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Worth Revising For A Level Subjects Just Finished Gcse Exams

How do I finish the full syllabus for an exam overnight?

Just what I did in the last two weeks!Okay. You need to be a little pragmatic at this time. Trying to cover the whole syllabus is a little far-fetched. Try and complete at least 60% of the syllabus. Of course you can study more but focus on the 60% first. Talk to some sincere student (there's always one in each class) and ask about the easiest and the most scoring chapters to study. First hurdle crossed, now you know where to start from. Good, moving on.Next step. You need notes. Trouble that sincere student a little more. You may have to bribe him with promises of treats. Do not hesitate, do not be a miser at this time. You need him/her, you need to pass, if it takes buying 2 pizzas in exchange of notes so be it. If you have to beg a little and involve in shameless flattery, do that. If everything goes well, you'll have the notes by now.Remember pain is temporary, gpa is forever. Write this statement down where you can see it, make it your phone's/laptop's wallpaper, set it as the contact picture of the people you frequently talk to. No distractions. Get off Quora, go go now. Uninstall Whatsapp, don't use Facebook/YouTube/Buzzfeed. It's just a few days, you don't need anything that doesn't let you study.Smart work will be more fruitful than hard work at this point. Go through last years question papers. Some topics are almost always repeated. Make sure you prepare them well. You might find some topics that go above your head as you panic due to lack of time. It's OK, breathe, call someone who knows those topics and ask them to explain it to you. If they're not a nice person and refuse to do so, blurt out things like "If I fail, it'll be on your conscience, how will you forgive yourself."Load up on Coffee and just get to it. Study as much as you can, as fast as you can. Sacrifice sleep, 2-3 hours is enough, you can sleep after the exam. Send a little prayer out to whatever you believe in and hope for the best. All the best to you.

How do I study 1 month before my final exams?

1.Prepare the best time table how much you can and strictly FOLLOW IT.2. NEVER GIVE UP.3. Make the 50/30/20 rule by dividing the time equally in sequence.50 means, you have to give your 50 % in understanding the concepts30 means, Do practice of that problem minimum 5 times to make sit in your mind.20 means, Revision of all those which you have learned in this 50+30 %time rule.{THIS PROCESS IS LIKE DIVIDE AND RULE.}I am sure you will score your best and specially this time is the best time for, if you want to study all night.Make sure that you are giving your best time to understand all the related topics and theories given in books. [1]Footnotes[1] How To Avoid Sleep While Study Before An Exam in Hindi|Study Tips For Exam|Motivational Video

How to pass a history GCSE with out knowing anything?

Start reading but history is definately a subject you can waffle away, you don't need to know key facts...
If you cant remember a date like 1935 just say in the 1930s or mid-1930s.
All you need to do is convince the examiner that you know everything and so you dont have to write anything if that maes sence...
Learn certain small details in depth which may be seemingly unimportant just so the examiner know you are interested. therefore if you are a bit vague about the big details they wont doc so many marks as yours is more intersesting than others.
I advise doing some serious revision and just before the exam and skim over everything you have learned. Some will go in.
Most importantly, in history you learn perhaps 10 topics but only 3 or so come in the exam. you should know this from mocks and pass papers. Only revise the things you know are coming otherwise you will waste time. Certain topics always come like WW1 and WW2 depending on what your cource is about. look over past papers and c what always come and even ask your teacher.

Good luck and i find hgistory is defo the easiest subject to BS on.. =)

What is A-Level Maths and Further Maths like (in comparison to GCSE)? For someone who found GCSE level easy, what skills do I need to succeed?

Most students who obtained an A in GCSE with relative ease find the first few weeks of A level study quite easy (as much of it is revising old topics like quadratics).But by the end of the 1st year and taking those first modules for the AS (maths A level is still modular, that changes in 2017), about a third who found getting an A in GCSE are wondering if they’ll scrape an E in AS.Don’t even consider Further Maths A level if you didn’t get an A* in GCSE.Right.. Now I’ve scared you a bit..If you find algebra really easy then you will find both AS maths and AS Further Maths relatively straightforward. You will be taking pure and applied modules in both courses and most good GCSE students who did find algebra easy at GCSE will be fine with the pure modules.For some reason, perhaps because many schools don’t teach GCSE Physics well, many A level students struggle with the Mechanics applied modules in A level. The actual maths involved there is not above GCSE level but it seems there’s a big gap in just comprehending the questions for many students and I think that’s down to there being far fewer practical sessions in Physics.Now I know I’m jumping around a bit with this answer but it occurs to me that I should tell you the way the exams are structured:If you do A level maths, you will do 4 pure maths modules - C1, C2, C3 & C4. You will do C1 & C2 in the first year, C3 & C4 in the second. You will also study two applied modules which can be statistics or mechanics.If you do A level further maths you have to take 6 more modules. These must include FP1 (Further Pure 1) and one of FP2, Fp3 (and FP4 if the exam board your school uses has a FP4 module) and you can make up the 6 by either doing the FP module you didn’t do as compulsory study or by doing up to 4 applied modules. Often you don’t get the choice about this as the school may teach a limited set of modules so you simply have to do what the school tells you.I hope that’s a useful introduction. If you have anything specific, A2A me as I’ve been teaching A level for a while now…

Can you help me pick my A-Level options? (thinking of sciences + maths + one more subject)?

My Predicted Grades Are:
Maths Linear – A*/A
Maths Pair Pilot (Applications + Methods) – A, A
Core Science – A*
Additional Science - A* - I had and still have got the potential to do the single sciences (physics, biology and chemistry) because I got 7A in my Year 9 test but I was stupid at picking my options
English Language – A
English Literature – A
History – A*/A
French – A/B
Drama – B
Religious Studies - A/B
For My A-Level Choice I want to do, these following subjects for sure:
Maths
Chemistry
Biology (still thinking about this)
Is Physics really hard at A-Levels?
But I’m not sure what my 4th subject should be (I want to do a fourth subject, so that I can drop one in my 2nd Year)
I’m considering History (or English Literature) I really like it and enjoy but I can’t stand going through 2 more years of essay writing. Also, I kind of got put off by my Mock Results. In my Y10 exam i got A*, for my Coursework i got A. For my mock i got C, 1 off B. I must admit I didn’t revise at all for the exam and that our teacher hadn’t taught us the two new type of questions.
Is History really hard at A-Level?

If I do Maths, Chemistry, Physics and Biology, would that be too much pressure on me?

I don’t particularly want to go into Medicine or anything but I was reading up on the Oxford Undergraduate courses ( I don’t want to go Oxford, I just think their website is really helpful) and I really like Chemistry, and don’t mind doing Biochemistry. I’m not sure about what I want to do when I grow up.
I want to become a songwriter but that’s just a hobby and like a side job (I’m going to be contacting Song writing contact companies for that as soon as I’m 16) and I want to do something in the Music Industry and have this job in mind but it doesn’t require any qualifications. So with my education I just want to have fun and I really am interested in the sciences.

Give me some advice?

I think I'm going to fail my maths gcse?

I'm doing the modular exam tomorrow. It has algebra and geometry on it. In this one week holiday I've spent a couple of hours everyday revising various topics. Now on the last day I'm panicking and stressing I won't do as well. I'm trying so hard to revise write now but I'm struggling because I'm really worried and tired. The exam's tomorrow so it makes me more stressed.

What can I do so I won't fail?

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