignment, or past paper is useful information — but only if you analyse it. Ask yourself: was it a content gap? Did you misread the question? Did you rush? Did you know the answer but phrase it in a way the mark scheme did not reward?

Each of these has a completely different fix. Content gaps need revision. Careless errors need slowing down and double-checking. Exam technique problems need mark scheme practice. If you treat all lost marks the same, you will keep making the same mistakes in different subjects.

Build an error log — a simple notebook where you record every lost mark, its topic, and the specific reason. After a few weeks of past papers, patterns become clear. Those patterns are your personal priority list. This is the backbone of the most effective IB revision strategies we use with students.

Quick Win After your next test or past paper, do not just check the score. Go through every wrong answer. Write one sentence for each explaining exactly why you lost that mark. This takes 10 extra minutes and makes the next paper noticeably better.
Tip 10
Protect Your Wellbeing — It Is Part of Your Revision Strategy

You cannot study well when you are burned out, anxious, or running on empty. Good grades come from consistent, sustainable effort — not from pushing yourself past the point of exhaustion.

Take genuine breaks. Eat proper meals. Exercise — even a 20-minute walk raises focus and lowers stress hormones for hours after. Spend time with people you like. Keep at least one thing in your week that has nothing to do with school.

The NHS and leading university wellbeing services consistently report that students who maintain a healthy balance during exam periods perform better — not worse — than those who remove everything from their lives and study every available hour.

Burnout does not just feel bad. It actively reduces your brain’s ability to remember things, make connections, and perform under pressure. Protecting your energy is not weakness. It is strategy.

Quick Win Add one non-negotiable activity to your week — a sport, a walk, time with friends, a creative hobby. Schedule it like a study session. It will not hurt your grades. It will protect your ability to study effectively for the rest of the week.

Quick Summary: 10 Tips to Get Good Grades

#TipWhy it works
1Attend every class and be fully presentFirst exposure in class is the most efficient learning you will do
2Take notes in your own wordsSummarising forces your brain to process — not just copy
3Build and follow a study scheduleEnsures weak subjects get the attention they actually need
4Test yourself — active recall over re-readingThe most evidence-backed revision method in learning science
5Do past papers under timed conditionsBuilds exam technique, not just content knowledge
6Ask for help early — before you fall behindGaps compound over time; catching them early is far cheaper
7Stay organisedRemoves friction and wasted time before every study session
8Sleep 8 or more hours every nightMemory consolidation happens during sleep — not during revision
9Review every single mistake with a reasonPatterns in errors show exactly where to direct your focus
10Protect your wellbeing and take real breaksSustainable effort beats burnout — every single time

You do not need to do all 10 at once. Pick the two or three that will make the biggest difference for you right now. Build those into habits over two weeks. Then layer in the next ones. Small, consistent improvements compound — and that is how grades actually change.

How to Get Good Grades in Your Specific Programme

The 10 tips above work for every student in every subject. But the specific approach shifts depending on what you are studying. Here is where to go next based on your qualification.

IB Diploma Programme — DP1 and DP2

The IB has specific features that make it different from other qualifications. Your Internal Assessment counts for 20 to 25% of your final grade and must be completed well before exam season. The Extended Essay and Theory of Knowledge both affect your total Diploma score. And managing six subjects simultaneously means building six separate revision plans at once.

If you are currently in DP1, now is the right time to build your study habits before DP2 pressure sets in. We offer dedicated DP1 revision courses and DP2 revision courses built around the IB exam calendar. For IB-specific exam strategy, our article on how to get a 7 in IB exams covers past papers, command terms, and subject-specific techniques in full detail.

GCSE and IGCSE Students

At GCSE and IGCSE level, past paper practice is your single best revision tool because exam formats are extremely consistent from year to year. You can accurately predict question styles — which means targeted past paper work converts directly into marks. If you are not sure which qualification you are sitting, read our guide on the difference between GCSE and IGCSE. We also offer dedicated IGCSE tutoring and GCSE tutoring for students who want structured support.

A Level Students

A Levels require deep, specialist knowledge combined with strong essay and analytical writing technique. The most common reason A Level students underperform is not insufficient content knowledge — it is weak structure in extended writing. For specific guidance, see our A Level tutoring page and our guide on how to achieve an A in A Level Maths.

MYP and Primary Years (PYP)

For students in the IB Middle Years Programme, building the right study habits now has the biggest long-term return. The habits formed in MYP carry directly into the demands of the Diploma Programme. We offer MYP tutoring and Primary Years Programme support for students at every stage of their IB journey.

Want help getting better grades in your specific subjects?

Our IB examiner tutors know exactly what the mark scheme rewards — and they will tell you precisely why you are losing marks and how to fix it. Book a free 30-minute strategy call today.

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What Getting Good Grades Actually Comes Down To

After working with thousands of students across 55 countries, here is the honest truth: good grades are a result of habits, not talent.

The students who consistently perform at the top of their class are not always the most naturally gifted. They are the most consistent. They attend every lesson. They review their mistakes after every test. They get enough sleep. They practise past papers under real conditions. They ask for help before they fall behind. They take breaks so they can keep going when it counts most.

You do not need to change everything at once. Pick two or three tips from this guide that apply most to where you are right now. Build those habits over the next two weeks. Then add the next layer. Grades do not change through a single heroic session — they change through dozens of small, right decisions made consistently over time.

If you want structured, personalised support rather than going it alone, our 1:1 tutoring packages are designed to do exactly this — help you build the right habits, close the content gaps, and get the marks your work deserves. Take a look at our IB examiner tutor team and find out more about how the tutoring process works.


FAQs

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Mudassir Mehmood
IB Math Examiner · IB Curriculum Reviewer · “Mr. IB Math” · 15+ years experience

Mudassir is one of the most recognised IB Mathematics educators globally. As an active IB Curriculum Reviewer and Examiner, he has been involved in marking, moderation, and curriculum design at the IB level for over a decade. He leads the mathematics faculty at IB Demystified and has personally guided 200+ students to grade 7s across AA and AI. You can book a session with his team here.