Your DP2 Acceleration Plan: Weekly Roadmap for When IA and EE Pressure Peaks
Take a breath. If you’ve reached the point in DP2 where internal assessments, supervisor meetings, and the Extended Essay feel like a tidal wave converging with final revision, you’re not alone. This two-year journey builds toward a short, intense window where several high-stakes pieces land at once — but that window can be managed. This guide gives you a human, realistic, week-by-week acceleration plan designed to help you prioritize, protect your energy, and finish your core DP2 deliverables with quality and confidence.

Who this plan is for
This roadmap is for DP2 students who are entering a concentrated period of work on IAs and the EE while also juggling revision and CAS/TOK duties. It works whether you’ve fallen a bit behind or are planning a final sprint to lift performance. It assumes steady teacher support and regular supervisor check-ins, and is flexible enough to match subject-specific IA needs.
What you’ll get from this guide
- A week-by-week high-intensity acceleration plan you can adapt to your calendar.
- Practical daily routines and time allocations that protect mental energy.
- Concrete IA and EE milestones, subject-specific tips, and mock-exam tactics.
- Ways to use targeted tutoring — for example, one-on-one guidance via Sparkl‘s personalized tutoring — without losing ownership of your work.
Principles that make an acceleration plan work
Prioritize with surgical clarity
Not all tasks are equal. Identify the non-negotiables first: IA final drafts and submission requirements, the EE final draft and abstract, and any assessment checklist items that teachers require. Everything else is negotiable or can be deferred to lighter-touch revision.
Chunk, then sprint
Break big tasks into 45–90 minute focused blocks. You’ll build momentum and collect feedback quickly. Short, intense practice beats vague, long hours of unfocused study.
Feedback loops are your lifeline
Plan quick, regular check-ins with supervisors and teachers. A 20-minute targeted meeting is more valuable than an hour of isolated work if it prevents rework.
12-week High-Intensity Acceleration Plan (when IA/EE pressure peaks)
This is a flexible 12-week sprint designed for the densest pressure period. Treat each week as a mini-sprint: set goals on Monday, sprint mid-week, and get feedback/submit by Friday.
| Week | Primary Focus | Suggested Hours / Week | Key Deliverable | Feedback Checkpoint |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | Audit + Prioritize | 6–8 | Complete master checklist (IA, EE, TOK tasks, mock dates) | Discuss timeline with supervisors |
| Week 2 | EE research & outline | 8–10 | Final research question, annotated bibliography, detailed outline | Supervisor approves question & outline |
| Week 3 | IA experiments/primary data collection | 8–12 | Raw data set + lab notes / fieldwork logs | Teacher review of methods |
| Week 4 | First EE draft (intro & method) | 10–12 | Draft 1 (intro, lit review start) | Supervisor comments |
| Week 5 | IA analysis & write-up | 10–14 | IA draft ready for teacher annotation | In-class teacher feedback |
| Week 6 | EE deep-dive: discussion & evidence | 12–14 | Draft 2 (analysis sections) | Supervisor targeted comments |
| Week 7 | IA revision & mock marking | 10–12 | Final IA submission ready | Teacher confirms readiness |
| Week 8 | EE rewrite + polish | 12–15 | Full EE draft with citations | Supervisor suggests final edits |
| Week 9 | Mock papers: timed practice (subject rotation) | 10–14 | 2–3 timed papers completed | Teacher marking & feedback |
| Week 10 | Final EE edits & abstract | 8–12 | EE final draft ready for submission | Supervisor signs off |
| Week 11 | Consolidate TOK & CAS reflections | 6–8 | Claims, evidence for TOK; CAS logs up to date | TOK teacher review |
| Week 12 | Exam-style polishing & final admin checks | 8–12 | All submissions complete; exam plan set | Final teacher/supervisor confirmations |
How to use the table
Tailor the hours to your stamina and subject load. If your IA is coursework-heavy (e.g., sciences, arts), move more hours into Weeks 3–7; if your EE needs heavy revision, increase Weeks 4–6 and Weeks 8–10. A weekly review meeting (even 20 minutes) with your supervisor closes the loop on progress and saves hours of rework.
Daily micro-routines: a realistic schedule
Consistency beats frantic all-nighters. Below is a realistic day during the sprint that balances focused work and recovery.
- Morning — 60–90 minutes: heavy cognitive work (EE drafting or IA data analysis).
- Late morning — 45 minutes: subject revision or past-paper practice.
- Afternoon — 60 minutes: school classes / supervised lessons / IA tasks if lab access required.
- Evening — 30–60 minutes: light review, reflection notes, email supervisors with clear questions.
- Rest blocks — 30–60 minutes between sprints for movement, fresh air, or a short nap.
Use Pomodoro-style work blocks (25–50 minutes focus, 5–10 minutes rest). Track progress in a simple log: task, start/end times, outcome. That log becomes your evidence for teacher conversations and helps reduce anxiety.
EE: targeted weekly breakdown
Think of the EE as a miniature research project. The key is iterative drafts and early supervisor engagement.
- Choose a question that can be argued with focused evidence and realistic methods.
- Week-by-week: research question → annotated sources → structured outline → draft sections → full draft → polish & abstract.
- Keep bibliographic records from day one (use a simple reference manager or a shared document that notes author, title, page, and why it’s useful).
EE checklist for each draft
- Draft 1: clear research question, roadmap for argument, major sources identified.
- Draft 2: evidence added, transitions between sections, initial analysis.
- Draft 3: tightened argument, citations formatted, word-count trimmed to stay within the limit.
- Final pass: proofreading, abstract, and final supervisor sign-off.
Internal Assessment: subject-specific tactics
IAs vary by subject. The common thread is: plan early, capture raw material well, and ask for rubric-aligned feedback.
- Sciences: record raw data meticulously, back it up, and run basic error analysis before writing interpretations.
- Mathematics: include alternate approaches and commentary on why one model fits better than another.
- Language A: collect multiple drafts and justify choices in the commentary; check word counts carefully.
- Arts: document the creative process with dated photos and reflective notes; many marks come from process evidence.
Small tip: maintain a version history for drafts. Name files like IA_DRAFT_v2_date. That saves time when you need to recover earlier text and shows teachers your development process.
Mock exams and revision sprints
Mimic exam conditions. Timed papers with strict limits sharpen exam technique and speed. Rotate subjects so that you don’t over-focus on one area to the detriment of others.
Last 6-week pre-exam sprint (sample)
| Week | Focus | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Week -6 | Core content gap-filling | Identify top 8 weak topics per subject; 3 focused sessions each |
| Week -5 | Timed practice | 1 timed paper per subject; mark against markscheme |
| Week -4 | Targeted feedback | Teacher review of common errors; redo problem sets |
| Week -3 | Exam technique | Question interpretation, command terms practice |
| Week -2 | Consolidation | Mixed practice with spaced repetition |
| Week -1 | Rest and light revision | Short, high-yield reviews; sleep and routine maintenance |
How to mark your own papers
- Use exemplars and markschemes to grade your answers honestly.
- Annotate exactly where you lost marks and turn that into practice points.
- Track recurring mistakes — then do targeted mini-sprints to fix the root cause.
Managing supervision and teacher communication
Good communication reduces friction. Treat supervisor time as a professional appointment: arrive with specific questions, a 1-paragraph update, and a clear next-step request.
- Before meetings: send a 3-line summary and the exact piece you want feedback on.
- During meetings: take brief notes and confirm the next deadline in writing.
- After meetings: implement the feedback immediately and circulate the revised excerpt to show progress.
If you need extra structure or targeted one-on-one guidance, consider using focused tutoring to practise exam technique, tighten essay structure, or polish IA analysis. For example, Sparkl‘s personalized tutoring can offer tailored study plans, expert tutors for subject-specific IAs, and AI-driven insights to track progress — all while keeping you in the driver’s seat.
Wellbeing: the non-negotiables for peak performance
High productivity without rest is false economy. Your brain needs consistent sleep, movement, and nutritious food to consolidate learning and manage stress.
- Sleep: aim for consistent sleep windows. Even small, consistent gains matter more than irregular marathon sleeps.
- Movement: short aerobic bursts enhance concentration — a 15-minute walk or a quick HIIT set between study blocks is high yield.
- Social & emotional check-ins: tell a friend or mentor when pressure feels overwhelming; share small wins to reduce the sense of isolation.
Micro-habits that protect focus
- Turn off notifications during focused blocks and keep a single open tab for the task at hand.
- Use a simple breathing routine (4–4–8) for two minutes if anxiety spikes before a supervisor meeting or exam.
- Use short, specific rewards after completing big tasks (e.g., a walk, a favourite snack).
Common pitfalls and fixes
- Pitfall: Waiting for perfect time to start. Fix: Start with a 25-minute block and iterate.
- Pitfall: Over-editing one paragraph for hours. Fix: Timebox editing and move on — return for a later global pass.
- Pitfall: Skipping feedback because it’s uncomfortable. Fix: Ask for one actionable point per meeting and implement it immediately.
- Pitfall: All-or-nothing burnouts. Fix: Build in short daily recovery routines and ask for small deadline extensions early if needed.
Small examples that make a big difference
Here are a few micro-strategies students use to transform limited time into tangible progress:
- When drafting the EE, write the method and results first — then craft an introduction that fits the evidence you already have.
- If your IA requires data collection, schedule a “buffer day” in the week after data collection for troubleshooting equipment or unexpected gaps.
- Use a simple spreadsheet to track where each IA mark comes from — this reveals low-hanging fruit where small improvements earn marks quickly.
- Record brief voice memos after reading a source for the EE: they’re quicker than notes and capture your instinctive analysis for later expansion.
Final preparation checklist before submission season
- Confirm submission formats, word counts, and required cover sheets for each IA and the EE.
- Proofread with fresh eyes the day after your final draft. If possible, swap drafts with a peer for a different perspective.
- Ensure all supervisor and teacher signatures or online confirmations are complete well before deadlines.
- Back up all drafts in at least two places (cloud + external drive) the day you submit.
Closing thought
DP2’s most intense weeks are a sprint with long endurance training behind them. By breaking tasks into weekly sprints, scheduling regular feedback, protecting your wellbeing, and using targeted support where needed, you transform a chaotic pressure period into a sequence of manageable, measurable steps. Finish submissions with clarity, enter mock and final exams with practiced technique, and let the work you hand in reflect thoughtful planning rather than last-minute panic.
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