If you're revising for GCSE Physics, one of the smartest things you can do is know exactly what's coming up in each paper — before you sit down to revise. This guide breaks down the paper structure for the three main exam boards: AQA, OCR Gateway, and Edexcel.
AQA GCSE Physics
AQA Physics is split into two papers, each worth 50% of your final grade:
- Paper 1 — Energy, Electricity, Particle Model of Matter, Atomic Structure
- Paper 2 — Forces, Waves, Magnetism & Electromagnetism, Space Physics (Higher only)
Both papers include multiple choice, structured questions, and extended response questions. Required practicals can appear in either paper.
OCR Gateway GCSE Physics
OCR Gateway also uses two papers:
- Paper 1 (Breadth in Physics) — Matter, Forces, Electricity, Magnetism, Waves, Radioactivity
- Paper 2 (Depth in Physics) — Same topic areas but tested in greater depth, with more application and analysis questions
OCR tends to include more context-based questions, so practising applying your knowledge to unfamiliar scenarios is key.
Edexcel GCSE Physics
Edexcel Physics is examined across two papers:
- Paper 1 — Key concepts, Motion & Forces, Conservation of Energy, Waves, Light & the Electromagnetic Spectrum, Radioactivity
- Paper 2 — Energy, Forces & their Effects, Electricity & Circuits, Magnetism & the Motor Effect, Space Physics
Edexcel papers include a mix of calculation, short answer, and extended writing questions.
Top Tips for All Exam Boards
- Download your exam board's specification and tick off topics as you revise them
- Practise required practical questions — they appear in every paper
- Use retrieval practice to test yourself on key equations and definitions
- Don't leave Space Physics until last — it's a common trap for AQA Higher students
Knowing your paper structure means you can prioritise your revision time effectively. Good luck!
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