How to Organize Saved Quizzes for Revision
Saved quizzes are useful only if you can find them again. As the semester continues, students may collect many Kahoot PDFs, Wooclap exports, and practice sets.
Without organization, revision becomes messy.
This guide explains how to organize saved Quizzy practice sets so they support exam preparation instead of becoming another cluttered folder.
Use A Consistent Naming Pattern
A good title should include the week, topic, and source.
Examples:
- `Week 02 - Demand and Supply - Kahoot`
- `Week 05 - Authentication - Wooclap`
- `Tutorial 03 - Regression Basics`
This makes saved quizzes easier to scan.
Separate Current Review From Exam Review
Not every quiz has the same purpose.
Create two mental groups:
- Current review: quizzes from this week
- Exam review: older quizzes worth revisiting
This prevents old material from disappearing while keeping the current week manageable.
Mark Weak Topics Outside The Quiz
Quizzy can help you practise, but it is useful to keep a short external note of weak topics.
For each saved quiz, write:
- Topic
- Date attempted
- Weak questions
- Concepts to review
- Next retry date
This turns saved quizzes into a study plan.
Delete Low-Value Sets
Not every extracted quiz needs to stay forever.
Delete a set if:
- It was a test upload
- The source file was wrong
- The questions are too unclear
- The topic is no longer relevant
Keeping only useful sets makes revision easier.
Build A Final Exam Mix
Before exams, choose a few saved quizzes from each topic and mix them into your review schedule.
The goal is not to answer everything again. The goal is to identify weak areas quickly.
Final Thoughts
Saved quizzes are most valuable when they are organized by topic and reused intentionally.
With clear names, short notes, and regular retry sessions, Quizzy can become a practical revision library rather than a pile of old files.


