
Most IB Psychology SL students arrive at exam season having encountered dozens of studies and feeling confident about precisely none of them. The problem isn’t effort—it’s method. Textbooks and class notes list study after study under each syllabus topic without ranking their exam utility, so the default response is to try holding everything. The result is a list too long to practice and too shallow to use when it counts.
For SL candidates, the pressure is tighter than it is for HL. Less contact time, fewer lessons given over purely to revision, the same command-term demands across SAQs and ERQs—when attention is scarce, every extra study on the list is practice time borrowed from one that would have performed better on the day.
A lean, curated portfolio isn’t a shortcut. It’s the method. Three moves drive that result: selecting a small evidence set using clear criteria, organizing it around examination question utility, and practicing retrieval until deployment under time pressure is reliable.
Criteria for Study Selection
Most studies look useful in the abstract and become marginal the moment you test them against real exam conditions. Four criteria determine whether a study earns a place in your portfolio. Applied honestly, they’ll eliminate more of your current list than you expect.
First, cross-perspective applicability: the study should help answer questions from at least two approaches—biological, cognitive, or sociocultural. If you can’t write one accurate sentence about it under two different perspective headings, it’s probably too narrow. Second, command-term flexibility: you should be able to use the same study to describe a key finding, explain a mechanism, and offer at least one evaluation point about its method or sample. Third, real-world relevance: the finding should connect naturally to at least one applied domain—mental health, education, or work—so that it supports the application and psychological-literacy angles that ERQ markschemes reward. Fourth, memorability under pressure: you must be able to write the core procedure and main result in under sixty seconds without notes. If a study fails two or more of these criteria, treat it as a strong candidate to cut, not a borderline case to preserve out of habit.
- List every candidate study in one place; mark any teacher “must-use” items; do this in about 5 minutes.
- Score each study 0–4, giving 1 point for every criterion it clearly passes; aim to finish this in about 20 minutes.
- Keep all 3–4 point studies, park 0–1 point studies, and flag 2-point studies as borderline; this first cut should take around 10 minutes.
- When two studies serve the same purpose, keep the one you can recall in under 60 seconds and use with more command terms; spend about 15 minutes on this redundancy check.
- For each borderline study, do two timed checks—a 60-second procedure+finding and a one-sentence link to a likely prompt; use roughly 20 minutes for this stress test.
- Stop when you reach about 15–20 studies, then map them by exam question in a one-page overview; take about 5 minutes to produce this overview and treat any orphaned or teacher-added studies as final tweaks, not reasons to reopen the whole list.
If your course has required “must-use” studies, treat them as pre-included and run the workflow on the remainder. A locked portfolio is still only a list—without clarity on which studies connect to which exam questions and command terms, selection alone changes nothing.

Organizing by Exam Utility
Once the portfolio is chosen, organize it by what the exam asks, not by where each study appeared in the syllabus. A single one-page overview works well: list your studies down the side and map them across to SAQ and ERQ prompts, command terms, and the core topics they can support. The teacher-created resource IB Psychology ALL Questions + Relevant Study follows this logic, pairing a wide range of IB Psychology prompts directly with suggested studies—organized by question utility rather than syllabus unit, the same approach used in exam-focused materials from platforms like Revision Village.
Mapping studies this way makes the gaps concrete. A study appearing across several SAQ and ERQ columns is a core asset that earns more practice time. One that barely connects to a single prompt is telling you something about whether it really belongs. But identifying which studies fit where is an organizational task; recalling them accurately when there’s no time to think is something else entirely—and that second half is where portfolios either hold or don’t.
Why a Small Portfolio Wins
Retrieval practice is the mechanism that closes that gap. A systematic review examining 50 classroom experiments with 5,374 students found that 57% of effect sizes were medium or large in favor of retrieval practice across subjects, delays, and conditions. For IB Psychology SL, that supports one clear habit: practice recalling the same fifteen to twenty studies in response to timed “describe,” “explain,” and “evaluate” prompts, rather than rereading notes that never ask anything back.
The tracking system is straightforward. For each study, record 60-second accuracy (Y/N), a link-to-question sentence, and one evaluation point. Each week, test about six studies and total your score out of 12—two points per study for the link sentence and evaluation point, with the 60-second accuracy check as a gate before points count. Use that total to judge whether the portfolio as a whole is on track week-on-week. If a study fails the 60-second gate twice, rewrite its 2–3 line summary. Fails three times? Replace it. When a study hits the gate plus both sentence types two weeks running, start practicing it under different command terms.
This check measures deployability under time pressure. It doesn’t tell you whether your portfolio still covers the breadth of the syllabus, so keep running sanity checks that your set connects to the kinds of prompts your course and past-paper practice produce. A study that passes the weekly gate reliably is ready to be used. Deploying it effectively under time pressure still depends on how well the answer around it is structured.
Deploying in SAQs and ERQs
The 60-second recall standard from revision and the SAQ answer structure are the same constraint applied in two different rooms. A top-band SAQ is short, so every element has to pull weight: name the study, deliver a concise procedure, state the key finding, then write a direct sentence tying that finding to the question stem. When the procedure runs longer than sixty seconds’ worth of content, it almost always consumes the question-link sentence—which is exactly where marks are assigned.
ERQs demand the same evidence but make proportion the central test. Anchor on the command term before writing a single sentence. “Discuss” calls for a balanced mix of description and critical engagement. “Evaluate” makes sustained analysis of strengths and limitations the main task. “Contrast” requires a clear comparative structure between explanations or studies. Getting this straight before the essay starts stops description from expanding to fill available space and keeps enough room for the evaluative and integrative work that earns higher bands.
Solving the Overload Problem
Choosing a long list and rereading it is how students arrive at exam day knowing a little about too much. The three moves here work together because they address that problem at different stages: the selection criteria and cut-down workflow reduce the list to what’s genuinely versatile; the exam-question map makes coverage visible rather than assumed; retrieval practice converts a well-organized set into something that holds under time pressure. A portfolio of fifteen to twenty deeply mastered studies, deployed through a clear answer structure, will consistently outperform a list of forty that never quite became exam-ready. That’s not a revision tip—it’s the whole method.
