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Study Tips

Best Study Tips for CBC (now CBE) Learners β€” Score ME and EE in Every Subject

Practical, proven study techniques for CBC (now CBE) learners in Kenya. From spaced repetition to active recall to smart use of revision papers β€” these tips help your child score Meeting Expectations or Exceeding Expectations.

Best Study Tips for CBC (now CBE) Learners β€” Score ME and EE in Every Subject

Studying under the Competency-Based Curriculum (CBC (now CBE)) is different from what your parents experienced under 8-4-4. The old system rewarded memorisation β€” if you could cram enough facts, you could pass. CBC (now CBE) rewards understanding, application, and critical thinking. That means study techniques need to change too.

This guide covers practical, research-backed study tips that work for CBC (now CBE) learners at every grade level. Whether you are in Grade 4 preparing for Upper Primary or in Grade 9 gearing up for the KJSA, these techniques will help you move from AE (Approaching Expectations) to ME (Meeting Expectations) β€” and even reach EE (Exceeding Expectations).

For Parents: These tips work best when a parent or guardian supports the learner at home. You do not need to be a teacher β€” you just need to create the right environment and help your child stay consistent.

Tip 1: Understand the CBA Levels β€” Know What You Are Aiming For

Before you study, understand what success looks like under CBC (now CBE). Every subject is assessed on four competency levels:

LevelCodeWhat It Means
Exceeding ExpectationsEEYou can apply knowledge to new, unfamiliar problems
Meeting ExpectationsMEYou understand the content and can apply it in familiar situations
Approaching ExpectationsAEYou understand some parts but need guidance on others
Below ExpectationsBEYou need significant support to meet the basic outcomes

The key insight: ME is not about memorising facts β€” it is about understanding and applying them. EE requires you to go further and use your knowledge creatively. Your study methods need to focus on understanding, not cramming.

Tip 2: Use Spaced Repetition β€” The Science of Not Forgetting

Spaced repetition is the single most effective study technique supported by research. Instead of studying a topic once and moving on, you review it at increasing intervals: after 1 day, then 3 days, then 7 days, then 14 days.

Here is how to apply it:

  1. Study a topic today (e.g., Grade 7 Mathematics β€” Linear Equations).
  2. Review your notes the next day β€” just 10 minutes.
  3. Review again 3 days later.
  4. Review again after 1 week.
  5. By the end of the month, that topic is locked into long-term memory.

Practical tool: Use a simple notebook calendar. After studying a topic, write the topic name on the dates you need to review it. When that date comes, spend 10 minutes revising β€” not relearning.

African schoolgirl focused on her revision materials

Tip 3: Active Recall β€” Test Yourself Before the Exam Tests You

Most learners study by re-reading their notes. Research shows this is one of the least effective study methods. Instead, use active recall: close your notes and try to remember what you just studied.

How to practise active recall:

  • Flashcards: Write a question on one side, the answer on the other. Test yourself daily.
  • Blank page method: After studying a topic, take a blank sheet and write everything you can remember. Then check your notes and fill in the gaps.
  • Teach someone: Explain what you learned to a friend, sibling, or even an imaginary student. If you cannot explain it simply, you do not understand it well enough.
  • Past papers: The ultimate active recall tool. Doing a past paper forces you to retrieve information without any help.

Tip 4: Use Revision Papers β€” The Most Underrated CBC (now CBE) Study Tool

Revision papers (also called past papers or practice exams) are the closest thing to a study cheat code. They show you:

  • Exactly what type of questions are asked
  • How marks are allocated (so you know how much detail to give)
  • Which topics come up most often
  • How to manage your time during the actual exam

The right way to use revision papers:

  1. Do the paper under real exam conditions. No notes. Set a timer. Sit at a desk.
  2. Mark it using the marking scheme. Be honest β€” give yourself only the marks you truly earned.
  3. Identify weak areas. The questions you got wrong point to the topics you need to revise.
  4. Revise those specific topics using your notes.
  5. Do the paper again after 5 days. Your score should improve. If it does not, repeat the revision cycle.

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Tip 5: Create a Study Timetable That Actually Works

A study timetable fails when it is too ambitious. Here are the rules for building one that works:

  • Study in 25-minute blocks (called the Pomodoro technique). After 25 minutes, take a 5-minute break.
  • Alternate subjects. Do not study Mathematics for 3 hours straight. Do 25 minutes of Maths, then 25 minutes of English, then back to Maths. This keeps your brain alert.
  • Hard subjects first. Study the subject you find most difficult at the beginning of your session when your brain is freshest.
  • Include revision slots. Leave space in your timetable specifically for reviewing topics you studied earlier in the week (spaced repetition).
  • Rest is not optional. A tired brain cannot learn. 7–8 hours of sleep is more valuable than 2 extra hours of studying at midnight.
African schoolboy concentrating on his schoolwork

Tip 6: Focus on Understanding, Not Memorising

This is the fundamental shift that CBC (now CBE) demands. Under 8-4-4, you could memorise a formula and score marks. Under CBC (now CBE), the exam will give you a new problem that requires you to understand and apply the formula in an unfamiliar context.

How to study for understanding:

  • Ask "why" and "how" for every fact. Do not just learn that plants make food through photosynthesis β€” understand why they need light, how chlorophyll works, and what happens when a plant is in the dark.
  • Draw diagrams. Visual learners retain more when concepts are mapped visually. Mind maps, flowcharts, and labelled diagrams are powerful tools.
  • Connect topics. CBC (now CBE) learning areas are interconnected. A concept from Integrated Science (e.g., measurement) connects to Mathematics. When you see these links, your understanding deepens.
  • Use real-life examples. When studying Business Studies topics like profit and loss, calculate the actual profit from a real business scenario β€” say, a mandazi vendor selling 100 mandazi at KSH 10 each with costs of KSH 500.

Tip 7: Use YouTube Tutorials as a Supplement

Sometimes reading notes is not enough. A 10-minute video explanation can make a concept click in a way that pages of text cannot. Free tutorial videos are available for most CBC (now CBE) subjects on YouTube.

How to use video tutorials effectively:

  1. Study the topic from your notes first. Identify what confuses you.
  2. Watch the video specifically for the confusing parts. Pause and take notes.
  3. After watching, close the video and test yourself (active recall).
  4. Do not binge-watch tutorials passively β€” that is entertainment, not studying.

We publish free tutorials for Grade 7–9 core subjects on our YouTube channel: @CBCEduKenya.

Tip 8: Build a Portfolio Throughout the Term

CBC (now CBE) assessment includes portfolio-based assessment for many learning areas β€” especially Life Skills, Creative Arts, and practical subjects. Do not leave portfolio work until the last week of term.

  • Keep all your project work, drawings, reflections, and practical reports organised in a folder.
  • Date every piece of work.
  • Ask your teacher which items count towards your portfolio assessment.
  • Quality matters more than quantity β€” a well-done project report scores higher than five rushed ones.

Tip 9: Form a Study Group β€” But Keep It Small

Study groups work if they have 3–4 committed learners. More than that and the group becomes a socialising session. Here are the rules:

  • Each person prepares before the meeting β€” study groups are for discussing, not starting from scratch.
  • Take turns explaining topics to each other (teaching is the best form of learning).
  • Use the group to do past papers together and compare answers.
  • Set a timer. One hour of focused group study is better than three hours of chatting.

Tip 10: Use the Holiday Wisely

The three school holidays (April, August, December) are where the real gains happen. Learners who revise during holidays consistently outperform those who do not.

A simple holiday revision plan:

  1. Week 1: Review all notes from the term just ended. Identify weak areas.
  2. Week 2: Focus revision on weak areas. Use past papers to test improvement.
  3. Week 3: Preview key topics for the next term (ask your teacher for the scheme of work).

We offer affordable holiday revision packs with notes and practice papers for every grade: Holiday Revision Packs.

Summary: The Top 10 Study Tips for CBC (now CBE) Learners

  1. Understand the CBA levels (BE, AE, ME, EE) β€” know your target.
  2. Use spaced repetition to lock topics into long-term memory.
  3. Practise active recall β€” test yourself constantly.
  4. Use revision papers under exam conditions.
  5. Build a realistic study timetable with breaks.
  6. Focus on understanding and application, not memorisation.
  7. Supplement with YouTube tutorials for difficult topics.
  8. Build your portfolio throughout the term, not at the end.
  9. Form a small, focused study group.
  10. Revise during every school holiday.

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