Full coverage of every topic on the GCSE maths checklist! Link below to download! Get personalised study plans, unlimited access to content, and instant feedback with our revision quizzes. Don't miss out on your chance to upgrade! 📈 🚨 TGMT Upgrade - thegcsemathstutor.co.uk/upgrade-vsp/ 🚨 Download the PDF booklet here: thegcsemathstutor.co.uk/freesource-gcse-maths-practice-papers/ Freesources: 🔥Download my FREE Ultimate Revision Guide for the 2023 exam here🔥 thegcsemathstutor.co.uk/freesource-gcse-maths-revision-guide/ 💡 FREE Higher and Foundation Revision Checklist 2023💡 thegcsemathstutor.co.uk/freesource-gcse-maths-revision-checklist/ 🔥Download my FREE practice booklets for the 2023 exam here🔥 thegcsemathstutor.co.uk/freesource-gcse-maths-practice-papers/
@@10xfactsabout unfortunately not as year 10 mocks will be decided by teachers based on the curriculum path that schools follow! This will be different between schools so it’s best to use something like my “everything for a grade 5” and “everything for a grade 6-9” videos 😁
@@TheGCSEMathsTutor Hi i need a seperate checklist like for paper 1 2 and 3 but like not combined if you know what i mean or if you have seperate checklists i got one from last year for the 2022 GCSE maths it has topics for paper 1 and 2 and 3 do you reckon i should use that again please reply asap as i need your help thanks 🙏
Everyone’s commenting how easy foundation maths is to pass but you need practically full marks which is hard. I feel as though the questions are worded horribly in GCSE papers, once it’s explained to me everything makes sense but just reading it confuses the heck out of me. Although there’s the odd question they throw in and I sit there in my mocks so confused, and brain fog kicks in. I have just over a week to get my grade 3 to a 4. Maths is the one subject I’ve always found hard, I just can’t understand how you start some questions or why I need to know some of the content on these papers. There’s so much pressure on Foundation people just to obtain that grade 4. Personally, the boundaries should be lowered because it’s just ridiculous.
at the end of the day youve had alot of time to revise maths, and foundation especially doesn't have too much tricky topics, only really the final 5 questions
@@Ricardo0777 Yes but no, it’s not how this works. It may have seemed like a ‘long time’ but in reality it really isn’t. As I stated, maths is a weak subject for me because it takes me a long time to learn and process the content, plus Covid fucked up a lot of my skills, I had shit teachers for most of my school years. It’s a subject that I could revise for years on end but still never fully understand.
Foundation is extremely easy, Its harder to pass though than Higher Tier, in foundation you need 150/200 marks total to Pass, In Higher you need only 40/200
hi sir, is there any predictions for maths paper 1 foundation tier and what do you think would the paper be easy, and I really appreciate the effort you put in your videos which means a-lot x!
You can use SOHCAHTOA to determine which trigonometric ratio to use in a right triangle problem, depending on what sides and angles are given. Here's how you can use SOHCAHTOA to identify the trigonometric ratio to use: Determine which angle is relevant to the problem. Identify the two sides that are associated with that angle. One side will be the hypotenuse and the other will either be the opposite or adjacent. Determine which trigonometric ratio corresponds to the sides you have identified using SOHCAHTOA. For example, if you are given the hypotenuse and the opposite side of a right triangle and you are asked to find the angle opposite to the given side, you would use the sine ratio because you have the opposite and hypotenuse sides, and SOHCAHTOA tells you that sine is opposite/hypotenuse. In summary, you can use SOHCAHTOA to identify the appropriate trigonometric ratio for a right triangle problem by analyzing the given sides and angles and matching them up with the corresponding ratios.
i think so yeh as they have different expectations for you i would watch other videos for that exam board but im pretty sure you can also watch this as maths is math
IGCSE is little easier, IGCSE just means the qualification is valid internationally, while GCSE is only valid in the UK, so you couldn't get a job in another country.
No there are some differences, paper 1 is calculator for iGSCE, there are also couple of extra topics such as differentiation and stationary points etc 😁🙏🏼
Hi tutor i have a quick question at the start of the video that revision checklist is it for paper 1 or just the whole foundation tier in general please reply asap thanks because i really need a checklist that's separated for example a checklist for paper 1,2,3 thanks a lot 🙏