Good question! First i forgot to say about the days of the week in the video. Which is a perfect way of dividing up the revision. So yes use that with the bike list slider. To revise the Pointed is to revise everything, this is fine if you are no-longer out pointing any real volume on bike lists. The important thing to know about points is once they are in your long term memory they are there for a while. This is the reason bike lists and sticky lists are more important. Bike lists takes a newly found point into your long term memory if you do the repeated revision of it. The daily sheet revision in respect takes care of POINTED. STICKY list takes care of any discovered weaknesses. If you dont have any new bike lists then you can revise POINTED , but it will be filled with points of the calibre of Buckingham Palace and Paddington Station and because there are a few thousand points of that calibre you will be wasting valuable time revising the unnecessary.
NO complete all 320. If anyone tries to scare you and say you have a test after 80 runs then they are not telling you that it counts for nothing and is meant as an experience and to show you what will be in the test. If you have done no points at all and do well in this test well that would be interesting. You will do plenty of points later and it will be much more accurate list to point of what would be current and relevant. For example imagine you point all the points in the radius of manor house station, 11 on WizAnn map and 8 on KP map. in the past year not one single point has been asked from that area. Yet there are currently 3000 points being used regularly that you do not know. So finish the runs and start finding whats in use and popular
How often should I be revising my points on wiz radius, should i aim to revise all of them or after the month should I move on to new ones as I would of most likely done it over 15 times?
On WizRadius it is not a substantial amount, you should be able to revise all of them over a two to three day period (1000 points is 2 days) . Once you move on to the WizPoints then can stop revising them. You may take a look every now and again just for fun.
But Mr W, if one just haven’t the time to revise all points from every level each day, how can I just concentrate on the examiners that could arise from that particular week in up for an app ? Thx in advance.
Great Question. First you should definitely have time to revise a whole point sheet worth of points. It takes less than a second to say you don’t know something. A sheet is not that many points. Answer quickly if you have to think deep on the answer mark it sticky. Let’s say a point comes out on 21s that you have never heard of? Well that’s the first time you are seeing it. Now what if that point is asked everyday for a week. You have said 5 times that you do not know it. But I bet you are now able to say it’s location because you saw it on the sheet 5 times. This will happen a lot and is a pre learning of points. It means when you do visit this point it will just be putting a face to the name. This is a way of learning points they has no pressure to it but works immensely well.
Mr W. Excellent as always
Thank you kindly
Thanks Dean 👍🏻
No problem 👍
Eye opening I was doing it wrong. Thanks for the video Dean
Glad to help
Great Video Dean. Thanks. Question. Why should I revise “bike list” rather than “pointed” and should I not use the revision depending on the day?
Good question! First i forgot to say about the days of the week in the video. Which is a perfect way of dividing up the revision. So yes use that with the bike list slider.
To revise the Pointed is to revise everything, this is fine if you are no-longer out pointing any real volume on bike lists. The important thing to know about points is once they are in your long term memory they are there for a while. This is the reason bike lists and sticky lists are more important. Bike lists takes a newly found point into your long term memory if you do the repeated revision of it. The daily sheet revision in respect takes care of POINTED. STICKY list takes care of any discovered weaknesses.
If you dont have any new bike lists then you can revise POINTED , but it will be filled with points of the calibre of Buckingham Palace and Paddington Station and because there are a few thousand points of that calibre you will be wasting valuable time revising the unnecessary.
hi dean, was wondering if i should complete the first 80 runs first, then start learning the points for the first 80 runs?
NO complete all 320. If anyone tries to scare you and say you have a test after 80 runs then they are not telling you that it counts for nothing and is meant as an experience and to show you what will be in the test. If you have done no points at all and do well in this test well that would be interesting. You will do plenty of points later and it will be much more accurate list to point of what would be current and relevant. For example imagine you point all the points in the radius of manor house station, 11 on WizAnn map and 8 on KP map. in the past year not one single point has been asked from that area. Yet there are currently 3000 points being used regularly that you do not know. So finish the runs and start finding whats in use and popular
So after I’ve finished pointing everything in the wiz radius app, I should start this?
Yes WizRadius you should do the top 1 to 2000 then move on to WizPoints
How often should I be revising my points on wiz radius, should i aim to revise all of them or after the month should I move on to new ones as I would of most likely done it over 15 times?
On WizRadius it is not a substantial amount, you should be able to revise all of them over a two to three day period (1000 points is 2 days) . Once you move on to the WizPoints then can stop revising them. You may take a look every now and again just for fun.
But Mr W, if one just haven’t the time to revise all points from every level each day, how can I just concentrate on the examiners that could arise from that particular week in up for an app ? Thx in advance.
Great Question.
First you should definitely have time to revise a whole point sheet worth of points. It takes less than a second to say you don’t know something. A sheet is not that many points. Answer quickly if you have to think deep on the answer mark it sticky. Let’s say a point comes out on 21s that you have never heard of? Well that’s the first time you are seeing it. Now what if that point is asked everyday for a week. You have said 5 times that you do not know it. But I bet you are now able to say it’s location because you saw it on the sheet 5 times. This will happen a lot and is a pre learning of points. It means when you do visit this point it will just be putting a face to the name. This is a way of learning points they has no pressure to it but works immensely well.