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GCE Examination Timetable For O & A Level Candidates 2020

An examination timetable is very important. It has defined period lengths. It also has specific subjects for each examination session. Hence, it allows invigilators and examiners to properly supervise and assess the students. The organization of a good timetable is such that important subjects are at the best times.

The Cameroon GCE examination timetable the June 2020 session shall be made public from the date of the announcement for the start of the Cameroon GCE examination registration 2020.

Cameroon GCE examination timetable 2020

Timetables are always released from the start of the registration process to enable candidates to master the days and subjects to be written.

Individual timetables are always issued to students as soon as the candidate in question finishes with the registration process. The individual timetable carries only the candidate’s registered subjects showing clearly the dates and subjects to be written respectively. This time timetable is normally used as a receipt and as an acceptance slipt in the time of writing of the examination, hence candidates are always requested to show his/her personal time each time before entering the examination hall. Students without the individual Cameroon GCE examination timetable 2020 shall not be allowed to enter the hall.

The General time table contains all the subjects showing all the writing dates displayed throughout the writing period. It is usually issued at the time of launching of the exam.

The full General timetable shall be uploaded here as soon as it is made public.


Awaiting GCE Examination Timetable For O & A Level Candidates from the Cameroon GCE Board to be posted here!


Another crucial thing students need in preparation for the GCE is a revision timetable.

The Importance of a Revision Timetable For GCE Students

I am guessing many of you taking this examination have not studied for a long time.

For some of you, it will be a very long time, maybe even decades. God forbid!

It can be a daunting process; you have a lot of information to learn for the GCE examinations and usually limited time to learn it.

You need to balance your revision with other activities that may be taking up your time. This is where a good timetable can make a real difference.

A solid revision timetable allows you to cover everything you need to and in a good time for the exam. It will also allow you to break the topics down into manageable chunks. It will also allow you to put into perspective the task ahead.

We have gone and spoken with some academics (well teachers really but they like to call themselves academics) as to what makes a good revision timetable. Their advice is below (we think it’s rather good)

1. Think of it as a study calendar.

A basic revision timetable is essentially a normal calendar; but instead of birthdays, it contains the topics you need to study. The first thing you need to do is to work how long you have until exam day, the second is how many topics you need to study and then divide it up so that they are all covered over that period.

2. Be Realistic

I see many students drafting very excellent timetables but end up not following them simply because they’re unrealistic. For instance, we have people working, taking care of their families and all what not with very little hours left for studies. Allocating so many hours that won’t be available or that you won’t stick to is simply deceiving yourself. Be realistic enough to set reasonable study sessions that you’ll stick to.

3. Prioritize

You need to decide which topics you wish to spend more time on. You will have an understanding already of what areas you struggle with. For instance, if you find yourself confident at Reproduction but struggling with Genetics then it may be that at the start you look at putting more time into that. Make sure you do not neglect those areas that you are already strong at, just balance the revision.

4. Refresh, Refresh, Refresh

You need to continually go back and revise areas that you have covered otherwise by the time the examination comes those topics that you studied in week one will be a distant memory. It is important to put refresher periods into the timetable.

5. Be Flexible

Look, your timetable may look beautiful and you have spent hours using every colour in your pencil case to craft it but you need to be flexible with your approach to it. There will be times that you need to, wait for it, go off the grid and by that I mean change what you have planned for. It may be an unexpected engagement (although more likely enforced overtime) that throws your timetable in the air. Before you tear it up and start again, stop and simply see where you can move things to get on track.

6. Add in Breaks

We cannot stress this enough. No matter how dedicated you think you are, 14 hours of study on a Friday is unlikely to happen. You are far better putting in some reasonable breaks (half a day in a spa does not count) and focusing on quality revision time. You will struggle to focus for more than an hour at a time, so a 15-minute break after each hour session may work for you.

7. Check it Every Day

This is important, once you have made your timetable, do not leave it in your locker, and forget about it. If you prefer, put it on your phone or tablet but make sure that you are looking at it regularly. (Just make sure you’re not distracted by social media if it’s in your device).

8. Colour Code to Your Hearts Content

Revision timetables should be colourful; in fact, it should be the law. You can colour code each topic, each sub-topic, each day if you so wish but make it impactive. It is your revision timetable and you can design it for how you want. The main thing is to follow it, remember you do need to actually study, ticking off the topics as each day passes does not qualify.

9. Make it Public

It is all very well having a beautiful timetable but you need to show it off. It is a good idea to put it somewhere all of your family and friends will see. For instance if you put it on the fridge, then everytime someone goes in for a sneaky bar of chocolate they will see what you have planned. This also means that they will know when you should be studying (be prepared though to lose television rights when they quote the schedule).

10. Make it for You

We cannot stress this enough, you are studying for something you want, and therefore you need to plan for yourself. Take time making the revision timetable so that it covers everything you want and need to study.

Remember, your family and friends will be supportive but if they are not in the GCE Exams then they most probably have no idea how much work you need to do. A revision timetable will educate them to this and hopefully allow you the time you need to be successful.

So what are you waiting for? Get those felt tips out and start creating your revision timetable.

I wish you the best!

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