Hiya! Thank you for visiting my website. There's quite a lot of resources I've published over the years, and I know it can be overwhelming at first. You don't know where to start, what's the difference between various types of tests, and where to find everything. Look no further - this is the one-stop-shop for all your resources. Unit tests: designed to stretch the best students but weaker folks should have enough opportunity to secure an A (in Unit Tests v1) or an A2 (in Unit Tests v2). The number of marks is not indicated for each question - the focus is on getting the easy questions completely correct , not a game of "how much partial credits do I get". To get grade (level) 7, you'll need to be very efficient - working well under time pressure is one of the things I'm also evaluating here. The unit tests for each topic can be found below. Algebra and functions (Topic 1 and 2) Geometry, trigonometry and vectors (Topic 3) Statistics and probabi...
Hello hello hello! I am now back with a fancy project - the ultimate Survival Guide for AASL. If you're struggling and you want an all-in-one Survival Guide, this is it! What's in the Revision Guide? Packed inside this booklet are a series of statements for you to check if you're prepared to get a solid 4 (or even a 5!) on the official exams. You'll also have questions on the right column to check if you know what you're doing. Answers not included. I know y'all don't have time to do all the stuff in hundreds of pages of the RG, and it's hard to find a revision checklist like this online, so I might as well make it available for everyone interested. c; Disclaimer I've tried my best to only include topics that usually pop up quite early on the exams, but do not sue me if the questions on the exam do not exactly match with my preds. Compacting two years of content in a 15-page document means some content will be left out deliberately (you don't ...
Hiya! This is the first post in the series to help students prepare for the TMUA. This is an admission test taken by students applying to some UK universities for mathy programs. TMUA deserves a section on its own because it's a combination of quick thinking and algebraic/calculus fluency. Unlike STEP/MAT that evaluates more extended thinking, TMUA measures whether a candidate can function under pressure and whether the basic motor skills are in place to tackle a large quantity of questions in a relatively short amount of time (20 questions in 75 minutes) - and many questions require a trick or some level of intuition. Level 1 - Motor skills A well-prepared candidate should be able to answer each question in about 2 minutes, or all 77 questions here in less than 3 hours - that will give them buffer to work on harder, unpredictable questions reserved for those aiming at 9.0. Questions are arranged in the same order as the syllabus for Part I, roughly following the AS content....
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