Study FAQ

As I have been working as a Chemistry tutor for a good while now, I have helped a number of students to achieve their A*s and trawled the internet a fair bit. So here are my hot study tips (in form of an FAQ). From how to take your study notes, making a decision of whether or not to buy your own textbook to which online resources to make your go-to study resources. I hope you'll find it helpful. If there is a question you'd like to see answered here, then please drop me an email and I'll get it onto it straight away.

A level Chemistry textbook - Do I need to buy one?

Not necessarily. The internet is full of great revision notes. However, particularly if you are aiming for an A*, having your own textbook may still be worthwhile. Textbooks are more comprehensive than revision guides which often overly compact the content leaving out exam-relevant detail. Textbooks also appear to be proofread more throroughly, so are less likely to have mistakes in them. Most importantly though, they often contain examples and case studies as they could come up in exam questions too. 

If you are unsure which textbook to buy, your teacher will be happy to give advice. I am of course more than happy to give you advice in my lessons too and am also intending to publish a blog article with my own recommendations soon. So stay tuned!

If cost is an issue, check out:

  • School library copies

  • Older students

  • Second-hand websites

Note taking during lessons - What works, what doesn't?

Taking notes during lessons is important. It helps you to start building a first memory layer, keep track of which content you have covered in lessons and helps you decide what to look at during your independent study time. When you find yourself primarily copying things down from powerpoint slides or whiteboards instead of participating in the lesson though, pause and think how that could be improved. Ideally, use the first 1-2 months of your course to optimise your note taking.

In ideal world, your school would be providing you with either the slides or a booklet which you then can supplement with your notes from class. If that is not the case, you can annotate a good set of revision notes of which there are plenty online. I personally recommend the ones from Revisely which are free and can be found here (at least for the following exmboards):

Important to note though is, that no matter how detailed your notes from a lesson are, they should not be your sole resource for preparing for tests. At least not if you haven’t gone over them with a textbook or trusted online resource. Also they are not a replacement for doing practice questions. Also see How do I make the most of my independent study time.

Free online Chemistry resources - which ones are good?

There are plents of free resources out there, so many that one can feel quite overwhelmed and there is a danger of wasting time trying to figure which ones are reliable. 

Here are the ones I recommend to my students:

🔎 For Practice Questions

  • Physics and Maths Tutor
    Excellent for topic-based exam questions organised by exam board.

  • Access Tuition (particularly for AQA)
    Very useful structured question banks.

  • Mr Cole Chemistry
    Clear exam-style practice materials and structured topic support.

Practice questions are where grades are built — not in passive reading.

📚 For Revision Notes

  • Revisely
    Concise and clearly structured summaries.

Revision notes are useful for clarifying understanding — but they should not replace doing exam questions. Physics and Maths Tutor provides summaries for each topic too, but I do prefer the Revisely ones by a long shot.

 

🔬 For Going Beyond the Specification (A* Students)

  • Chemguide
    Fantastic for deeper understanding and stretching yourself beyond surface-level explanations.

If you are aiming for an A*, deeper conceptual understanding makes a big difference — especially in organic and physical chemistry.

 

🎥 For Help With Specific Exam Questions

There are many YouTube walkthroughs of past papers. Some are excellent. Some are… less so.

Use them carefully:

  • Check they are for your exam board and year

  • Follow along actively

  • Pause and attempt the question yourself first

For straightforward questions, tools like ChatGPT can sometimes help clarify steps — but always verify explanations against your textbook or mark scheme. AI explanations are not infallible.

A Final Word

Free resources are powerful — but they are not a substitute for structured guidance.

In my lessons, we spend a significant amount of time working through exam questions together and it's important to me to guide students using prompts rather than simply giving answers, because that active thinking process strengthens retention far more effectively.

Resources support learning.
They don’t replace it.

Flashcards - How to use them most effectively? Online/not online?

Flashcards can be effective when used in the right way, but let’s get the uncomfortable truth out of the way: Creating the flash cards is doing little to nothing with regards of helping you to retain knowledge. If you know you are unlikely to actually use them, there are much more valuable thing you can do with your time. So making them only makes sense if afterwards you are using them regularly for testing yourself. There are some great techniques of how to best use them, for examples keeping separates piles depending on how well you remember their content so that you get to see the ones you are less sure about more often.

Quality matters too. Flashcards are definitely great for memorising definitions. This may be the only way you use them. If you want to go beyond that, orient yourself on exam questions that come up frequently copying the markscheme answers on to your flashcard. This can be a great way to make more of practicing exm questions.

Also consider pre-made online flashcards. My hot tip here is the website called Brainscape where you can access flashcards of former students. There is a particularly good one for AQA students which can be found here.

 

Chemistry specification - Do I really need it for anything?

I do strongly recommend it.  From the wording of definitions, required practicals, depth of detail and style of questions, you find a lot of information in there. While there is a large overlap in content between exam boards, each specification has its own structure, emphasis and quirks.

So, the very first thing I recommend you do at the start of Year 12 is download your specification and save it somewhere easily accessible. And then use it regularly to:

  • Cross-reference it with what you are covering in lessons.
  • Check off topics as you complete them.
  • Look ahead so you know what is coming next.

I find that my A* students are always superaware of where they are within the specification. They understand that the specification is the document the exam paper is written from — not their textbook, not their teacher’s slides.

You can download your specification directly from your exam board’s official website or by clicking on your examboard below.

Download area

Free resources available for download here soon!

Looking for more personalised support?

If you are feeling overwhelmed by the whole prospect of undertaking your Chemistry A level, you are not alone. I have helped many students to achieve their goal. Get in touch today to book a trial session with me.