A GCSE SLANDER OF the final math gcse exam. Which is Maths paper 3. We're so close guys. Just a few more left to go then we will be finished. Please check out my other videos like Biology, English and Maths paper 1 and 2. Thanks
Geometric sequence, the fucking plan drawing, the volume of a pyramid 💀 that last question as well. Functions were good questions tho! I hated the counter bags ratio question
Well done to all who sat that dreaded maths exam paper 3. whether you sat Edexcel, aqa or OCR (like I did) they were such unforgiving papers so don't ever worry if you feel completely devastated coming out that hall today - Believe me everyone felt it. Anyway Good luck for everyone doing history and chemistry tomorrow! Get some rest, put some hard work in and remember you've got this!
same for AQA, it used to be 4 questions about 1 markers which were multiple choice but now its 2 or 3 questions with bigger questions (but this is easier!)
I was able to do the last question but it took me like 30 minutes (It took me 50 min to do all other questions) because I had no idea what to do in the first 20 lol
My luck today was amazing. I geussed what a plan was, I solved the geometric as a quadratic, i did trial and error for arithmetic. Today was a good day.
@@IbraFN223 most likely as last year they had predicted questions so like they new some of the topics that could come up which made it a lot easier for them obviously we didn’t have that tbh there was no need for the equation sheet anyway cuz you didn’t need it for any question
@@4thAccnt im sorry i had a stroke reading that, but i still think grade boundaries are going to be either the same as pre-covid times or higher. i doubt they'll lower it although that would be amazing.
@@FreddieBarlow-fp4lq for edexcel higher? do you mean the probability tree question? because that was earlier in the paper and literally so easy lol. if not, then i'm guessing you mean a different exam board
How did people get that hexagon question like I got the radius as 6 which was fine for showing the inner hexagon but no clue for how to prove 2 root3 on the outer one💀
@ldrgrm-venom_grim-pg3dandm64 (thinking now, it's 3 not 6 😅) so from memory, I labelled the centre and with the hexagon, you can connect two lines from two of the hexagon's angles to the centre. Because you're forming the triangle inside the hexagon, you know the angle at the centre equals 60° and because the hexagon is regular and the two lengths from the centre are the same, you can assume the bottom side of the hexagon is the same length leaving an equilateral triangle. You know the length of the triangle is 3 as given by the question so the radius is also 3. It's then proved as pi (3x2) is the circumference and the perimeter of the hexagon therefore is 18. Divide each by 6 and you show 3
Teachers lied to students telling them it wasn’t on the spec but it was and if you saw the retakes of November 2023 they had similar but with rationlizing
What did everyone put as the reason on that plan question i said the arrow is pointed at the front not the side bc i didnt know why bro was incorrect 💀💀
I believe if iam not mistaken it was like a spot the difference the person drew 7cm long at the top when it should’ve been 4cm and then she drew 4cm on the sides where is should’ve been 7cm
aqa people are so lucky. edexcel are probably laughing to themselves and drinking our tears after cultivating some of the most evil questions for this year's paper
Anyone who did edexcel foundation - what did you guys get for the question with the two triangles and one was x4 , then you had to put in the form of 1:n
@@Styxqw oh yeah I remember, on the bright side I’m sure they examiner will find it quite funny when they see the lower bound about ten thousand times higher than the original value lol
@@LemonTene08 NOO i had to answers. one of them being 10.125 and the other one was 13.5. i didnt know which one so i just guessed and i ended up picking the wrong answer omds
Umm actually, the final question was quite simple, all you had to do was get 6r for the small hexagon, get 2xpixr for circle, and 4r root 3. It literally said use perimeters. For the large hexagon, you make 2 isosceles triangles and use sin rule to find half of the side (2r root 3) and x2 to get 4r root 3. You then put them in a inequality and simplify by dividing by 2 and removing r, getting you 3
No but the triangle - prism question was so hard though I was nearly accepting defeat and literally just sat there for a few mins then did a equation (I did Pythagoras it’s def wrong 😭) then sat there again and so on 🥹