Skip to main content

✨ How To Use The Wheel-Spin and Holy Grail Tick-List?

Issues, questions and tips on the new feature!

Holly Chalmers avatar
Written by Holly Chalmers
Updated over a week ago

💡Simple Steps on How to Use The Wheel-spin:

1️⃣ Start on A GCSE Text:

👑 Macbeth

🕵️ An Inspector Calls

💕 Romeo and Juliet

😈 Jekyll and Hyde

🌲 A Christmas Carol

2️⃣ Use the Holy Grail Tick-list:

✅ You'll see 15 key words in context already loaded in.
✅ If it’s on the tick-list: learn it.

✅ Once you’ve ticked everything off, you’re totally covered for the exam!

3️⃣ Spin the Wheel-spin Wheel:


💬 Click into each key character: there’s a wheel-spin that picks your unique quote for each one. In order to exit, you must spin the wheel for every single character.

💬 No plagiarism, no duplicates — your quotes, just for you!

4️⃣ Open the Lesson for Your Quote


When you click on your quote lesson, you’ll see:


✔️ A video explanation
✔️ Condensed notes

✔️ Analysis + techniques already done for you
✔️ 4 essay plan options showing how to apply that quote to any question!

5️⃣ Make Your Own Flashcards


Next to the video, you can write your own flashcards.
✔️ Summarise the notes in your own words
✔️ Change colours to help memory
✔️ Use it to test yourself later

6️⃣ Understand Quote Flexibility


✍️ Don’t stress about learning 15 quotes: just know 5–6 that can link to multiple key themes.

✍️ Example: A quote for violence can also work for ambition — it’s all about how you explain it, and we show you how!

7️⃣ Test Yourself with Quizzes

❓Scroll down to find quizzes under each video.
❓ Use them to test your memory of the quote, the technique, and the analysis.
❓ You’ll get instant feedback on what you nailed and what needs work!

8️⃣ Review Grade 9 Essay Examples 📚


📑 Finally, browse through the Grade 9 Essays and Essay Plans
📑 Read through to see how top-level answers are written
📑 This helps you visualise how your paragraph should actually look in the exam

Did this answer your question?