This article is for students who failed an exam and have a resit coming up. Whether you bombed a midterm, failed a final, or need to retake a module exam, this guide gives you a practical, science-backed plan to pass the second time around.
Failing an exam is rough. But here is the truth: a resit is not a punishment — it is a second chance, and students who use it strategically often come out with a deeper understanding of the subject than those who passed the first time.
In this guide, you will learn exactly how to prepare for a resit exam, what mistakes to avoid, and how to study smarter in the time you have — whether that is 2 days, 2 weeks, or a full semester.
🎯 Key Takeaways: Resit preparation requires a different strategy than first-attempt studying. You already know what went wrong. Use that information. Focus on diagnosed weaknesses, not re-reading everything from scratch.
Here is a frustrating pattern: students who fail an exam often study for the resit the same way they studied the first time. More hours, same ineffective methods. The result? Another disappointing grade.
Research from the Journal of Educational Psychology found that re-reading and passive review are among the least effective study strategies, yet they remain the default for most students. Highlighting notes, re-watching lectures, and copying material again creates a feeling of familiarity that is easily mistaken for actual learning — a phenomenon called the fluency illusion.
The three most common reasons students fail resits are:
Knowing this, your resit prep needs to do three things differently: diagnose, target, and test. That is what the steps below are built around.
Before you open a single textbook, you need to understand exactly why you failed. This is the most skipped step in resit preparation, and skipping it is why so many students fail again.
Most universities and colleges allow students to view their marked exam scripts. Request yours. If you cannot get the original paper, ask your lecturer for specific feedback on where you lost marks.
Look for patterns in the feedback:
Once you have the feedback, sort your problem areas into three categories:
These three types of gaps require different fixes. Knowledge gaps need more input. Understanding gaps need the Feynman technique (explaining concepts in your own words until they click). Exam technique gaps need deliberate practice with past papers under timed conditions.
⚠️ Pro Tip: Spend at least 30 minutes on the diagnosis step before you do anything else. Students who skip it tend to study the same way and get the same result.
Once you know what went wrong, you can build a study plan that targets the right material. This is where most students waste time — they treat the resit like they are starting fresh and try to cover everything again from scratch.
Do not do that. You have already studied this material once. Your goal is targeted revision, not repetition.
In most subjects, roughly 20% of the content accounts for 80% of exam marks. Identify the high-yield topics — the ones that appear on every past paper, the ones your lecturer emphasized, the ones where you lost the most marks — and spend the majority of your time there.
Block your time in advance. A realistic resit study plan for a 2-week window might look like:
The specific allocation will depend on how much time you have and how many gaps you identified — but the structure matters more than the exact timing. Work backwards from your exam date.
Strategic incompleteness beats scattered completeness. It is better to deeply understand 70% of the syllabus than to have a shallow familiarity with 100% of it. Examiners reward depth.
Active recall — retrieving information from memory rather than re-reading it — is the single most effective study technique with the highest evidence base in cognitive science research. A 2013 meta-analysis published in Psychological Science in the Public Interest compared 10 popular study techniques and ranked practice testing and distributed practice as the two methods with the highest utility.
For resit preparation, this means:
Instead of re-reading your notes, close them and try to write down everything you remember about a topic. Then check what you missed. This forces your brain to actively retrieve information, which strengthens memory far more than passive exposure.
Practical methods for active recall:
Spaced repetition is the practice of reviewing material at increasing intervals as it moves into long-term memory. Instead of cramming everything the night before, you review new information the same day, then 2 days later, then 5 days later, then 10 days later. This mirrors how memory consolidation actually works.
Students using spaced repetition have been shown to retain up to 80% more information compared to massed practice (cramming) after one month, according to research from the Association for Psychological Science.
📱 Use Snitchnotes to turn your lecture notes and PDFs into instant quiz questions. The app generates active recall questions automatically so you can test yourself on the exact material you need to learn — no setup required.
Knowing the material is only half of passing a resit. The other half is being able to perform under exam conditions — time pressure, unfamiliar question phrasing, and the mental load of the exam room.
Past paper practice is non-negotiable. Research consistently shows that testing yourself with exam-style questions before an exam (a technique called retrieval practice or the testing effect) dramatically improves actual exam performance compared to additional studying of the same material.
A significant portion of marks lost in exams comes from poor exam technique, not poor knowledge. Before writing a single word, spend the first 5–10 minutes reading the entire paper. Identify:
Many students answer the question they prepared for rather than the question actually being asked. This is one of the most common reasons marks are lost in essay-based subjects.
Resit exams carry a psychological weight that first-attempt exams do not. Failing once already has a way of embedding doubt, and that doubt can actively interfere with performance through test anxiety and avoidance behavior.
Here is how to manage it:
Failing an exam does not make you less intelligent or less capable. Research from Stanford University psychologist Carol Dweck shows that students with a growth mindset — the belief that ability is developed through effort — consistently outperform those with a fixed mindset, especially when facing setbacks. A failed exam is data, not a verdict.
The most common response to the anxiety of a resit is avoidance — delaying study, distracting yourself, and letting the time disappear. Avoidance feels like relief in the moment but compounds the problem. The best way to reduce study anxiety is to start studying, even briefly. A 10-minute session will almost always extend itself once you begin.
Three focused study sessions of 90 minutes each over three days will outperform one 6-hour marathon session the night before. Sleep is particularly important for resit preparation — memory consolidation happens during sleep, meaning a well-rested brain retains significantly more than an exhausted one.
🧠 If anxiety is significantly affecting your ability to prepare or sit the exam, speak to your university student support services. Many offer free short-term counselling and academic support specifically for students going through resits.
Snitchnotes is an AI study tutor designed to help students learn faster by transforming their notes, PDFs, and lecture materials into interactive quizzes and study guides. For resit preparation, it is particularly useful because it removes the setup friction from active recall.
Instead of manually creating flashcards or quiz questions from your notes, you upload your material and Snitchnotes generates targeted quiz questions automatically. You can quiz yourself on exactly the topics you need, identify where you keep getting stuck, and build the kind of retrieval practice routine that the research shows actually works.
Key features for resit students:
Snitchnotes is available at snitchnotes.com and is free to try.
It depends on how large your knowledge gaps are and how much time you have, but most students benefit from at least 2 weeks of focused preparation. If you have less than a week, prioritize past paper practice and active recall on your weakest topics over re-reading all your notes.
Not necessarily. The content tested is the same, and you have already studied the material once. Many students find the resit easier because they understand the exam format, know their weaknesses, and are more focused in their preparation. The psychological pressure can feel higher, but the academic bar is usually identical.
No. If your original study method did not produce a pass, repeating it is unlikely to produce a different result. Diagnose what went wrong, identify your gaps, and switch to active recall methods (self-testing, past papers, teaching the material) rather than passive review (re-reading, highlighting, re-watching lectures).
Connect your study sessions to a concrete outcome rather than abstract pressure. Remind yourself why you enrolled in this course and what passing it enables. Break your prep into small, achievable daily targets — completing a focused 90-minute session feels much more manageable than trying to "study for the whole resit" in one sitting. Track your progress so you can see improvement happening.
Yes, but only if you are highly strategic. Do not try to cover the entire syllabus. Use your marked paper or feedback to identify the 3–5 highest-priority topics, practice only those using active recall and past paper questions, and focus the rest of your energy on sleep and exam technique. Trying to do everything in 48 hours will result in shallow coverage of everything and mastery of nothing.
A resit exam is not a failure. It is a second attempt with more information than you had the first time — you know the exam format, you know the marking criteria, and if you follow the diagnosis step, you know exactly where you lost marks.
The students who pass their resits are not the ones who study the hardest. They are the ones who study most strategically: diagnosing their gaps, targeting their weakest areas, using active recall instead of passive review, and practicing under real exam conditions with past papers.
Use this guide as your plan. Work through the steps in order. And if you want a tool that makes active recall easier — so you can quiz yourself on exactly the material you need without spending hours building your own flashcards — try Snitchnotes at snitchnotes.com.
You already know more than you did the first time. Use that knowledge to your advantage.
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