The Student Room Group

How to succeed in your AS levels, + explanation of new A level system

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Original post by Bulletzone


Edexcel, and I like the new spec layout.
Original post by richpanda
Edexcel, and I like the new spec layout.


Your thoughts on:
-Getting ahead of the class
-Revising everyday except weekends
(doing 'hardest' subjects so I was advised to)



Posted from TSR Mobile
Original post by AdeptDz
Your thoughts on:
-Getting ahead of the class
-Revising everyday except weekends
(doing 'hardest' subjects so I was advised to)



Posted from TSR Mobile


Getting ahead of class- I never did this, and I don't think you need to unless you realise that you're not going to completely finish the spec at least a month before your exams. So definitely don't start thinking about it now. What I did do was in my textbooks/specification print out just have a quick glance or skim of chapters I haven't done yet just to get an idea and wet my appetite. That was for chemistry and physics, not for maths though.

Revising everyday except weekends- Sure go for it. Are you revising everything you did on that day? Do you have a plan or schedule for your revision? How long are you revising per night? How does that tie in with homework (homework is effectively revision in all but name)
Original post by richpanda
Getting ahead of class- I never did this, and I don't think you need to unless you realise that you're not going to completely finish the spec at least a month before your exams. So definitely don't start thinking about it now. What I did do was in my textbooks/specification print out just have a quick glance or skim of chapters I haven't done yet just to get an idea and wet my appetite. That was for chemistry and physics, not for maths though.

Revising everyday except weekends- Sure go for it. Are you revising everything you did on that day? Do you have a plan or schedule for your revision? How long are you revising per night? How does that tie in with homework (homework is effectively revision in all but name)


Cool thanks
And i'm counting homework as revision. I get so much i hardly have time revise + most of the times its to do summary questions in the book with some sheets so its basically revisiting what i learnt on the day.
I don't really haved a plan but when when i start revising (not homework) ill just set aims to meet by the end of the week.
And per night can't really say exact hours but from
6-10pm .. I spend like 1hour on break, and maybe like an hour to eat or something so like 2hrs/2 and a half hours basically.
I wanted to start reading ahead on a sunday once ive done all the homework for that week during the weekdays then on weekends relax but on sunday at like 7pm read ahead
Original post by AdeptDz
Cool thanks
And i'm counting homework as revision. I get so much i hardly have time revise + most of the times its to do summary questions in the book with some sheets so its basically revisiting what i learnt on the day.
I don't really haved a plan but when when i start revising (not homework) ill just set aims to meet by the end of the week.
And per night can't really say exact hours but from
6-10pm .. I spend like 1hour on break, and maybe like an hour to eat or something so like 2hrs/2 and a half hours basically.
I wanted to start reading ahead on a sunday once ive done all the homework for that week during the weekdays then on weekends relax but on sunday at like 7pm read ahead


Sounds absolutely perfect. I also like to relax on the weekends and work during the week. You should be getting a lot of homework- I'm so conditioned to it that I don't even know what a small amount of homework is now!
Original post by richpanda
Sounds absolutely perfect. I also like to relax on the weekends and work during the week. You should be getting a lot of homework- I'm so conditioned to it that I don't even know what a small amount of homework is now!


Thanks, and yep its good.
I actually like getting a lot of homework because if i didn;t i probably wouldnt revise as much
Original post by AdeptDz
Thanks, and yep its good.
I actually like getting a lot of homework because if i didn;t i probably wouldnt revise as much


Precisely. Homework IS revision, never forget that.
Reply 107
Original post by richpanda
Intro
I have been asked by a few readers of my study log to do a post on what they can do to succeed at AS level. Bear in mind that currently (3rd July) this advice doesn't have too much substance, as I haven't received my AS level results and anything could happen. However I feel like I did pretty well and felt similar to after my GCSEs (and those went really well). So fingers crossed that I will be able to back up this advice with a nice set of results come the 18th of August!

Stage 1 (September to December)
I started my first year of sixth form not really knowing how much work I was going to need to do. I had of course google searched stuff like 'how to succeed at AS level' but this didn't return too much that was helpful. All I really knew was that it was going to be more work than at GCSE, but less than the numbers that were thrown about in our first assembly of the year (4/5 hours of independent work a day).

After the first week or so, we were beginning to settle in to our new routine. I was being given homework in about 2/3 of my lessons in each subject per week. That's 8 pieces of homework per week (it was probably actually slightly higher than that). In this stage, THE ABSOLUTELY MOST important thing you can do is make sure you do absolutely all of your homework on time and you should also completely understand what you are doing in the homework, and why (for example, the sum of a geometric series) it works.

You can get a lot of homework done in your study periods. I actually did more work in study periods in this stage of the year than at any other point (when I did more work at home). But you don't need to work flat out in every single study period, chat with your friends (especially if it's about subject related things), or make new friends by just talking about anything.

Lastly, early tests and early revision. I don't advocate doing 2 hours of revision every night in Stage 1, as some posters on TSR say they are going to do. For me (and most other students) this is only going to lead to you getting burnt out and hating school/work. Having said that, you need to do well in your early tests/mocks or whatever you call them. Make sure you are regularly speaking to your teachers about the content you're doing, and find out which topics you are going to be tested on. Then, do some revision (for me, about 1.5 hours a day) in the week or so before the test. That's actually far more than I did, but I'm including homework as revision here. And once you get your test back, if you do well, keep going at the same work rate for the rest of Stage 1. You're doing well so far, so why change? If you did badly on the test, speak to your teacher. You will need to up your work rate accordingly, but don't panic. Seriously.

VERY last thing- if you don't ask questions when you don't understand something or you're not 100% sure on something, you will most likely fail. Also, your revision should mainly be homework, topic specific questions and doing summaries (in the form of notes) on the stuff you've done. You won't have covered enough yet to do past papers (there will be a few exceptions to this)

Stage 2 (January to Easter)
Most schools have mocks in January, and it is very important you do well in these. Try and do at least 30 minutes of each subject per day (this is an average) in the 3 weeks leading up to your mocks, with obviously doing more the closer you get to each mock. This is getting you 'warmed up' for the rest of the academic year. I actually did my mocks quite late (mid February), but I was on average doing at least an hour of revision each day once the Christmas holidays had finished. There are some days when you won't do anything, some when you'll do 3 or 4 hours at home. Don't stress over it.

From the start of February, you should start to aim for 2 hours of revision a day, and this marks the start of your revision for your summer exams. Around this time you need to start planning and tracking what you are doing (more on this later on in this post) and using the specification, and start thinking about past papers. In addition to all of this, you still need to be doing all your homework, and all the other stuff I said you need to do in Stage 1.

Stage 3 (Easter to Exams)
The finishing line is almost in sight! Easter was when I did a huge amount of past papers (about 4 hours a day of them), a bit of general revision, and teaching myself a few final topics we hadn't finished in class, so that I could do full past papers. But you will still have time to relax, and relax you should. Go shopping, play some sport, go walking, watch the football, etc. Otherwise you will go insane.

After Easter I was doing 3 or 4 hours of revision each weekday, and about 5 hours each weekend. Some people will do more, some will do less. By now you will have a feel of how you are doing. After this, it's just a grind. Never give up no matter how boring you find the revision, or how hard you find a certain topic. You will be looking back at stuff you found really hard in October and laugh at how easy it now seems. You should have done every available past paper by the time your exam comes around.

I don't really have any exam technique advice, but I'll try my best. Make sure you are eating good food and getting good sleep in the exam season, and that you are hydrated. Also make sure you read the question and understand what it is asking.

Planning/Tracking
One thing that I felt really helped me during Stage 2 and 3 was planning and tracking anything to do with exams and revision. I will definitely be doing this again (and starting it earlier) for A2.

Planning just means setting out what you want to achieve on a certain day. In February and March, this was mainly something like '1 hour of chemistry' or '30 minutes of French grammar'. That was fine, as it was just general revision and helped massively, but eventually I had to switch to task-based planning. This means for each day writing stuff like 'June 2014 Core 1 Paper' or 'Review specification for Chemistry Topic 4'. You should have an idea of how long this will all take, but the time isn't too important. Planning every day from Easter to Mid-June took me about 4 hours, but it was worth it.

Tracking means making an Excel speadsheet to track your past papers. Have a 'sheet' for each subject, and then a row for each each exam session (such as January 2013, June 2012 R, June 2011). Then as columns have the different papers in that subject (such as Core 1, Core 2 and Stats 1). If you're a bit of a nerd (like me), you can do some conditional formatting so that the cells go green for a good past paper score, amber for an okay score, and red for a bad score. This then helps you to PLAN, as you can see which past papers you haven't done, and which you need to do again.

New A level System
I've seen a few posts by Year 11s about the new A level system, and usually they're completely wrong and based on speculation. For people starting AS levels in September 2016, the main subjects that I believe will still be old, modular style is Maths (and Further Maths), Government and Politics and Media Studies. There are others, but search it up yourself. For these subjects, your AS level exams will count for 50% of your whole A level grade, and you will sit exams in these regardless of if you are planning to drop or continue the subject to A2.

Most of your subjects will be in the new linear style, which is where most people get confused. With these subjects, it is ONLY your year 13 exams that count towards your whole A level grade. In these exams you will be assessed on content from both years of the course.

In year 12, you may or may not take the AS level exams in your subjects. Some schools want their students to do the AS exams as preparation for the next year, or for a concrete example of that student's ability that they can put on their UCAS form or whatever. For students whose school aren't doing the official AS exams, you will do mocks in these subjects, and these will be taken very seriously as they will be the basis for your university predicted grades.

Lastly, some subjects don't have an AS exams at all. Art and English are 2 subjects that I know don't have AS exams.

Outro
That is pretty much all I've got to say. Ask any questions and I will answer them. Note that when I say 'revision' in these posts, I usually mean revision done at home'. Work it out yourselves:biggrin:.


Do every past paper in existance ... twice!
Examiners reports
Know your exam spec and whats required

Use sites such as
physicsandmathstutor.com (many maths resources
studywise.co.uk/a-level-revision (well organised resources - find specs here)
getrevising.co.uk (great student and teacher made stuff)

Gd luck!
Original post by Alfoxd
Do every past paper in existance ... twice!
Examiners reports
Know your exam spec and whats required

Use sites such as
physicsandmathstutor.com (many maths resources
studywise.co.uk/a-level-revision (well organised resources - find specs here)
getrevising.co.uk (great student and teacher made stuff)

Gd luck!


Yes do all of this.
Already feeling the work intensity in Biology and Psychology :s-smilie:
I'm find Chemistry and Maths more relaxed tbh :smile:
Posted from TSR Mobile
Original post by extraordinaire
Already feeling the work intensity in Biology and Psychology :s-smilie:
I'm find Chemistry and Maths more relaxed tbh :smile:
Posted from TSR Mobile


Different people find different things easy/hard. It may even be down to the individual topics you are doing in those subjects. As long as you are staying on top of work and reviewing it, there is nothing to worry about.
Original post by richpanda
Different people find different things easy/hard. It may even be down to the individual topics you are doing in those subjects. As long as you are staying on top of work and reviewing it, there is nothing to worry about.


I see, thank you!
Reply 112
Original post by richpanda
Intro
I have been asked by a few readers of my study log to do a post on what they can do to succeed at AS level. Bear in mind that currently (3rd July) this advice doesn't have too much substance, as I haven't received my AS level results and anything could happen. However I feel like I did pretty well and felt similar to after my GCSEs (and those went really well). So fingers crossed that I will be able to back up this advice with a nice set of results come the 18th of August!

Stage 1 (September to December)
I started my first year of sixth form not really knowing how much work I was going to need to do. I had of course google searched stuff like 'how to succeed at AS level' but this didn't return too much that was helpful. All I really knew was that it was going to be more work than at GCSE, but less than the numbers that were thrown about in our first assembly of the year (4/5 hours of independent work a day).

After the first week or so, we were beginning to settle in to our new routine. I was being given homework in about 2/3 of my lessons in each subject per week. That's 8 pieces of homework per week (it was probably actually slightly higher than that). In this stage, THE ABSOLUTELY MOST important thing you can do is make sure you do absolutely all of your homework on time and you should also completely understand what you are doing in the homework, and why (for example, the sum of a geometric series) it works.

You can get a lot of homework done in your study periods. I actually did more work in study periods in this stage of the year than at any other point (when I did more work at home). But you don't need to work flat out in every single study period, chat with your friends (especially if it's about subject related things), or make new friends by just talking about anything.

Lastly, early tests and early revision. I don't advocate doing 2 hours of revision every night in Stage 1, as some posters on TSR say they are going to do. For me (and most other students) this is only going to lead to you getting burnt out and hating school/work. Having said that, you need to do well in your early tests/mocks or whatever you call them. Make sure you are regularly speaking to your teachers about the content you're doing, and find out which topics you are going to be tested on. Then, do some revision (for me, about 1.5 hours a day) in the week or so before the test. That's actually far more than I did, but I'm including homework as revision here. And once you get your test back, if you do well, keep going at the same work rate for the rest of Stage 1. You're doing well so far, so why change? If you did badly on the test, speak to your teacher. You will need to up your work rate accordingly, but don't panic. Seriously.

VERY last thing- if you don't ask questions when you don't understand something or you're not 100% sure on something, you will most likely fail. Also, your revision should mainly be homework, topic specific questions and doing summaries (in the form of notes) on the stuff you've done. You won't have covered enough yet to do past papers (there will be a few exceptions to this)

Stage 2 (January to Easter)
Most schools have mocks in January, and it is very important you do well in these. Try and do at least 30 minutes of each subject per day (this is an average) in the 3 weeks leading up to your mocks, with obviously doing more the closer you get to each mock. This is getting you 'warmed up' for the rest of the academic year. I actually did my mocks quite late (mid February), but I was on average doing at least an hour of revision each day once the Christmas holidays had finished. There are some days when you won't do anything, some when you'll do 3 or 4 hours at home. Don't stress over it.

From the start of February, you should start to aim for 2 hours of revision a day, and this marks the start of your revision for your summer exams. Around this time you need to start planning and tracking what you are doing (more on this later on in this post) and using the specification, and start thinking about past papers. In addition to all of this, you still need to be doing all your homework, and all the other stuff I said you need to do in Stage 1.

Stage 3 (Easter to Exams)
The finishing line is almost in sight! Easter was when I did a huge amount of past papers (about 4 hours a day of them), a bit of general revision, and teaching myself a few final topics we hadn't finished in class, so that I could do full past papers. But you will still have time to relax, and relax you should. Go shopping, play some sport, go walking, watch the football, etc. Otherwise you will go insane.

After Easter I was doing 3 or 4 hours of revision each weekday, and about 5 hours each weekend. Some people will do more, some will do less. By now you will have a feel of how you are doing. After this, it's just a grind. Never give up no matter how boring you find the revision, or how hard you find a certain topic. You will be looking back at stuff you found really hard in October and laugh at how easy it now seems. You should have done every available past paper by the time your exam comes around.

I don't really have any exam technique advice, but I'll try my best. Make sure you are eating good food and getting good sleep in the exam season, and that you are hydrated. Also make sure you read the question and understand what it is asking.

Planning/Tracking
One thing that I felt really helped me during Stage 2 and 3 was planning and tracking anything to do with exams and revision. I will definitely be doing this again (and starting it earlier) for A2.

Planning just means setting out what you want to achieve on a certain day. In February and March, this was mainly something like '1 hour of chemistry' or '30 minutes of French grammar'. That was fine, as it was just general revision and helped massively, but eventually I had to switch to task-based planning. This means for each day writing stuff like 'June 2014 Core 1 Paper' or 'Review specification for Chemistry Topic 4'. You should have an idea of how long this will all take, but the time isn't too important. Planning every day from Easter to Mid-June took me about 4 hours, but it was worth it.

Tracking means making an Excel speadsheet to track your past papers. Have a 'sheet' for each subject, and then a row for each each exam session (such as January 2013, June 2012 R, June 2011). Then as columns have the different papers in that subject (such as Core 1, Core 2 and Stats 1). If you're a bit of a nerd (like me), you can do some conditional formatting so that the cells go green for a good past paper score, amber for an okay score, and red for a bad score. This then helps you to PLAN, as you can see which past papers you haven't done, and which you need to do again.

New A level System
I've seen a few posts by Year 11s about the new A level system, and usually they're completely wrong and based on speculation. For people starting AS levels in September 2016, the main subjects that I believe will still be old, modular style is Maths (and Further Maths), Government and Politics and Media Studies. There are others, but search it up yourself. For these subjects, your AS level exams will count for 50% of your whole A level grade, and you will sit exams in these regardless of if you are planning to drop or continue the subject to A2.

Most of your subjects will be in the new linear style, which is where most people get confused. With these subjects, it is ONLY your year 13 exams that count towards your whole A level grade. In these exams you will be assessed on content from both years of the course.

In year 12, you may or may not take the AS level exams in your subjects. Some schools want their students to do the AS exams as preparation for the next year, or for a concrete example of that student's ability that they can put on their UCAS form or whatever. For students whose school aren't doing the official AS exams, you will do mocks in these subjects, and these will be taken very seriously as they will be the basis for your university predicted grades.

Lastly, some subjects don't have an AS exams at all. Art and English are 2 subjects that I know don't have AS exams.

Outro
That is pretty much all I've got to say. Ask any questions and I will answer them. Note that when I say 'revision' in these posts, I usually mean revision done at home'. Work it out y



Hi this really helped me plan out what I will do with my revision time . I currently started sixth form and I'm doing AS . I wanted to know any revision tips on how to remember the content as I am doing biology chemistry eng language and maths. I would love to get into medicine for that I need As .
Original post by abidar

Hi this really helped me plan out what I will do with my revision time . I currently started sixth form and I'm doing AS . I wanted to know any revision tips on how to remember the content as I am doing biology chemistry eng language and maths. I would love to get into medicine for that I need As .


Firstly, I can say that remembering content is not going to get you very far in maths. You need understand why things are the way they are, as they can twist the questions to make it harder, for example making you work backwards. You have to do every past paper and available question, and keep doing them until you are getting 70+ each time.

For Chemistry, which is a mix of understanding concepts and memorisation, you also need to do every past paper (this applies for every subject). Other than doing the papers, I wrote long notes using the spec, shorter notes using the spec and then just going individually through each spec point. For the memorisation stuff, you can make flashcards or posters.

I can't speak for English or biology, but the same stuff will apply.
Original post by richpanda
Intro
I have been asked by a few readers of my study log to do a post on what they can do to succeed at AS level. Bear in mind that currently (3rd July) this advice doesn't have too much substance, as I haven't received my AS level results and anything could happen. However I feel like I did pretty well and felt similar to after my GCSEs (and those went really well). So fingers crossed that I will be able to back up this advice with a nice set of results come the 18th of August!

Stage 1 (September to December)
I started my first year of sixth form not really knowing how much work I was going to need to do. I had of course google searched stuff like 'how to succeed at AS level' but this didn't return too much that was helpful. All I really knew was that it was going to be more work than at GCSE, but less than the numbers that were thrown about in our first assembly of the year (4/5 hours of independent work a day).

After the first week or so, we were beginning to settle in to our new routine. I was being given homework in about 2/3 of my lessons in each subject per week. That's 8 pieces of homework per week (it was probably actually slightly higher than that). In this stage, THE ABSOLUTELY MOST important thing you can do is make sure you do absolutely all of your homework on time and you should also completely understand what you are doing in the homework, and why (for example, the sum of a geometric series) it works.

You can get a lot of homework done in your study periods. I actually did more work in study periods in this stage of the year than at any other point (when I did more work at home). But you don't need to work flat out in every single study period, chat with your friends (especially if it's about subject related things), or make new friends by just talking about anything.

Lastly, early tests and early revision. I don't advocate doing 2 hours of revision every night in Stage 1, as some posters on TSR say they are going to do. For me (and most other students) this is only going to lead to you getting burnt out and hating school/work. Having said that, you need to do well in your early tests/mocks or whatever you call them. Make sure you are regularly speaking to your teachers about the content you're doing, and find out which topics you are going to be tested on. Then, do some revision (for me, about 1.5 hours a day) in the week or so before the test. That's actually far more than I did, but I'm including homework as revision here. And once you get your test back, if you do well, keep going at the same work rate for the rest of Stage 1. You're doing well so far, so why change? If you did badly on the test, speak to your teacher. You will need to up your work rate accordingly, but don't panic. Seriously.

VERY last thing- if you don't ask questions when you don't understand something or you're not 100% sure on something, you will most likely fail. Also, your revision should mainly be homework, topic specific questions and doing summaries (in the form of notes) on the stuff you've done. You won't have covered enough yet to do past papers (there will be a few exceptions to this)

Stage 2 (January to Easter)
Most schools have mocks in January, and it is very important you do well in these. Try and do at least 30 minutes of each subject per day (this is an average) in the 3 weeks leading up to your mocks, with obviously doing more the closer you get to each mock. This is getting you 'warmed up' for the rest of the academic year. I actually did my mocks quite late (mid February), but I was on average doing at least an hour of revision each day once the Christmas holidays had finished. There are some days when you won't do anything, some when you'll do 3 or 4 hours at home. Don't stress over it.

From the start of February, you should start to aim for 2 hours of revision a day, and this marks the start of your revision for your summer exams. Around this time you need to start planning and tracking what you are doing (more on this later on in this post) and using the specification, and start thinking about past papers. In addition to all of this, you still need to be doing all your homework, and all the other stuff I said you need to do in Stage 1.

Stage 3 (Easter to Exams)
The finishing line is almost in sight! Easter was when I did a huge amount of past papers (about 4 hours a day of them), a bit of general revision, and teaching myself a few final topics we hadn't finished in class, so that I could do full past papers. But you will still have time to relax, and relax you should. Go shopping, play some sport, go walking, watch the football, etc. Otherwise you will go insane.

After Easter I was doing 3 or 4 hours of revision each weekday, and about 5 hours each weekend. Some people will do more, some will do less. By now you will have a feel of how you are doing. After this, it's just a grind. Never give up no matter how boring you find the revision, or how hard you find a certain topic. You will be looking back at stuff you found really hard in October and laugh at how easy it now seems. You should have done every available past paper by the time your exam comes around.

I don't really have any exam technique advice, but I'll try my best. Make sure you are eating good food and getting good sleep in the exam season, and that you are hydrated. Also make sure you read the question and understand what it is asking.

Planning/Tracking
One thing that I felt really helped me during Stage 2 and 3 was planning and tracking anything to do with exams and revision. I will definitely be doing this again (and starting it earlier) for A2.

Planning just means setting out what you want to achieve on a certain day. In February and March, this was mainly something like '1 hour of chemistry' or '30 minutes of French grammar'. That was fine, as it was just general revision and helped massively, but eventually I had to switch to task-based planning. This means for each day writing stuff like 'June 2014 Core 1 Paper' or 'Review specification for Chemistry Topic 4'. You should have an idea of how long this will all take, but the time isn't too important. Planning every day from Easter to Mid-June took me about 4 hours, but it was worth it.

Tracking means making an Excel speadsheet to track your past papers. Have a 'sheet' for each subject, and then a row for each each exam session (such as January 2013, June 2012 R, June 2011). Then as columns have the different papers in that subject (such as Core 1, Core 2 and Stats 1). If you're a bit of a nerd (like me), you can do some conditional formatting so that the cells go green for a good past paper score, amber for an okay score, and red for a bad score. This then helps you to PLAN, as you can see which past papers you haven't done, and which you need to do again.

New A level System
I've seen a few posts by Year 11s about the new A level system, and usually they're completely wrong and based on speculation. For people starting AS levels in September 2016, the main subjects that I believe will still be old, modular style is Maths (and Further Maths), Government and Politics and Media Studies. There are others, but search it up yourself. For these subjects, your AS level exams will count for 50% of your whole A level grade, and you will sit exams in these regardless of if you are planning to drop or continue the subject to A2.

Most of your subjects will be in the new linear style, which is where most people get confused. With these subjects, it is ONLY your year 13 exams that count towards your whole A level grade. In these exams you will be assessed on content from both years of the course.

In year 12, you may or may not take the AS level exams in your subjects. Some schools want their students to do the AS exams as preparation for the next year, or for a concrete example of that student's ability that they can put on their UCAS form or whatever. For students whose school aren't doing the official AS exams, you will do mocks in these subjects, and these will be taken very seriously as they will be the basis for your university predicted grades.

Lastly, some subjects don't have an AS exams at all. Art and English are 2 subjects that I know don't have AS exams.

Outro
That is pretty much all I've got to say. Ask any questions and I will answer them. Note that when I say 'revision' in these posts, I usually mean revision done at home'. Work it out yourselves:biggrin:.

Excellently detailed and informative post - thanks and hope you did well!

All I will say on the matter: if only I'd have seen this sort of guide when I did my A Levels in 2012/2013, then I'd have vowed to follow it and I'd have done much better than I did :wink:
Original post by spotify95
Excellently detailed and informative post - thanks and hope you did well!

All I will say on the matter: if only I'd have seen this sort of guide when I did my A Levels in 2012/2013, then I'd have vowed to follow it and I'd have done much better than I did :wink:


Yes everything went excellently:biggrin: just made it to help people, who are especially unsure due to the new spec.
Original post by richpanda
Yes everything went excellently:biggrin: just made it to help people, who are especially unsure due to the new spec.


Awesome! :smile:

Yep, I can imagine that quite a lot has changed since 2012/2013 (I did my AS exams in 2012 and my A2 exams in 2013) - shortly after I finished, they scrapped january exams, then they've now changed it so that exams are all at the end of A2 for some subjects...
Anyways, had this guide (or a similar one) been published in 2012, for the A Levels back then, I'd have taken the advice and no doubt got better grades :yep:
Original post by richpanda
Yes everything went excellently:biggrin: just made it to help people, who are especially unsure due to the new spec.


Hi :smile: So if I take AS Further Maths in Summer 2017 under the old A level system, will I still be able to follow through and take A2 level Further Maths of the old syllabus/ system in Summer 2018 (even though that's when the new system is first examined).
Original post by TheWaffle
Hi :smile: So if I take AS Further Maths in Summer 2017 under the old A level system, will I still be able to follow through and take A2 level Further Maths of the old syllabus/ system in Summer 2018 (even though that's when the new system is first examined).


Yeah you will. To do the new spec you've got to start with it, our year is the last year to sit the old one
Original post by spotify95
Awesome! :smile:

Yep, I can imagine that quite a lot has changed since 2012/2013 (I did my AS exams in 2012 and my A2 exams in 2013) - shortly after I finished, they scrapped january exams, then they've now changed it so that exams are all at the end of A2 for some subjects...
Anyways, had this guide (or a similar one) been published in 2012, for the A Levels back then, I'd have taken the advice and no doubt got better grades :yep:


Ah well I hope everything turned out fine in the end! Yes the new exams are quite a pain, but I can see why they have switched to this system, to stop excessive retaking.

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