Verdict on June 2022 Foundation Tier
The June 2022 papers for AQA GCSE Physics (Foundation Tier) were highly accessible and fair, staying closely aligned with standard specification concepts. Paper 1 focused heavily on Energy Changes and Electricity, providing students with formula sheet prompts for nearly every calculation. Paper 2 was dominated by Electromagnetic Waves and Waves in Air, alongside fundamental mechanics. Overall, the papers rewarded students who were confident with basic substitution and formula recall, making it a very balanced assessment series.
Where the Marks Are Won & Lost
A huge proportion of marks came from simple calculation questions. However, many students fell short on unit conversions, such as converting minutes to seconds in charge calculations (\( Q = It \)), or centimeters to meters when working out spring extension. Significant marks were also dropped on the two 6-mark experimental method questions (RPA 5 on density and RPA 9 on refraction). Students frequently missed out on top-band marks by failing to clearly list the equipment used (like a eureka can or protractor) or omitting the final calculation steps (such as state \( \text{density} = \frac{\text{mass}}{\text{volume}} \)).
Examiner Pitfalls & Strategy
Examiners highlighted several common areas where students sabotaged themselves:
- Vague explanations: For the wind turbine unreliability question, stating 'weather' was not credited; students must specify 'wind speed is too low' or 'wind is unreliable'.
- Graph drawing: In the refraction graph, many drew straight lines of best fit when a smooth curve was clearly required.
- Transformers misconception: Many candidates incorrectly believed that step-up transformers increase current rather than potential difference.
Prediction & High-Yield Focus
With Electromagnetic Waves and Waves in Air comprising almost 30% of the Paper 2 marks in this series, future exams are highly likely to re-balance towards Space Physics and Forces and Motion, which were slightly under-represented here. Additionally, expect a heavier focus on Paper 1 topics like Atoms and Nuclear Radiation (specifically half-life graphs) and Domestic Electricity and Safety, which did not feature as prominently in this set.