Most students don’t struggle with GCSE chemistry because they aren’t clever enough. They struggle because they revise the wrong way — re‑reading notes, highlighting until the page glows, and hoping it sticks. It rarely does.
After 30 years teaching chemistry and marking real exam papers, I’ve seen exactly what separates a grade 5 from a grade 8. The good news? It’s a method, and you can learn it. Here’s a realistic revision plan you can actually stick to.
1. Start with the specification, not the textbook
Your exam board (AQA, Edexcel or OCR) publishes a specification — the exact list of everything you can be tested on. Download it. This is your revision checklist.
Go through it and RAG‑rate every topic:
- 🔴 Red — I don’t understand this
- 🟠 Amber — I sort of get it
- 🟢 Green — I could teach this
Now you know precisely where to spend your time. Most students waste hours re‑revising green topics because they feel comfortable, and avoid the red ones because they feel hard. Do the opposite.
2. Revise actively, not passively
Reading and highlighting feel productive, but they’re passive — the information goes in one eye and out the other. Real revision is active: you have to make your brain retrieve the information.
Swap re‑reading for these:
- Blurting: close your notes, write down everything you remember about a topic, then check what you missed.
- Flashcards: question on one side, answer on the other. Test yourself, don’t just read them.
- Teach it out loud: explain electrolysis to an empty room (or a patient family member). If you can’t explain it, you don’t yet understand it.
If you only change one thing about how you revise, make it this.
3. Master the three “maths” topics early
The topics that cost students the most marks in GCSE chemistry are almost always the calculation‑heavy ones:
- Moles and formula calculations
- Concentrations
- Percentage yield and atom economy
These feel scary, but they’re just a handful of methods repeated over and over. Practise them until the method is automatic. Once moles “click”, a whole tier of exam marks opens up — and that’s often the difference between a 5 and a 7.
4. Practise past‑paper questions (this is the real revision)
Notes get you familiar with the content. Past‑paper questions get you the marks. They train you to:
- recognise what a question is really asking,
- structure answers the way the mark scheme rewards,
- and handle the pressure of the wording under time.
Do questions topic‑by‑topic as you finish revising each one, then full papers closer to the exam. Always mark your answers against the official mark scheme — and pay attention to the exact words it wants. As an examiner, I can tell you: marks are won and lost on precise vocabulary.
5. Learn the “6‑mark” technique
Extended‑response (6‑mark) questions terrify students, but they follow a pattern. Plan for 30 seconds, cover the points logically, use correct chemical terms, and link cause to effect. (I’ve written a whole post on this — see below.)
6. Build a plan you’ll actually follow
A realistic plan beats a perfect one you abandon in week two:
- Revise in short focused blocks (25–35 minutes) with short breaks.
- Cover one topic per session, ending with a few past‑paper questions.
- Spread it out — revising a topic three times across three weeks beats cramming it once.
- Rotate subjects; don’t do chemistry for five hours straight.
The bottom line
Effective GCSE chemistry revision is active, spaced, and built around your weak topics — with past‑paper practice at its heart. Do that consistently and your grade will climb, because you’ll finally be revising the way the exam actually rewards.
If you’d like a revision plan built specifically around your exam board, your target grade, and your weak spots, that’s exactly what I do.
👉 Book a free intro call and let’s find out where you are — and where you could be.
