Different note formats are useful for different problems.
That is the simplest way to think about diagrams, tables and mnemonics. None of them is automatically better than the others. The value depends on what you are trying to remember or compare.
When diagrams help most
Diagrams are useful when the topic has a process, pathway or relationship that is easier to see than to describe.
They can work well for:
- treatment pathways
- decision steps
- linked mechanisms or interactions
- process-based calculations logic
If the topic is mainly about flow or sequence, a diagram often works better than a paragraph.
When tables help most
Tables are strong when you need comparison.
They are especially useful for:
- contrasting similar medicines or classes
- comparing side effects, cautions or counselling points
- separating options that tend to blur together in Single Best Answer (SBA) or Extended Matching Question (EMQ) work
- keeping high-yield distinctions visible on one page
If the revision task is "How are these things different?" a table is often the cleanest format.
When mnemonics help most
Mnemonics are helpful when the problem is recall of a short list or ordered set that really does need remembering.
They are less useful when the topic needs deeper reasoning or applied judgement.
That means mnemonics can support revision, but they should not replace understanding.
Match the format to the memory problem
This is where note-making improves quickly.
Ask whether the main problem is:
- remembering sequence
- comparing similar items
- recalling a list
- understanding a pathway
Then choose the format that solves that problem most directly.
Keep the page usable
High-impact notes are not just colourful or varied. They are easy to scan and easy to reuse.
If the diagram is too crowded, the table too wide or the mnemonic too obscure, the note becomes harder to revise from.
Build around repeated mistakes
One of the best ways to decide on note format is to look at your error patterns.
If you keep confusing similar options, build a table.
If you keep forgetting a sequence, build a diagram.
If you keep dropping a short set of linked points, a mnemonic may help.
That makes the notes much more purposeful.
The better goal
The point of note format is not to make revision look clever. It is to make recall and application easier under pressure.
Quick FAQs
- Are diagrams better than tables? Not generally. Diagrams are better for flow and relationships, while tables are better for comparison.
- Should I use lots of mnemonics? Only where they genuinely help. Too many can become harder to manage than the material itself.
- What makes a note format high impact? It solves a real memory or comparison problem clearly enough that you can reuse it quickly in revision.