10 May 2026

How to Prepare for A-Level Psychology Examinations


 

How to Prepare for A-Level Psychology Examinations

A-Level Psychology can feel overwhelming because it combines:

  • Huge amounts of content
  • Research studies and names
  • Evaluation points
  • Application questions
  • Essay writing
  • Scientific terminology

Many students revise Psychology by simply rereading notes and highlighting textbooks.

Unfortunately, that is usually one of the least effective ways to revise.

The students who achieve the highest grades tend to prepare in a very different way.


The Biggest Problem in A-Level Psychology

Psychology is not just about remembering facts.

It is about being able to:

  • Recall studies accurately
  • Explain theories clearly
  • Apply knowledge to new situations
  • Evaluate strengths and weaknesses
  • Write under time pressure

Many students feel they understand the topic when reading notes.

Then the exam question changes the context slightly and suddenly everything falls apart.

That is why revision must involve active retrieval and application, not passive reading.


Step 1 – Learn the Core Studies Properly

Many students know the “general idea” of a study but not enough detail.

For each study you need to know:

  • Aim
  • Procedure
  • Results
  • Conclusion
  • Evaluation
  • Key terminology

A simple structure works well:

The 6-Box Method

Create a page divided into six sections:

  1. Aim
  2. Method
  3. Findings
  4. Conclusion
  5. Strengths
  6. Weaknesses

Do this repeatedly until you can reproduce the page from memory.

Students who use visual layouts often remember material far better than those who only use paragraphs of text.


Step 2 – Turn Psychology Into Visual Revision

Psychology contains a huge amount of abstract information.

Visual revision helps enormously.

Try:

  • Mind maps
  • Flow diagrams
  • Colour-coded notes
  • Flashcards
  • Timelines
  • Comparison tables
  • Infographics

If you enjoy graphic design, this becomes even more powerful.

For example:

TopicVisual Idea
Memory ModelsDraw the information flow
AttachmentCreate comparison charts
ApproachesUse colour coding for assumptions
Research MethodsCreate experiment flow diagrams

Students often remember pictures more easily than blocks of text.


Step 3 – Use Flashcards Correctly

Flashcards only work if used actively.

Bad flashcard revision:

Read card → flip → “yes I knew that.”

Good flashcard revision:

  • Say the answer aloud first
  • Write the answer down
  • Explain it without looking
  • Shuffle cards constantly
  • Return frequently to difficult cards

A-Level Psychology requires repeated retrieval practice.

The brain strengthens pathways when forced to retrieve information.


Step 4 – Practise Application Questions

This is where many students lose marks.

They learn theories…

…but cannot apply them to scenarios.

For example:

A question may describe:

  • A classroom
  • A family
  • A workplace
  • A phobia
  • A criminal case

You then need to identify:

  • Which theory applies
  • Which terminology fits
  • Which evidence supports it

The only solution is practice.

Lots of practice.


Step 5 – Master Evaluation Skills

Top grades depend heavily on evaluation.

Many students write vague comments like:

“This study lacked validity.”

That gains very few marks.

Better evaluation explains:

  • Why validity was limited
  • What caused the problem
  • How it affected findings
  • Whether the issue actually matters

Strong evaluation often includes:

  • Methodological criticism
  • Ethical issues
  • Sample bias
  • Reliability
  • Validity
  • Real-world application
  • Contradictory evidence

A useful structure is:

Point → Because → Therefore

Example:

“The study lacked population validity because the sample only included male students, therefore the findings may not generalise to wider populations.”

That is far stronger than short unsupported comments.


Step 6 – Learn How Marks Are Awarded

One of the best revision methods is studying mark schemes.

Many students lose marks because they do not answer in the style examiners expect.

Look carefully at:

  • Command words
  • Number of marks
  • Timing
  • Structure
  • Model answers

Notice the difference between:

  • Describe
  • Explain
  • Discuss
  • Evaluate
  • Compare

These words completely change what the examiner wants.


Step 7 – Write Essays Under Time Pressure

Psychology is a writing-heavy subject.

You must train yourself to think quickly.

A useful technique:

15-Minute Essay Practice

  1. Choose a question
  2. Plan for 3 minutes
  3. Write for 12 minutes
  4. Mark it afterwards

Short regular practice is often better than occasional marathon revision sessions.


Step 8 – Research Methods Must Become Automatic

Research methods appear everywhere in Psychology.

Students often underestimate this section.

You need confidence with:

  • Variables
  • Experimental design
  • Reliability
  • Validity
  • Ethics
  • Sampling
  • Statistics
  • Graphs

Many Psychology students struggle because this section feels more scientific and mathematical.

The best solution is repeated small practice sessions.


Step 9 – Use Interleaving

Do not revise one topic for six hours straight.

Instead mix topics:

  • Memory
  • Research Methods
  • Attachment
  • Approaches
  • Psychopathology

Switching topics forces the brain to work harder and improves retention.


Step 10 – Teach Someone Else

One of the best revision techniques is teaching.

If you can explain:

  • Classical conditioning
  • Working memory model
  • Cognitive biases
  • Attachment types

…clearly to another person, then you probably understand them properly.

Even explaining topics aloud to yourself can help.


Common Mistakes Students Make

Reading Instead of Retrieving

Recognition is not the same as memory.


Ignoring Weak Topics

Students naturally revise what they enjoy.

The best improvement usually comes from tackling weaknesses.


Not Timing Essays

Knowledge alone is not enough.

Exams require speed.


Learning Without Application

Psychology questions nearly always change context.

Practice applying theories constantly.


Final Advice

Psychology rewards:

  • Consistency
  • Active revision
  • Practice questions
  • Structured answers
  • Repeated retrieval

It is not about being “naturally good” at Psychology.

It is about training your brain to:

  • Recall accurately
  • Apply knowledge
  • Evaluate effectively
  • Communicate clearly under pressure

Small daily revision sessions done properly are usually far more effective than last-minute cramming.

And remember:

Many students who eventually achieve A and A* grades originally believed they were “bad at Psychology.”

Usually they simply had not yet discovered how to revise it properly.

09 May 2026

The Secret to Revising A-Level Computing (It’s Not What Most Students Think)


 

The Secret to Revising A-Level Computing (It’s Not What Most Students Think)

A-Level Computing is one of those subjects that looks deceptively manageable.

Many students think:

“I use computers every day… how hard can it be?”

Then the exam arrives.

Suddenly they discover that:

  • knowing how to use technology,
  • and understanding how computers actually work,

are very different things.

And that’s where many students struggle.


The Biggest Mistake Students Make

The most common revision mistake in A-Level Computing is treating it like a memory-only subject.

Students often:

  • read notes repeatedly,
  • highlight textbooks,
  • watch videos passively,
  • memorise definitions,

but never actually apply the knowledge.

Computing is much closer to Maths and Physics than many students realise.

You do not truly understand something until you can:

  • explain it,
  • apply it,
  • debug it,
  • or use it to solve a problem.

The Real Secret: Active Revision

The students who improve fastest are usually the ones who actively do things.

That means:

  • writing code,
  • tracing algorithms,
  • drawing diagrams,
  • explaining concepts aloud,
  • answering exam questions,
  • correcting mistakes.

Passive revision feels comfortable.

Active revision feels difficult.

But difficult revision is usually the revision that works.


1. Learn the Theory Like a Story

A-Level Computing contains a huge amount of theory:

  • CPU architecture,
  • networking,
  • databases,
  • cybersecurity,
  • operating systems,
  • logic gates,
  • legal and ethical issues.

Students often try to memorise isolated facts.

Instead, try to understand the story behind the technology.

For example:

Networking

Don’t just memorise:

  • packets,
  • routers,
  • protocols.

Understand what is physically happening.

Imagine:

  • a video call,
  • packets travelling,
  • delays,
  • lost packets,
  • reassembly,
  • encryption.

When the theory becomes visual and logical, it becomes far easier to remember.


2. Practise Programming Every Week

Programming is not something you revise once before the exam.

It is a practical skill.

Nobody learns piano by reading about piano playing.

Programming is similar.

The secret is frequency.

Even:

  • 20 minutes a day,
  • small coding exercises,
  • debugging old programs,

can make a massive difference.

The best programmers at A-Level are not usually the students who write the most advanced code.

They are the students who:

  • stay calm,
  • break problems down,
  • and debug methodically.

3. Learn to Trace Code Properly

One of the hidden superpowers in A-Level Computing is code tracing.

Students often rush.

Instead:

  • track variables carefully,
  • use tables,
  • follow loops step by step,
  • predict outputs before running code.

This is especially important for:

  • recursion,
  • searching,
  • sorting,
  • arrays,
  • file handling.

Examiners love questions where students panic and lose track halfway through.

Slow thinking often beats fast thinking.


4. Use Past Papers Early

Many students leave past papers too late.

That’s a mistake.

Past papers teach students:

  • how questions are worded,
  • what examiners actually want,
  • how marks are awarded,
  • common traps.

In Computing, exam technique matters enormously.

Two students may understand the same topic equally well —
but the student who understands exam structure usually scores higher.


5. Don’t Ignore the Written Questions

Students often focus entirely on programming.

But many marks are found in:

  • evaluation,
  • comparison,
  • advantages/disadvantages,
  • ethics,
  • impacts of technology.

These questions require:

  • precise language,
  • structured answers,
  • balanced arguments.

A surprising number of students lose easy marks simply because they answer too vaguely.


6. Build Things

One of the best ways to revise Computing is to create projects.

Small projects force students to combine:

  • logic,
  • planning,
  • debugging,
  • testing,
  • persistence.

That might be:

  • a simple game,
  • a database,
  • a weather app,
  • a revision quiz,
  • a Raspberry Pi project,
  • a website.

Real projects reveal understanding gaps very quickly.


7. Explain Concepts to Somebody Else

If you can teach a topic clearly, you probably understand it.

Try explaining:

  • RAM vs ROM,
  • TCP/IP,
  • binary shifts,
  • normalization,
  • object-oriented programming,

to:

  • a parent,
  • a friend,
  • or even an empty room.

The moment you struggle to explain something clearly usually reveals what you still need to revise.


AI Is Changing Revision

Modern students also have something previous generations never had:
AI tools.

Used properly, AI can:

  • generate practice questions,
  • explain difficult concepts,
  • create debugging exercises,
  • simulate interviews,
  • produce alternative examples.

But there is a danger.

If students let AI do all the thinking, they learn very little.

The real value comes when students:

  • attempt the problem first,
  • compare their thinking,
  • and analyse mistakes.

AI works best as a tutor — not as a shortcut.


Final Thought

The secret to revising A-Level Computing is not endless reading.

It is interaction.

The students who improve most are usually the ones who:

  • practise regularly,
  • make mistakes,
  • debug calmly,
  • explain ideas,
  • and actively engage with the subject.

Computing rewards thinkers.

And like programming itself, progress usually happens:
one bug fix at a time.

08 May 2026

Why Buffer Calculations Look Terrifying… But Are Actually One of the Easiest Questions in A-Level Chemistry

 


Why Buffer Calculations Look Terrifying… But Are Actually One of the Easiest Questions in A-Level Chemistry

There’s a moment in many A-Level Chemistry lessons where students see a buffer calculation for the first time and immediately panic.

Suddenly there are:

  • strange equations,
  • logarithms,
  • weak acids,
  • salts,
  • Ka values,
  • and lots of brackets.

It looks horrible.

But here’s the surprise:

Buffer calculations are often some of the most predictable and methodical questions on the paper.

Once you understand what the examiner is actually asking, the whole topic becomes far easier than students expect.


What Is a Buffer?

A buffer solution is simply a solution that resists changes in pH when small amounts of acid or alkali are added.

There are two common types:

  • Acidic buffer → weak acid + its salt
  • Alkaline buffer → weak base + its salt

At A-Level, students are normally asked to:

  1. identify the buffer,
  2. substitute values into an equation,
  3. calculate the pH.

That’s it.


The Real Secret

Students often think buffer questions are difficult because they try to memorise everything.

But most questions reduce to one idea:

Acid Buffer Equation

pH=pKa+log([salt][acid])pH = pK_a + \log\left(\frac{[salt]}{[acid]}\right)

You are simply comparing:

  • how much weak acid you have,
  • to how much salt you have.

If the concentrations are equal:

  • the log term becomes zero,
  • so pH = pKa.

That single idea solves a huge number of exam questions.


Example 1 — Acid Buffer

Suppose we mix:

  • 0.50 mol dm⁻³ ethanoic acid
  • 0.30 mol dm⁻³ sodium ethanoate

Ethanoic acid has:


And that’s the entire calculation.

No magic.
No terrifying chemistry.
Just substitution into a formula.


Example 2 — Alkaline Buffer

An alkaline buffer contains:

  • ammonia solution,
  • ammonium chloride.

For alkaline buffers, students often use the pOH equation first.

Suppose:

  • ammonia concentration = 0.40 mol dm⁻³
  • ammonium chloride concentration = 0.25 mol dm⁻³

For ammonia:


Again:

  • identify the equation,
  • substitute carefully,
  • use the calculator correctly.

Why Students Lose Marks

The maths is usually not the problem.

The real problems are:

  • using the wrong concentration in the ratio,
  • forgetting to convert pOH to pH,
  • calculator mistakes with logs,
  • panic caused by the appearance of the equation.

In lessons, I often find students can solve buffer questions perfectly once they slow down and treat them as a simple substitution exercise.


Practical Chemistry Makes Buffers Easier

Buffers make far more sense when students actually see them working.

In the lab:

  • universal indicator,
  • pH probes,
  • PASCO sensors,
  • adding acid and alkali gradually,

all help students understand what the equations are really describing.

Once students realise the buffer is simply “absorbing” added H⁺ or OH⁻ ions, the calculations suddenly feel logical rather than abstract.


Final Thought

Buffer calculations are a wonderful example of something in A-Level Chemistry that looks frightening but is actually very structured.

The students who succeed are rarely the ones who memorise blindly.

They are the students who:

  • recognise the pattern,
  • stay calm,
  • substitute carefully,
  • and trust the process.

Sometimes the scariest-looking questions are secretly the easiest.

07 May 2026

Pascal’s Vases – Different Shapes, Same Pressure?

 



Pascal’s Vases – Different Shapes, Same Pressure?

One of the most surprising demonstrations in physics is discovering that the shape of a container does not determine the pressure at the bottom.

At first glance, students are convinced it must.

A tall thin vase looks as though it should exert less pressure than a wide heavy-looking one.

Surely the container holding more water must produce the greatest pressure?

That is exactly why Pascal’s Vases are such a useful teaching demonstration.

What Are Pascal’s Vases?

Pascal’s Vases are a set of differently shaped containers connected to the same base.

Typically:

  • One is tall and narrow
  • One widens outwards
  • One narrows towards the top
  • Another may have curved sides

Despite their different shapes and water volumes, when the water level is the same height, the pressure at the base is also the same.

That idea feels completely wrong to many students at first.

And that is what makes the experiment memorable.

The Key Physics Idea

Hydrostatic pressure depends on:

  • The density of the liquid
  • Gravity
  • The depth of the liquid

Not the total volume.

The equation is:

P=ρghP=\rho gh

Where:

  • PP = pressure
  • ρ\rho = density
  • gg = gravitational field strength
  • hh = depth of liquid

The width or shape of the container does not appear in the equation at all.

That is the important conceptual breakthrough.

Experiment 1 – Comparing Water Pressure

The simplest experiment is to fill each vase to exactly the same height.

Students predict which vase will create the largest pressure at the bottom.

Most choose the widest one because it contains the most water.

Using:

  • A pressure sensor
  • A manometer
  • Or even observing water jets from holes at the base

students quickly discover the pressure is identical.

This creates one of those excellent “That can’t be right…” moments in the lab.

And those moments are where real learning starts.

Experiment 2 – Water Jets

If each vase has a small hole at the same depth, the water jets travel roughly the same horizontal distance.

Again, students expect the larger vase to produce a more powerful stream.

But the speed of the water leaving depends mainly on the pressure due to depth.

Equal depth → equal pressure → similar jet behaviour.

A wonderfully visual demonstration.

Experiment 3 – Measuring Force on the Base


This experiment often causes even more confusion.

Different shaped vessels can contain different masses of water while producing the same pressure at the base.

Students naturally assume:

“More water means more downward force.”

But some of the weight is supported by the sides of the container depending on the shape.

This opens discussions about:

  • Resultant forces
  • Vector components
  • Pressure vs total force
  • Engineering design

It is an excellent bridge between GCSE and A-Level thinking.

Experiment 4 – PASCO Pressure Sensors

Using modern PASCO pressure sensors connected to software such as PASCO Capstone transforms the experiment.

Students can:

  • Record live pressure readings
  • Compare multiple vessels
  • Plot pressure against depth
  • Investigate linear relationships

The graph obtained is typically a straight line:

PhP\propto h

Students can then experimentally verify the hydrostatic pressure equation rather than simply memorising it.

That is a far deeper level of understanding.

Common Student Misconceptions

“More water means more pressure.”

Not necessarily.

Pressure depends on depth, not volume.


“Wider containers push harder.”

Only if the depth changes.


“Pressure and force are the same thing.”

They are closely related but not identical.

Pressure is force per unit area.

P=FAP=\frac{F}{A}

Pascal’s Vases help students separate these ideas clearly.

Why Demonstrations Matter

Students often understand equations only superficially.

But seeing identical pressure readings from wildly different vessels creates a mental conflict that forces genuine understanding.

That is why practical demonstrations remain so important in physics teaching.

A surprising experiment is remembered far longer than a copied note.

And Pascal’s Vases are full of surprises.

06 May 2026

Why Mechanics Questions Go Wrong (It’s Not the Maths… It’s the Setup)


 

Why Mechanics Questions Go Wrong (It’s Not the Maths… It’s the Setup)

“Most students lose marks in mechanics before they even start the maths.”


The Real Problem with Mechanics

Ask most A-Level Maths students what they struggle with, and mechanics comes up again and again.

But here’s the surprising truth:

It’s not the algebra
It’s not the equations
 It’s not even Newton’s Laws

It’s the setup.

Students rush in, start writing equations… and everything goes wrong from the very first line.


Why This Topic Matters

Mechanics questions are:

  • Highly structured
  • Predictable in content
  • Generous with marks

And yet…

They consistently produce avoidable mistakes.

From years of teaching (and recent sessions like those with Isaac), the pattern is clear:

Students don’t lose marks because they can’t do the maths.
They lose marks because they haven’t understood the situation.


Step 1: What Is Actually Happening?

Before writing anything down, students need to answer:

What is physically happening here?

Is the object:

  • Stationary?
  • Accelerating?
  • Moving at constant velocity?

Is it:

  • On a slope?
  • Hanging on a string?
  • In contact with a surface?

Teaching insight

Stronger students pause here.
Weaker students skip this entirely.


Step 2: Draw a Clear Force Diagram



This is where most marks are won—or lost.

A good force diagram should:

  • Include all forces
  • Show correct directions
  • Be neatly separated from the question

Common missing forces:

  • Weight (𝑚𝑔)
  • Normal reaction
  • Tension
  • Friction

Classic mistake:

Students draw a diagram… but don’t use it.

The diagram is the question.


Step 3: Choose the Right Axes

This is the step that transforms the question.

Instead of sticking with horizontal/vertical axes:

Rotate your axes to match the problem

For slopes:

  • One axis parallel to the slope
  • One axis perpendicular to the slope

Why this matters:

  • Eliminates unnecessary trig mistakes
  • Simplifies equations
  • Makes forces easier to interpret

Step 4: Understand the Forces Properly

Students often name forces correctly… but don’t understand them.

Tension

  • Pulls away from the object
  • Same throughout a light string

Normal Reaction

  • Always perpendicular to the surface
  • Not always equal to weight

Weight

  • Always acts vertically downward

The Biggest Issue: Not Reading the Question

This is the uncomfortable truth.

Students often:

  • Miss key words like “constant velocity”
  • Ignore phrases like “smooth surface”
  • Fail to notice what they’re actually solving for

Example:

  • “Constant velocity” → acceleration = 0
  • “Smooth” → no friction
  • “Find the tension” → not the acceleration

These are not maths errors.
These are reading and thinking errors.


Step 5: The Correct Thinking Process

Here’s the structure that works every time:

1️⃣ What is happening physically?

2️⃣ What forces are acting?

3️⃣ Which direction is easiest?

4️⃣ Apply Newton’s Second Law

5️⃣ Solve the maths

In that order.

Not the other way round.


Why Students Go Wrong

  • They rush into equations
  • They skip diagrams
  • They don’t visualise the situation
  • They treat mechanics like algebra

Why 1:1 Tuition Changes Everything

This is where individual teaching makes a huge difference.

In a classroom:

  • Mistakes go unnoticed
  • Diagrams aren’t checked carefully
  • Thinking isn’t challenged

In 1:1 sessions:

  • Every step is questioned
  • Every diagram is corrected
  • Every misunderstanding is addressed immediately

Teaching becomes less about delivering content…
and more about fixing thinking.


Final Thought

Mechanics isn’t difficult.

But it is different.

And once students realise:

The marks come from understanding first, maths second

Everything starts to fall into place.

How to Prepare for A-Level Psychology Examinations

  How to Prepare for A-Level Psychology Examinations A-Level Psychology can feel overwhelming because it combines: Huge amounts of conte...