Although many students study for months for the RBI Grade B 2025 exam, most of them skip the most important part of the preparation. That part is revision. They keep moving from one chapter to another, believing they will revise everything in the last few weeks. But unfortunately, by the time they reach the final phase of preparation, they forget what they learned in the beginning. This is one of the biggest reasons why students struggle to answer confidently in both Phase 1 and Phase 2 exams. Revision is not something you do after studying. It must be a regular part of your preparation journey. And to help you with that, we are sharing 5 simple and effective revision techniques that will help you retain important facts, concepts, and formulas from all subjects like Quantitative Aptitude, General Awareness, ESI, and FM.
Also, know why RBI Grade B Phase 1 Exam: The Silent Eliminator of 99% Aspirants & What is the Finance and Management Syllabus for RBI Grade B Exam?
You must not only study well, but also revise smartly to get success in RBI Grade B 2025. Some topics demand extra attention (like Economic data, Finance terms, Management theories, and static GK). You must revise these regularly to keep them fresh in your memory. The techniques below will help you do just that.
You need to bring information to the surface of your memory. Many students just re-read their notes again and again. But that doesn’t guarantee memory retention. Instead, active recall is a technique where you study a topic and then immediately try to recall it without looking at your notes. This way, your brain works harder to remember things, and this strengthens your memory.
Practical Example: After studying a chapter like Inflation in ESI, close your book and try to recall definitions, causes, and types. Do the same with Management theories like Maslow’s or Herzberg’s. This simple method will help you remember these better during the exam.
It’s important to revise at regular intervals. This is the reason why spaced repetition is one of the most powerful revision tools. You revise the same topic multiple times, but at increasing time intervals—after 1 day, then 3 days, then 7 days, and so on. This way, the chances of forgetting reduce sharply.
Practical Example: Let’s say you studied the Balance of Payments chapter today. Revise it tomorrow, again after 3 days, then after a week. Use apps like Anki or your own planner to schedule these sessions. This technique works great for formulas, schemes, and data-based topics.
Do you break topics into smaller parts? Well, when a topic looks too big, the brain often gives up. That’s why chunking really helps. You should, therefore, break a long topic into smaller sections and revise each part one by one. This makes difficult subjects like Finance and ESI easier to manage.
Practical Example: Instead of studying the entire RBI functions chapter at once, break it into parts like Monetary Policy, Currency Issue, and Financial Regulation. Revise each section separately and then connect them later through questions or notes.
Do you keep in touch with old topics? Keeping in touch with the topic means you should spend a few hours, once a week, actively revising what you’ve already studied. Learning a topic means not just reading it but also summarizing it and quizzing yourself or discussing the topic with someone. This exercise can help you to improve your long-term retention, especially for general awareness, schemes, and economic updates.
Practical Example: If you studied financial inclusion or NPA management in finance, use a weekend to make a short summary of main points or practice questions from that topic. You’ll be surprised at how easily you remember things later.
Now, what does visual revision mean? It means you should revise via visual means, like using charts, tables, or flashcards. It’s best for topics that have heavy data. These visual revision tools are very effective and are one of the best tools to revise tough topics. Use flashcards for definitions, flowcharts for processes, or tables for comparing economic indicators. These visuals stay longer in memory and are easy to revise quickly before the exam.
Practical Example: Make a chart for major inflation trends or a comparison table for Fiscal Policy vs Monetary Policy. For Management theories, create flashcards with keywords. Stick these around your study space (a wall beside or upon your study table) to keep watching these topics daily.
Most students believe they will revise everything just before the exam. But what they don’t realise is that revision is not just about going over notes. It’s about testing what you remember and getting aware of what you’ve forgotten. This is where mock tests become extremely useful during your RBI Grade B preparation.
A mock test is not just practice. It is a complete revision tool. It helps you mimic the real exam experience. You sit for a fixed time, solve the paper under pressure, and test both your speed and accuracy. This tells you clearly which topics are strong and which ones need more work.
After taking a mock test, go back and analyse your mistakes. That’s the key. It helps you revise smarter. You learn what to revise, how to improve, and where to focus next.
So don’t wait for the last few weeks. Use mock tests regularly as part of your revision.
Most students forget what they read months ago. It is because they never revise it in time. But with the above techniques, you will not only remember everything better but also answer confidently during the actual exam. Phase 1 or Phase 2 revision is equally important for both. One tests speed. The other tests the depth of your knowledge. But both phases need strong memory and smart preparation. So don’t wait for the pressure to hit. Start your revision today, and your future self will thank you.
It helps you remember what you’ve studied and boosts exam performance.
Use active recall, spaced repetition, and visual tools like charts and flashcards.
Revise it the next day, then after 3 days, then weekly using spaced repetition.
GA, ESI, Finance, and Management—especially data-heavy and theory-based topics.
Yes, by following a smart weekly revision plan and breaking topics into smaller parts.
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