The 90-Minute Tug-of-War: Mastering the Clock
In Oxford AQA International AS Level Business, time is your most precious currency. With 80 marks to earn across 90 minutes in both Unit 1 and Unit 2, you have exactly 1.125 minutes per mark. However, top scorers do not distribute their time equally. They treat the exam as three distinct phases:
- Section A (17 marks - Budget 15 mins): Blast through the multiple-choice questions (Q1–Q3) in under 3 minutes. Spend the remaining 12 minutes carefully writing out formulas and calculating the 2-mark and 3-mark quantitative questions, and drafting concise, precise responses for the 3-mark explanation questions.
- Section B (27 marks - Budget 30 mins): You have three 9-mark analysis questions. Allocate 10 minutes to each. Spend 2 minutes planning your two distinct points of analysis, and 8 minutes writing deep, contextual chains of reasoning.
- Section C (36 marks - Budget 45 mins): The ultimate battleground. Three 12-mark evaluative essays. You must dedicate 15 minutes to each. This gives you enough time to read the scenario, balance your arguments, and craft a highly justified final recommendation.
Decoding the Examiner's Code: Command Words as Action Maps
Failing to match your response style to the examiner's command word is the fastest way to lose marks. Let's decode the three primary prompts you will face:
1. "Explain" (3 marks): Requires 1 mark for knowledge (AO1) and 2 marks for application (AO2). Never write a generic textbook definition. If the question asks you to explain one reason why an entrepreneur might use price penetration, define the term briefly and immediately anchor your explanation to the scenario's market conditions (e.g., highly established competitors).
2. "Analyse" (9 marks): Requires 3 marks for knowledge (AO1), 3 marks for application (AO2), and 3 marks for analysis (AO3). You are expected to examine two distinct factors or ways. To score in Level 3 (7–9 marks), you must build continuous, logical chains of cause and effect. Do not skip steps. Explain exactly how an action leads to an intermediate consequence, and how that ultimately impacts business performance (such as profit margins, cash flow, or market share).
3. "Assess" (12 marks): This is the only command word that triggers Assessment Objective 4 (Evaluation), which is worth 5 out of the 12 marks. Your essay must be balanced, featuring clear arguments for and against, culminating in a logical, supported judgment that does not merely repeat your previous points.
The Anatomy of a 12-Marker: Building a Bulletproof Evaluation
To reach the coveted Level 4 (10–12 marks) on Section C questions, your essay must follow a highly structured path. Top-performing students use the "AJAS" framework:
- A - Assertion & Definition: Open with a clear statement of your position, defining the core business concept (e.g., Kaizen or workforce diversity) in the context of the business type.
- J - Justified Argument FOR: Develop a strong, contextual argument in favor of the decision. Use the specific facts of the case (e.g., if it is an ethical clothing retailer, link their supplier switch directly to consumer perceptions of ethical sourcing).
- A - Analytical Counter-Argument: Provide a balanced counter-argument. What are the risks, short-term vs. long-term trade-offs, or financial costs of this decision? (e.g., the cost of initial machinery investment when transitioning to a capital-intensive system).
- S - Synthesised Judgment: This is where the top grades are won. Do not simply summarize. Offer a definitive recommendation based on a key "it depends" factor. For example, argue that the success of prioritizing cash flow over profit "depends on the business's current growth phase and its ability to raise capital via public share issues if it is a PLC."