Revision Breakdown was built by Stuart Yates, a teacher who has spent years watching students struggle not because the content is too hard — but because they do not know what the keywords mean.
Before this, I ran a free revision site called The Revision Hub, used by students in my own school. Revision Breakdown is the next version: cleaner, wider, and built so that any student — not just the ones I teach — can use it.
Why keywords?
Most exam questions test whether you know the vocabulary of a subject. If you do not know what osmosis means, or what juxtaposition is, or what opportunity cost refers to — you cannot answer the question, even if you understand the idea.
Revision Breakdown breaks every subject into blocks of ten keywords at a time. Flashcards first, then questions. Simple, fast, and designed so that doing fifteen minutes actually feels like progress.
Built for everyone
The app uses Atkinson Hyperlegible — a font designed specifically for readers with low vision and dyslexia. Every question can be read aloud. The interface is clean, with no adverts, no distractions, and no dark patterns.
It has been tested with real students, including students with dyslexia, ADHD, and low reading confidence. It is not a perfect tool, but it is an honest one.
Who is behind it?
Revision Breakdown is run by Stuart Yates, trading as Revision Breakdown. It is a solo project. If you have a question, a problem, or a suggestion, I will read it and reply.
Contact: revisionbreakdown@gmail.com