I am not a genius. In 2023 I got 9 points (3Bs and 1C). Last year I got 19 points (A in Physics, Chemistry, Biology + B in Maths). Here is the exact system that worked.
Monday–Wednesday: Heavy theory + mechanism subjects (Chemistry Organic + Physical, Biology Physiology/Genetics)
Thursday–Friday: Calculation-heavy (Physics, Maths, Chemistry calculations)
Saturday: Full past paper (alternating Paper 2 and Paper 3)
Sunday: Rest + light review of mistakes from the week + church/family
I will share the exact Anki deck structure and the 12 past papers I repeated most in the comments if people are interested.
The biggest mindset shift: treat every past paper as a diagnostic, not a test of your worth.
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How I Went from 9 Points 2023 to 19 Points 2024 in One Year I am not a genius. In 2023 I got 9 points 3Bs and 1C. Last year I got 19 points A in Physics, Chemistry, Biology + B in Maths. Here is the exact system that worked. Core Principles I Followed - Active recall > passive reading I stopped "reading notes" after week 2 - Past papers under exam conditions from week 3 onwards - Spaced repetition for definitions and mechanisms - One rest day every 7 days non-negotiable Weekly Structure Adapt to Your Subjects Monday–Wednesday: Heavy theory + mechanism subjects Chemistry Organic + Physical, Biology Physiology/Genetics Thursday–Friday: Calculation-heavy Physics, Maths, Chemistry calculations Saturday: Full past paper alternating Paper 2 and Paper 3 Sunday: Rest + light review of mistakes from the week + church/family Daily Non-Negotiables - 2 hours minimum active recall Anki or self-quizzing with past questions - 1 "teaching session" where I explain a topic out loud as if teaching Lower Sixth students - 30 minutes reviewing examiner reports this is pure gold I will share the exact Anki deck structure and the 12 past papers I repeated most in the comments if people are interested. The biggest mindset shift: treat every past paper as a diagnostic, not a test of your worth.
The Dangerous Realities of Relying on Speco for GCE Prep As GCE examinations draw closer, the pressure on students increases. In Cameroon, this pressure often drives candidates to look for shortcuts. One common term you will hear in classrooms and schoolyards is "speco" short for speculations. While analyzing past questions to predict likely topics is a normal study method, there is a dark side to this practice. Scammers frequently use the term "speco" to sell fake exam leaks on WhatsApp, Telegram, and Facebook. Here is why depending on these shortcuts is a massive risk to your future. Why Speco and Leaks Are a Trap Every year, dishonest individuals create online groups claiming they have "official leaked papers" directly from the GCE Board. They ask students to pay money to access them. - They Are Almost Always Fake: The GCE Board has strict security measures. The documents sold online are usually compiled from older past papers, modified, or completely fabricated to scam vulnerable students. - Relying on Them Leads to Failure: If you spend your final days studying only the "speco" sheet you bought, and it turns out to be wrong, you will enter the exam hall completely unprepared. Severe Penalties for Exam Malpractice The Ministry of Secondary Education and the Cameroon GCE Board have a zero-tolerance policy for examination malpractice. If you are caught with leaked materials, phones in the exam hall, or pre-prepared answers, the consequences are severe: 1. Annulment of Results: Your entire examination session will be cancelled. You will receive a grade of 'X' for all subjects. 2. Multi-Year Bans: The GCE Board publishes list of sanctioned students who are banned from writing any exams organized by the Board for one, two, or even three years. 3. Criminal Prosecutions: In cases of impersonation or organized leaking, suspects are handed over to the police, resulting in prosecution and imprisonment. The Right Way to Prepare The only guaranteed way to pass your GCE exams is through consistent and honest preparation. - Practice Past Questions: Work through past questions from the last 10 years. You can find free revision materials and guides in our GCE O-Level Board/boards/gce-o-level and GCE A-Level Board/boards/gce-a-level. - Form Study Groups: Explain topics to your classmates or discuss difficult questions with peers in our Active Revision Communities/communities. - Trust Yourself: Real academic success comes from understanding the concepts, not memorizing leaked questions. Stay safe, protect your education, and focus on honest study. You have the ability to pass on your own merit!