So, you finished the syllabus content and looking for the exam technique to help you achieve an A*/9? Don't worry. Everything you need will be stated here. Feel free to click on the titles below to reach your desired section.
It is very important to note that it is very common to feel lost once you attempt a past paper. However, this feeling will start to fade away the more you solve. We will first discuss paper 2 (extended) , including the command words, answering technique, understanding the mark distribution, and time management.
Paper 2 is a short-answer paper. Its duration is 1 hour and 30 minutes and sums up to 70 marks in total. Let's talk format! It's about 20 questions, mostly short-answer, 1-4 marks each. NO calculator required (be sharp with mental math & written working). They mainly test the basics of algebra, geometry, number, measurement, stats as well as simplifying, factorizing, solving, diagrams, units, angles
Usually a fact or direct value. Just answer, but be precise.
Often one calculation, or a definition + value.
Multi-step. Lay out your process clearly, step-by-step
Show your working. Even if you get it wrong, you might earn marks for the work out.
Write clearly & box your final answers. Examiners love clarity.
Know your squares up to 15², cubes up to 6³, common roots, fractions, etc. This will save you so much time and it'll feel like getting free grades.
Watch out for unit conversions (cm to m, hours to minutes...)
Use your calculator wisely, but don’t rely on it blindly — check for silly errors.
Label diagrams. Add info if it helps you visualize.
Use exact values unless told to round (e.g. keep surds, π, fractions)
Don’t leave blank spaces — write something logical, you may get method marks!
PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE!!!
This is the longer paper, lasting 2 hours and 30 minute summing up to a total of 130 marks. It has about 11-13 questions, each broken into parts (a, b, c, ...). Calculators are allowed. They test all the topics and your logic using real-life contexts like recipes, currency, geometry in 3D, maps, time zones
Usually quick calc or define + apply
Step-by-step question. Use a clean layout.
Worded/layered question. Draw diagrams, plan your logic.
Likely graphing, data, or geometry. Take your time, and LABEL!!!!
Now that the basic foundation of answering the questions is covered, we will go over the common mistakes that many candidates do.
They look easy, but read carefully!
Watch out for m vs cm, minutes vs hours, etc.
Only round at the final step unless told
Even if you guess, show a method
Not using diagrams → Geometry is visual. Sketch it!
Make sure it’s in DEGREE mode for trig! Not changing it is like lethal.
Always underline what the question wants: estimate? exact value? round to 3 s.f.?
Estimate your answer before using a calculator — does it make sense
Practice past papers under timed conditions
Know formulas by heart (unless stated as provided)
If you're stuck, move on & come back. Don’t waste time on one part.