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.

05 May 2026

Why Internal Resistance Confuses Everyone (And How to Actually Understand It)

 


Why Internal Resistance Confuses Everyone (And How to Actually Understand It)

“Your battery says 9V… so why does your circuit only get 7.8V? Where did the rest go?”


The Hidden Concept That Costs Marks

Internal resistance is one of those A-Level Physics topics that looks simple—until students hit exam questions.

They can often:

  • Rearrange equations ✔
  • Do calculations ✔
  • Recognise circuits ✔

But ask them what’s actually happening, and things quickly fall apart.

That’s because internal resistance isn’t just maths.

It’s energy, physics, and real-world behaviour all wrapped into one.


EMF vs Terminal Potential Difference (The Core Confusion)


This is where most problems begin.

EMF (ε)

  • The total energy supplied per unit charge
  • What the battery could provide
  • Measured when no current flows

Terminal Potential Difference (V)

  • The actual energy delivered to the circuit
  • What the components really get
  • Measured when current is flowing

The Key Idea

The battery does not give all its energy to the circuit.

Some is lost inside the battery itself.


Where Does the “Lost Voltage” Go?


That missing voltage isn’t “lost” in a mysterious way.

It’s converted into heat inside the battery.

Inside every cell is resistance—just like a resistor in your circuit.

So when current flows:

  • Energy is transferred inside the battery
  • The battery warms up (sometimes noticeably)
  • Less energy reaches the external circuit

The Equation Behind It

𝑉=𝜀𝐼𝑟

Where:

  • 𝜀= EMF
  • 𝐼= current
  • 𝑟 = internal resistance

Why Voltage Drops Under Load



When no current flows:

  • 𝐼=0
  • 𝑉=𝜀

But as soon as you connect a circuit:

  • Current flows
  • The term 𝐼𝑟 increases
  • Terminal voltage drops

Simple way to think about it:

The harder the battery works (more current), the more energy it wastes internally.


The Practical (Where It Finally Clicks)

This is where your teaching setup really shines.

Students understand internal resistance when they see it happening.

Practical approach:

  • Use a variable resistor to change current
  • Measure:
    • Current (I)
    • Terminal voltage (V)
  • Plot a graph of V vs I

What they observe:

  • A straight line
  • Negative gradient = internal resistance (r)
  • Y-intercept = EMF (ε)

Suddenly, it’s not abstract anymore—it’s measurable.


Common Exam Mistakes (And How to Fix Them)

1. Mixing up EMF and voltage

Students treat them as the same thing.

✔ Fix:

  • Always ask: Is current flowing?
  • If yes → it’s terminal p.d., not EMF

2. Ignoring internal resistance entirely

Students use 𝑉=𝐼𝑅 blindly.

✔ Fix:

  • Look for clues:
    • “Battery”
    • “Cell”
    • “Terminal voltage”
  • These usually signal internal resistance is involved

3. Not interpreting graphs properly

Students can plot but not explain.

✔ Fix:

  • Practise linking:
    • Gradient → internal resistance
    • Intercept → EMF

4. No physical understanding

They calculate correctly—but don’t explain energy loss.

✔ Fix:

  • Use phrases like:

    “Energy is dissipated as heat within the cell due to internal resistance.”


The Big Picture

Internal resistance isn’t just an exam topic.

It explains:

  • Why batteries get warm
  • Why devices lose efficiency
  • Why high currents are problematic
  • Why real circuits never behave perfectly

Final Thought

Once students stop seeing internal resistance as just an equation and start seeing it as:

energy being shared between the circuit and the battery itself

Everything clicks.

04 May 2026

Why Biology Feels Easy… But Is One of the Hardest A-Levels to Master

 


Why Biology Feels Easy… But Is One of the Hardest A-Levels to Master

Biology has a bit of a reputation.

Students often start Year 12 thinking:

“This one will be OK — it’s mostly learning, isn’t it?”

And to a point… they’re right.

There’s less heavy maths than Physics, fewer abstract calculations than Chemistry, and much of the content feels familiar from GCSE.

But here’s the catch:

Biology is one of the hardest A-Levels to get top grades in.

So what’s going on?


1. It Feels Like Common Sense (But Isn’t)

Biology topics often sound familiar:

  • Cells
  • Enzymes
  • Respiration
  • Photosynthesis

Students recognise the words… and assume they understand the detail.

But exam questions don’t test recognition — they test precision.

For example:

  • “Energy is released” ❌
  • “Energy is transferred from glucose to ATP during respiration” ✅

That small difference is often the difference between a C and an A.


2. The Mark Schemes Are Ruthless

Biology mark schemes are incredibly specific.

You might understand the concept perfectly — but if you don’t use the exact terminology, you won’t get the marks.

Examiners are looking for:

  • precise vocabulary
  • correct sequence
  • key terms in the right context

It’s not enough to “kind of explain it”.

You must explain it exactly right.


3. It’s Not Just Memory — It’s Application

Many students revise Biology by reading notes or making flashcards.

That helps… but it’s not enough.

A-Level Biology questions often:

  • use unfamiliar contexts
  • include data or graphs
  • require interpretation
  • link multiple topics together

So even if you’ve memorised everything, you can still struggle.


4. The Content is Huge

Biology has a massive specification.

You’re expected to know:

  • detailed processes
  • definitions
  • structures
  • experiments
  • practical techniques

And then recall and apply them under pressure.

It’s not difficult because it’s conceptually impossible…

It’s difficult because there is so much of it.


5. Long Answer Questions Are a Killer

Those 4-, 5-, and 6-mark questions catch students out.

Why?

Because they require:

  • structure
  • logical flow
  • linking ideas
  • correct terminology throughout

Students often:

  • write too little
  • write too vaguely
  • miss key marking points

So What Can You Do About It?

Here’s what actually works.


1. Learn the Language of Biology

Treat Biology like learning a language.

Create glossaries. Practise definitions. Use key terms correctly.

Don’t just understand it — say it properly.


2. Practise Exam Questions Constantly

This is the biggest difference between average and top students.

  • Do past paper questions
  • Mark them carefully
  • Learn the mark scheme language

This is where real improvement happens.


3. Use Active Recall (Not Just Reading)

Instead of re-reading notes:

  • cover them and write from memory
  • explain concepts out loud
  • teach someone else

If you can explain it clearly, you understand it.


4. Focus on Weak Areas Early

Don’t keep revising what you already know.

Find what you struggle with — and fix it early.


5. Practise Data and Application Questions

Get comfortable with:

  • graphs
  • tables
  • unfamiliar contexts

This is where top grades are won.


Final Thought

Biology feels easy because it’s familiar.

But achieving top grades requires:

  • precision
  • practice
  • application
  • exam technique

That’s why it catches so many students out.


Why Some Businesses Grow Fast… and Then Suddenly Collapse

 


Why Some Businesses Grow Fast… and Then Suddenly Collapse

Some businesses seem to appear from nowhere.

One minute nobody has heard of them. The next minute they are everywhere. New shops, new products, celebrity adverts, massive social media attention, and investors throwing money at them as if profits are optional.

And then, just as suddenly, they collapse.

For Business Studies students, this is a brilliant topic because it links together growth, cash flow, finance, operations, marketing, leadership and risk.

Growth is not the same as success

A business can grow very quickly and still be in trouble.

Growth means the business is increasing in size. That might mean:

  • more sales
  • more employees
  • more branches
  • more customers
  • more products
  • more market share

But growth also brings higher costs.

A business may need more stock, larger premises, more staff, more vehicles, more IT systems, and bigger marketing budgets. If these costs rise faster than the money coming in, the business can run into serious problems.

This is why cash flow is so important.

A business can be selling lots of products and still collapse if it does not have enough cash available to pay wages, suppliers, rent or loan repayments.

The danger of overtrading

One common reason fast-growing businesses fail is overtrading.

Overtrading happens when a business expands too quickly without having enough finance or resources to support that growth.

Imagine a company receives a huge order. Brilliant news?

Not always.

It may need to buy raw materials, pay workers, arrange delivery and cover production costs before the customer pays. If the money runs out before payment arrives, the business is in danger.

Growth has created the problem.

Weak management systems

Small businesses often rely on informal systems. The owner knows everyone, checks everything, and makes most of the decisions.

That works when the business is small.

But as the business grows, it needs proper systems:

  • stock control
  • financial planning
  • quality control
  • staff training
  • management structure
  • communication systems

Without these, the business can become chaotic.

Customers may receive poor service. Staff may become confused. Costs may rise. Mistakes may increase.

Fast growth magnifies every weakness.

Marketing can create demand — but operations must deliver

A clever marketing campaign can make a product popular very quickly.

But if the business cannot deliver what it promises, the damage can be severe.

Customers may face delays, poor quality, unavailable stock or poor after-sales service. Social media can then turn excitement into criticism very quickly.

In Business Studies terms, marketing must be matched by operational capacity.

There is no point creating huge demand if the business cannot supply the product properly.

External shocks

Some businesses grow in favourable conditions, but collapse when the environment changes.

This could include:

  • rising interest rates
  • inflation
  • supply chain problems
  • new competitors
  • changes in consumer tastes
  • new laws or regulations
  • economic downturns

A business model that works during a boom may fail during a downturn.

This is why businesses need contingency planning and a realistic understanding of risk.

The lesson for students

Fast growth looks exciting, but controlled growth is often safer.

A successful business needs more than sales. It needs cash, planning, good leadership, strong systems, reliable staff and the ability to adapt.

For exam answers, the key point is this:

Growth can increase profit, market share and brand recognition, but it can also increase costs, complexity and risk.

That is why some businesses grow fast… and then suddenly collapse.

02 May 2026

Why Big O Notation Confuses Everyone (And How to Finally Understand It)

 


Why Big O Notation Confuses Everyone (And How to Finally Understand It)


If there is one topic in A Level Computing that causes more confusion than almost anything else, it is Big O notation.

Students often say things like:

  • “I don’t get what the letters mean”
  • “Is it just maths?”
  • “Why does it even matter if the code works?”

And that last one is the key.

Because yes — your code might work…
But will it still work when there are a million users?


What Big O Is Really About

Big O notation isn’t just a formula.

It’s a way of answering one simple question:

“How does the time taken (or memory used) grow as the input gets bigger?”

Not when you test it with 10 items…
But when you test it with:

  • 1,000 items
  • 1,000,000 items
  • or even more

Why Students Struggle

From years of teaching, the main issues are:

1. It’s taught too abstractly

Students see symbols like:

  • O(n)
  • O(n²)
  • O(log n)

…but don’t connect them to real programs.


2. It feels like maths instead of computing

As soon as graphs appear, many students switch off.


3. No real-world context

Without context, it becomes memorisation instead of understanding.


A Simple Example: Searching

Let’s take something simple — finding a name in a list.

Method 1: Linear Search → O(n)

  • Check each item one by one
  • Worst case: check everything

 If there are 1,000 items → up to 1,000 checks


Method 2: Binary Search → O(log n)

  • Start in the middle
  • Eliminate half each time

If there are 1,000 items → about 10 checks


This is the key idea:

Even though both methods “work”…

One is dramatically faster as the data grows.


Understanding the Common Big O Types

Think of them like this:

  • O(1) → Always the same (fastest)
  • O(log n) → Grows slowly (very efficient)
  • O(n) → Grows steadily
  • O(n log n) → Slightly worse than linear
  • O(n²) → Gets slow quickly
  • O(2ⁿ) → Completely impractical very fast!

Why It Matters in the Real World

This isn’t just an exam topic.

Big O is used in:

  • Search engines
  • Social media platforms
  • Banking systems
  • Game engines

 Imagine:

  • Searching Google using O(n²)…
  • Or loading Instagram with inefficient algorithms…

They simply wouldn’t work at scale.


How to Actually Understand It (Not Memorise It)

Here’s how I teach it:

Step 1: Start with real problems

Searching, sorting, looping — not formulas

Step 2: Think “what happens when input grows?”

Always ask:

“If I double the data, what happens to the time?”

Step 3: Visualise it

Graphs help — but only after understanding the idea

Step 4: Compare algorithms

Understanding comes from comparison, not isolation


Exam Tip

A typical exam question might ask:

“Compare the efficiency of two algorithms…”

To get top marks:

  • State the Big O
  • Explain what it means
  • Link it to performance with large datasets

Final Thought

Big O notation isn’t about complicated maths.

It’s about thinking like a computer scientist:

“Will this still work when the problem gets big?”

Master that idea — and the rest falls into place.


Need Help With A Level Computing?

At Hemel Private Tuition, we:

  • Break complex topics into simple ideas
  • Use real examples (not just theory)
  • Focus on exam success AND understanding

01 May 2026

A-Level Chemistry – The Best Ways to Learn and Then Revise

 


A-Level Chemistry – The Best Ways to Learn and Then Revise

A-Level Chemistry has a reputation—and not always a friendly one.

Students often say:

“I understand it in class… but I can’t answer the questions.”

That’s the key problem. Chemistry isn’t just about learning—it’s about applying.

After 40+ years of teaching, I’ve found that success in A-Level Chemistry comes down to doing two things properly:

  1. Learning the content the right way
  2. Revising in a way that matches the exam

Let’s break that down.


Step 1: Learning Chemistry Properly (Not Just Copying Notes)

The biggest mistake students make is passive learning.

Reading notes ≠ learning
Highlighting ≠ understanding
Watching videos ≠ mastery

What actually works:

1. Build understanding first

  • Ask: Why does this happen?
  • Link topics together (e.g. bonding → structure → properties)
  • Use diagrams wherever possible

2. Learn definitions precisely
Exam boards love definitions—and they are picky.

For example:

  • Not “energy needed to break a bond”
  • But: “the enthalpy change required to break one mole of bonds in the gaseous state”

That level of precision matters.

3. Do examples immediately
After learning a concept:

  • Do 2–3 questions straight away
  • If you can’t do them → you haven’t learnt it yet

Step 2: The Power of Practice (This Is Where Grades Are Won)

Chemistry is a skills subject.

You wouldn’t learn to sail (or drive a powerboat!) just by reading about it—you have to do it.

Same here.

Focus on:

  • Past paper questions by topic
  • Repeating question types (they do come back)
  • Learning mark scheme language

Step 3: How to Revise Effectively

Revision is not re-learning everything from scratch.

It is:

Training your brain to recognise and solve exam questions quickly and accurately

The 3-Step Revision Cycle

1. Recall

  • Blurting (write everything you remember)
  • Flashcards
  • Quick quizzes

2. Apply

  • Exam questions
  • Timed practice
  • Mixed topics

3. Review

  • Mark your work properly
  • Add corrections to notes
  • Identify weak areas

Then repeat.


Step 4: Topic-by-Topic Strategy

Some topics need slightly different approaches:

Physical Chemistry

  • Practice calculations daily
  • Learn formulas AND when to use them
  • Show full working (marks are method-based)

Organic Chemistry

  • Learn mechanisms step-by-step
  • Practise drawing them repeatedly
  • Understand why electrons move

Inorganic Chemistry

  • Focus on patterns (trends in the periodic table)
  • Use colours, reactions, and observations
  • Link structure to behaviour

Step 5: The Final Weeks Before Exams

This is where many students go wrong.

They panic… and go back to reading notes.

Don’t.

Instead:

  • Do one full paper per day
  • Mark it properly
  • Redo mistakes the next day

This is the fastest way to improve grades.


Common Mistakes to Avoid

❌ Only reading notes
❌ Avoiding hard questions
❌ Not marking work properly
❌ Ignoring definitions
❌ Leaving revision too late


Final Thought

A-Level Chemistry isn’t about being “naturally good.”

It’s about:

  • Practising regularly
  • Learning from mistakes
  • Thinking like the examiner

Do that—and the grades will follow.

24 April 2026

Thinking Clearly About Ions, Charges, and the Periodic Table (Without the Panic)

 

Thinking Clearly About Ions, Charges, and the Periodic Table (Without the Panic)


If there’s one topic that quietly causes confusion in GCSE and A-Level Chemistry, it’s this one.
Ions… charges… half equations… and then someone casually throws in “just balance the electrons” as if that helps.

Let’s slow it down and make it make sense.


🔬 What Actually Is an Ion?

An ion is simply an atom (or group of atoms) that has gained or lost electrons.

  • Lose electrons → positive ion (cation)
  • Gain electrons → negative ion (anion)

Think of electrons as tiny negative charges:

  • Lose a negative → you become positive
  • Gain a negative → you become more negative

👉 Simple example:

  • Sodium loses 1 electron → Na⁺
  • Chlorine gains 1 electron → Cl⁻

Already, we’ve got the basis of ionic bonding.


🧭 The Periodic Table Is Your Shortcut



6

Students often try to memorise charges. That’s painful and unnecessary.

Instead, use the groups:

  • Group 1 → +1
  • Group 2 → +2
  • Group 6 → −2
  • Group 7 → −1

Why?

Because atoms want a full outer shell.

👉 Sodium (Group 1): easier to lose 1 electron than gain 7
👉 Oxygen (Group 6): easier to gain 2 electrons than lose 6

So the charges aren’t random — they’re about energy efficiency.


⚖️ Building Ionic Compounds (The Bit Students Overthink)

Here’s the golden rule:

👉 Total charge must equal zero

That’s it. No exceptions.

Example 1: Sodium Chloride

  • Na⁺ and Cl⁻
  • Charges cancel 1:1 → NaCl

Example 2: Magnesium Oxide

  • Mg²⁺ and O²⁻
  • Charges cancel 1:1 → MgO

Example 3: Calcium Chloride

  • Ca²⁺ and Cl⁻
  • Need two Cl⁻ to balance → CaCl₂

💡 Better way to think about it:
You’re not “crossing numbers over”…

You’re asking:
👉 “How many of each ion do I need so the charges cancel out?”


🔋 Half Equations (Where Electrons Finally Matter)

Half equations show electron transfer — the actual chemistry happening.


Oxidation = Loss of electrons

Reduction = Gain of electrons

👉 Example:

Oxidation:
Zn → Zn²⁺ + 2e⁻

Zinc loses electrons → becomes positive

Reduction:
Cl₂ + 2e⁻ → 2Cl⁻

Chlorine gains electrons → becomes negative


🧠 How to Think About It (This Is the Key Bit)

Most students try to memorise everything separately:

  • Ion charges
  • Ionic bonding
  • Half equations

That’s where it falls apart.

Instead, link everything together:

1. Start with the atom

Where is it in the periodic table?

2. Decide what it wants

Lose or gain electrons to get a full outer shell?

3. That gives you the charge

No guesswork needed

4. Build compounds by cancelling charges

Neutral overall — always

5. Use half equations to show the electron movement

That’s the mechanism behind it all


🎯 Final Thought (The “Lightbulb” Moment)

Ionic chemistry isn’t about rules…

It’s about electrons moving to lower energy states.

Once you see it like that:

  • Charges make sense
  • Compounds make sense
  • Half equations make sense

And suddenly, those exam questions stop looking like a foreign language.

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 ...