Edexcel IGCSE · Exam Tips

Geography Exam Tips

Ace your Pearson Edexcel IGCSE Geography exam with this examiner-backed strategy guide. Master the strict 1-mark-per-minute pacing, construct high-yield logical chains for explanation marks, synthesize the Resource Booklet with the 'So What?' strategy, and secure maximum fieldwork marks in Section B.

4 min readUpdated: 21 Jun 2026

Exam at a Glance

Papers
2
Total Marks
175
Time Limit
2h 55min
Question Types
4
PaperDurationMarksQuestionsWeightingQuestion Types
Paper 1: Physical Geography1h 10min70340%Multiple Choice (MCQ), Short Answer (1-3 marks), Medium Answer (4 marks), Extended Writing (8 marks)
Paper 2: Human Geography1h 45min105460%Multiple Choice (MCQ), Short Answer (1-3 marks), Medium Answer (4-6 marks), Extended Writing (8-12 marks)
Grade Scale
987654321U
Calculator Policy

A scientific or graphical calculator is permitted. Graphical calculators must be in exam mode with all stored programs and data cleared before the exam; the calculator must not be able to retrieve stored text or formulae.

  • AO1: AO1: Knowledge of locations, places, environments, processes, and concepts. (25%)
  • AO2: AO2: Understanding of geographical concepts and interrelationships. (25%)
  • AO3: AO3: Apply understanding to interpret, analyse, and evaluate geographical information. (25%)
  • AO4: AO4: Use a range of skills and techniques to collect, represent, and analyze data. (25%)

Built from real past papers and marking schemes (2023–2025).

Tips & Strategies

The 1-Mark-Per-Minute Habit: Pacing Under Pressure

In Pearson Edexcel IGCSE Geography, time is your most precious resource. Pacing is exceptionally tight: Paper 1 gives you 70 minutes to earn 70 marks, while Paper 2 gives you 105 minutes to earn 105 marks. This creates a brutal reality: you have exactly one minute per mark, inclusive of reading, interpreting resources, and planning your essays.

The most common cause of dropped grades is over-writing on low-tariff questions. If you spend five minutes writing a beautifully detailed paragraph for a 2-mark "explain" question, you have effectively stolen three minutes from your final 12-mark "discuss" essay. To prevent this, implement the 1-Mark-Per-Minute rule on your exam-day watch. For a 2-mark question, spend a maximum of 2 minutes writing a concise, two-step chain of logic. For the 8-mark and 12-mark questions, invest 2 minutes planning your structure, leaving you with exactly 1 minute per mark to execute your answer.

Decoding the Examiner's Code: Command Words and Expansion Marks

Examiners award marks based on highly predictable structures dictated by the command words. Failing to match your answer structure to these words is an instant way to lose marks:

  • Identify/State (1 mark): Write a single word, brief phrase, or choose the correct option. Do not write full paragraphs.
  • Explain (2 or 4 marks): These questions require a chain of cause-and-effect reasoning. To secure full marks, use connecting words like "which leads to...", "resulting in...", or "consequently...". For a 4-mark "Explain one reason..." prompt, do not list two separate reasons. Instead, write one single reason and develop it through three sequential logical extensions.
  • Analyse (8 marks): Found in both Papers. These questions assess your ability to deconstruct a provided resource. You must structure these answers into logical paragraphs representing different perspectives, trends, or geographic regions shown in the Resource Booklet.
  • Evaluate/Discuss (8 or 12 marks): These require balanced, two-sided arguments (such as human vs. physical factors, or development vs. conservation) and must conclude with a clear, justified final judgment. Without a concluding paragraph that answers the prompt directly, your answer is capped at Level 2 (maximum 8 out of 12 marks).

The 'So What?' Strategy: Making the Resource Booklet Work for You

A major differentiator between Grade 4 and Grade 9 candidates is how they use the Resource Booklet. Low-scoring candidates simply copy-paste data points verbatim (e.g., stating that "Figure 1c shows Nile discharge fell to 274 cubic meters per second"). Examiners refer to this as "lifting" data, and it scores minimal marks because it lacks geographical context.

Top scorers use the "So What?" strategy. Whenever you pull a statistic or a trend from a map, chart, or infographic, immediately ask yourself "so what?" and write down the geographical explanation or consequence. For example:

"Figure 1c shows that Nile discharge dropped to a low of 274 m³/second before the Aswan Dam was built (Resource reference), which meant that farmers experienced severe crop failures during dry seasons (Geographical explanation), leading to regional food insecurity and economic loss (Consequence)."

Always couple quantitative data with physical or human geographical processes to unlock high-level analysis marks (AO3/AO4).

Fieldwork Mastery: Don't Confuse the 'What' with the 'How'

Section B (Geographical Enquiry) is worth 20 marks on both papers. It tests your primary fieldwork and secondary research skills. One of the most common pitfalls is confusing data presentation methods (e.g., drawing bar charts, pie charts, or scatter graphs) with data collection methods (e.g., conducting questionnaires, measuring velocity, or completing environmental quality surveys).

When evaluating your fieldwork, avoid writing generic "mirror" arguments (e.g., stating that field sketches are "easy to draw" as an advantage and "difficult to draw" as a disadvantage). Instead, focus on issues of accuracy (the precision of your measurements, such as calibrating flowmeters) and reliability (sample size and repeatability, such as taking ten velocity readings per site rather than one). Additionally, never blame "poor weather" or "transport delays" as fieldwork limitations unless you explicitly explain how these factors directly reduced the accuracy or validity of the data you collected.

Study Hacks: Quantitative Prowess and Top Scorer Habits

To secure a Grade 8 or 9, you must master the simple quantitative skills embedded in the syllabus. Ensure you are comfortable computing the median, mode, and range of a dataset. Most importantly, memorize and practice the percentage increase/decrease formula:

\( \text{Percentage Change} = \frac{\text{Difference}}{\text{Original}} \times 100 \)

Always show your step-by-step working out in the spaces provided. If you make a transcription error but show your correct formula and method, Edexcel examiners are instructed to award you a method mark. Omitting your working means a single calculation slip costs you 100% of the marks for that task.

Calculator Programmes

Table mode for roots & turning points

Scientific calculator (e.g. Casio fx-991 series)

Purpose: Tabulate \(y\) across a range of \(x\) to locate sign changes (roots) and approximate maxima/minima.

When to use it: Solving or sketching a function when you want to find where its graph crosses or turns.

Steps
Enter the function in TABLE mode, set the start, end and step, then read where the sign of \(y\) changes or where it peaks.

Exam note: Allowed, but clear stored programs/data (graphical calculators in exam mode) and show the required working — unsupported calculator answers score no method marks.

Statistics mode (mean, SD & regression)

Scientific calculator (e.g. Casio fx-991 series)

Purpose: Read the mean \(\bar{x}\) and standard deviation directly, and the gradient/intercept (and \(r\)) of a linear regression for bivariate data.

When to use it: Any data-handling, statistics, or required-practical analysis question.

Steps
Enter the data in STAT mode (1-VAR or A+BX), then recall \(\bar{x}\), \(\sigma\) or the regression coefficients.

Exam note: Allowed, but clear stored programs/data (graphical calculators in exam mode) and show the required working — unsupported calculator answers score no method marks.

Carry exact values with Ans & memory

Scientific calculator (e.g. Casio fx-991 series)

Purpose: Keep full-precision intermediate values to avoid rounding errors.

When to use it: Multi-step calculations where premature rounding loses the final accuracy mark.

Steps
Use Ans, STO/RCL or the M+ memory to reuse the unrounded result of each step; round only the final answer.

Exam note: Allowed, but clear stored programs/data (graphical calculators in exam mode) and show the required working — unsupported calculator answers score no method marks.

Equation solver — to CHECK your working

Scientific calculator (e.g. Casio fx-991 series)

Purpose: Use the built-in EQN/SOLVE mode to verify roots of quadratics or simultaneous equations you have already solved by algebra.

When to use it: As a check only, after solving by hand.

Steps
Enter the coefficients in EQN mode (or use SOLVE) and confirm they match your worked solution.

Exam note: Allowed, but clear stored programs/data (graphical calculators in exam mode) and show the required working — unsupported calculator answers score no method marks.

Common Mistakes

  1. 1highMarks at stake: 3Geographical Enquiry (Section B)

    Confusing data presentation methods (like bar charts, scatter graphs) with data collection methods (like questionnaires) in Section B.

    How to avoid it: Group your fieldwork concepts clearly: collection is how you obtained the raw measurements, while presentation is how you visually represented those figures on paper.
  2. 2highMarks at stake: 4Resource Booklet Interpretation

    Lifting quantitative data directly from the Resource Booklet figures without providing any geographical context, process, or consequence.

    How to avoid it: Use the 'So What?' technique: quote the exact statistic from the figure, and immediately explain the underlying cause or consequence of that trend.
  3. 3mediumMarks at stake: 2Fieldwork Title and Locations

    Writing generic, non-specific locations for fieldwork (e.g. 'the local river') instead of citing specific geographical locations, site numbers, and project titles.

    How to avoid it: Memorize and write out your exact, formal fieldwork title with named location, county, or country to establish geographical validity immediately.
  4. 4highMarks at stake: 4Extended Writing Essays

    Failing to write a balanced, two-sided argument and a justified final conclusion on high-tariff (8 and 12-mark) questions.

    How to avoid it: Structure your long-form answers to present both viewpoints (e.g., physical vs. human factors) and always dedicate your last paragraph to a clear, summary judgment.
  5. 5mediumMarks at stake: 2River Environments

    Believing that river velocity always decreases downstream due to gentler gradients.

    How to avoid it: Remember that average river velocity actually increases downstream because channels become smoother and more efficient, reducing friction.
  6. 6mediumMarks at stake: 1Quantitative and Statistical Skills

    Omitting mathematical working or units on simple calculations (such as percentage change or range questions).

    How to avoid it: Always write out your formula, show step-by-step substitution, and check that the correct units (e.g., %, m³/s, km³) are clearly appended to the final answer.

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