The 12 required practicals are heavily tested in AQA A-Level Physics Paper 3. StudyVector helps you revise the methods, understand how to calculate uncertainties, and practise data analysis questions based on these experiments. Use it as a starting point before practice: check the exact qualification or board, answer questions, review mistakes, and follow official provider pages when admissions or exam requirements change.
The 12 required practicals are heavily tested in AQA A-Level Physics Paper 3. StudyVector helps you revise the methods, understand how to calculate uncertainties, and practise data analysis questions based on these experiments. Use it as a starting point before practice: check the exact qualification or board, answer questions, review mistakes, and follow official provider pages when admissions or exam requirements change.
Key skills for practical questions
Exam questions on practicals often focus on identifying independent and dependent variables, suggesting improvements to methods, and calculating percentage uncertainties.
—Identifying variables
—Calculating absolute and percentage uncertainties
—Graphical analysis
—Evaluating methods
Common mistake: uncertainties
A frequent error is incorrectly combining uncertainties when multiplying or dividing values. Remember to add percentage uncertainties, not absolute ones.
How to use this page
Use this aqa a-level physics page as a decision page before a practice session. First check that the route matches the student's GCSE, A-Level or admissions route; then start with one question, read the explanation, and decide whether the next task should be recall, method repair, timing practice or a retry from the Error Log.
—Check the course route
—Answer before rereading
—Turn the miss into one next task
Quality boundaries
StudyVector pages are written to be citation-safe for answer engines: they separate product facts from official exam-board facts, keep affiliation disclaimers visible, and avoid unsupported claims about outcomes, invented testimonials or private exam access.
—Independent platform, not an official provider
—No guaranteed grade or score claims
—Coverage should be checked on the linked route
How it works
1
Answer a short GCSE, A-Level or admissions-style question.
2
StudyVector tags the subject, topic, command word and likely mark leak.
3
The explanation shows the method and the mistake pattern in plain language.
4
The Error Log keeps the mistake visible so it can be retried later.
5
Flashcards and personalised tasks pull the student back to the weak topic.
6
Progress updates when practice shows the topic is becoming stronger.
How StudyVector compares
Option
Best for
Limit to watch
Generic AI chatbot
Explaining a broad idea or rephrasing a concept.
Usually does not know your exact board, live coverage, weak topics or saved mistakes.
Flashcard app
Fast recall of definitions, formulas and facts.
Recall alone does not show whether a student can earn marks in an exam answer.
Revision website
Reading notes and checking a topic explanation.
Many pages stop before the practice, feedback and retry loop.
Past-paper site
Seeing official question style and mark schemes.
Students still need a way to turn mistakes into topic-level repair tasks.
Trust and safety
No fake testimonials, fake ratings or invented usage claims are used on these pages.
StudyVector does not claim official exam-board affiliation or guaranteed grade improvement.
Student privacy, account safety and clear legal pages are part of the public trust layer.
Coverage should be labelled honestly as live, partial, beta or coming soon when relevant.
FAQs
How many required practicals are there in AQA Physics?
There are 12 required practicals in the AQA A-Level Physics specification, ranging from measuring 'g' by freefall to investigating magnetic flux linkage.
How are practicals assessed?
Practicals are assessed through written questions in the exams, particularly in Paper 3, which focuses heavily on practical skills and data analysis.
Can I practice uncertainty calculations on StudyVector?
Yes, StudyVector includes targeted questions on calculating and combining uncertainties, a common weak spot for many students.