The 1.1-Minute Rule: Strategic Time Management
In AQA AS Level Mathematics, time is your most precious asset. With 80 marks to secure in 90 minutes for both Paper 1 and Paper 2, you have exactly 1.125 minutes per mark. To protect yourself from dropping easy marks on late-paper questions, top scorers cultivate a strict pacing regime. Use the 1-minute-per-mark rule as a default: this leaves you with a critical 10-minute buffer at the end of each paper to check for arithmetic errors, missing constants of integration, and unverified stationary points.
If you encounter a multi-step problem that stalls your progress, do not spend more than 5 minutes stuck. Move on immediately. AQA papers are structured to test different topics independently; getting stuck on a mechanics vector question in Paper 1 does not prevent you from scoring full marks on the subsequent integration question.
Decoding Command Words: When "Show That" Means "Show Everything"
The command words used by AQA examiners are highly specific and directly dictate how much working must be written on the page:
- "Show that": This is a prompt where the final answer is already given to you. You will receive zero marks if you simply write the steps with logical gaps. Examiners want to see a continuous, unbroken chain of algebraic reasoning. Every single step—including intermediate factorisations, common denominators, and substitutions—must be explicitly written out.
- "Hence": You must use your preceding answer to solve the next part of the question. Attempting to start from scratch using another method will lose you all the available marks, even if you arrive at the correct answer.
- "Hence or otherwise": You are encouraged to use the previous result, but other valid methods are accepted. Note that the "hence" path is almost always the fastest and least error-prone.
- "Find" / "Calculate" / "Determine": These command words require you to show your method clearly. If you write down a correct final decimal answer with no working and it is wrong due to a minor calculator typo, you will score 0. Showing your initial formula and substitutions guarantees method marks.
Pure Mathematics: Mastering Calculus and Trigonometry
Nearly half of the total marks across both papers stem from pure topics, with calculus representing a massive portion of the assessment. Examiners consistently report that students lose substantial marks due to basic notation and algebraic slips in multi-step differentiation and integration. To secure top grades, adopt these three habits:
- The Limit Definition of Derivative: When asked to find the derivative from first principles, do not simply write down the answer using standard rules. You must state the limit formula: \( f'(x) = \lim_{h \to 0} \frac{f(x+h) - f(x)}{h} \). Show the expansion of \( f(x+h) \), factorise out \( h \), cancel it, and then explicitly state that as \( h \to 0 \), the limit terms disappear.
- Stationary Point Verification: Finding the coordinates where \( \frac{dy}{dx} = 0 \) is only half the battle. If a question asks you to find a maximum or minimum, you must justify its nature. Calculate the second derivative \( \frac{d^2y}{dx^2} \) and substitute your \( x \)-value to prove whether it is less than 0 (maximum) or greater than 0 (minimum). Alternatively, perform a clear sign test on either side of the stationary point.
- Trigonometric Interval Management: When solving equations like \( \sin(2\theta) = 0.5 \), remember to adjust your interval boundaries first (e.g., if \( 0 \le \theta \le 180^\circ \), then \( 0 \le 2\theta \le 360^\circ \)). Solve for the auxiliary angle first, find all valid solutions within the adjusted range, and then divide by 2. This prevents you from losing secondary solutions.
Mechanics and Statistics: Setting Up the System
In Paper 1 (Section B: Mechanics) and Paper 2 (Section B: Statistics), context is everything. Many students treat these sections as pure algebra exercises, which leads to avoidable mistakes:
In Mechanics: Never attempt a forces or kinematics problem without sketching a clear force diagram. Label all acting forces (weight, tension, friction, normal reaction) with arrows. Set up your coordinate system, stating which direction is positive. Write down your equations of motion using Newton's Second Law (\( \Sigma F = ma \)) or the SUVAT equations before plugging in numbers. This ensures that even if you make an arithmetic error, you secure the setup and method marks.
In Statistics: When conducting a hypothesis test, examiners look for precise notation and contextual conclusions. Always state your null and alternative hypotheses using the correct population parameter (e.g., \( H_0: p = 0.4 \), \( H_1: p < 0.4 \)). Never use sample statistics (like \( \bar{x} \) or \( \hat{p} \)) in your hypotheses. When writing your final conclusion, avoid deterministic language. Instead of writing "This proves the coin is biased," write "There is sufficient evidence at the 5% significance level to suggest that the coin is biased." Always link the conclusion back to the original context of the question.