This week’s Sunday Setup is about something students often try to avoid, but which sits at the centre of genuine understanding. Not knowing.
As exams approach, there is a strong urge to eliminate uncertainty as quickly as possible. To look things up, copy model answers or move on as soon as discomfort appears. Learning does not happen when everything feels clear. It happens in the moments just before it does.
That is what this week’s reflections focus on.
This week’s reflections
This week I noticed how quickly students label uncertainty as failure. If they cannot answer immediately, they assume something has gone wrong.
In reality, that pause is often the most valuable part of the process. It shows where understanding is incomplete, where ideas have not yet connected and where thinking needs more time.
Students who improve most are not the ones who avoid these moments. They are the ones who stay with them long enough for clarity to form.
On my mind this week
Not knowing is uncomfortable, especially for high achieving students. They are used to being competent, quick and correct.
A level subjects require ideas to be linked, compared and applied across topics. That kind of understanding cannot be rushed.
When students learn to tolerate uncertainty without panic, their thinking becomes more flexible. They stop chasing reassurance and start building explanations that actually hold.
Things I’ve learned about A-Level Revision
Uncertainty often signals learning, not weakness.
Students who pause think more deeply than those who rush.
Immediate clarity is not the goal. Durable understanding is.
Confidence grows after confusion, not before it.
Study tip
When you get stuck, resist the urge to look up the answer straight away.
Instead, ask yourself what you do know. Write it down. Say it out loud. Try to bridge the gap.
Even a partially formed explanation strengthens understanding more than copying a perfect one.
For Parents
If your child seems frustrated while revising, that does not always mean revision is going badly. It may mean they are engaging properly with difficult material.
Reassure them that uncertainty is expected and temporary. Encourage them to explain what they are unsure about rather than moving past it too quickly.
One thing to try this week
Once this week, deliberately stop before checking the answer.
Sit with the question for an extra minute. Let the uncertainty surface.
Then notice how much clearer the explanation feels once you resolve it yourself.
Quote of the week
“The pause is part of the process.”
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