Every feature on this platform exists to answer one question: are you actually learning, or just moving through questions? Used well, Wizard CA is more than a question bank. It is a working method: practice, explanation, revision and creation, repeated until a chapter holds no surprises. Here is how to run that method properly, so the whole platform works for you, not just the parts you happen to open first.
Treat the free chapter as a real diagnostic
◆Do not skip straight to paying
Every paper on Wizard CA opens with its first chapter free, on purpose. Before you unlock anything, work that chapter properly: full questions, full explanations, a real attempt at the timer. That one chapter tells you more about where you actually stand than any syllabus checklist. Students who skip it and jump straight to a paid plan usually end up re-learning the same lesson a few weeks in, only with less time left on the clock.
◆Choose the scope that matches your timeline
The Single Paper plan and the Full Course plan are not just price points, they are two different strategies. If one paper is genuinely the thing standing between you and the next attempt, buy the paper and go deep. If you are building toward the whole level, the course plan removes the friction of re-deciding every few weeks. Pick the scope that matches your actual exam date, not the one that feels safest today.
Read every explanation, especially on the ones you got right
◆A correct guess is not understanding
Every question on the platform comes with the full reasoning attached: why the right answer is right, and why each wrong option is wrong, read aloud in a clear voice. Most students open this only when they get a question wrong. Open it every time. A right answer built on a shaky guess feels identical to a right answer built on real understanding, until the exam asks the same idea from a different angle. The explanation is where that gap gets closed.
◆Use the voice, on purpose
Reading an explanation while also hearing it spoken is not a gimmick. Taking the same idea in through two channels at once, reading and listening, makes it easier to hold in your head and easier to recall later under pressure. Keep the voice on during practice, not just as background noise during revision.
Bookmark with intent, then actually clear the pile
◆Colour code like you mean it
The bookmark colours exist to separate three very different problems: a question you got wrong, a question you only guessed on, and a question worth returning to for a different reason entirely. A bookmark you never revisit is just decoration. The value shows up only when you come back to that colour on purpose.
◆Let Revise do the filtering for you
The Revise section lets you filter by exactly the category you choose: wrong answers, guesses, or your own flagged set. That turns a vague feeling of "I am weak somewhere in this chapter" into a specific, workable list. Run that filtered list before you move on to the next chapter, not weeks later when the details have faded.
Let unlimited questions close the gap, not just add volume
◆Point it at your weak chapters, not your strong ones
The Infinite Creation Engine can create a fresh set of exam grade questions for any chapter, on demand, as many times as you need. It is tempting to use it on the chapter you already enjoy, because more of what already works feels productive. The bigger gain comes from pointing it at the chapter your analytics say is weakest, and creating fresh sets there until it stops surprising you. Volume only helps when it lands on the right target.
Use Key Notes as a compass, not a shortcut
◆Good for the commute, not a replacement for practice
Every chapter has faculty curated notes with premium narrated audio, built to be played on any device. They are excellent for the last mile: a commute, a queue, the morning of the exam, when you need the essentials back in your head quickly. What they are not built for is replacing timed practice. Use them to orient yourself before and after a chapter, not instead of working through it.
Read your analytics like an examiner would
◆Speed and accuracy tell two different stories
A high score with a slow clock and a fast clock with a shaky accuracy rate are two completely different problems, and they need two completely different fixes. Once a week, actually open your performance dashboard. Look at speed against accuracy, and accuracy by chapter, not just the headline number. Decide what to fix next from that, the same way an examiner would read a script: not by the final mark alone, but by where it was earned and where it was lost.