GCSE Maths · Topic guide
Foundation tier targets grades 1–5; Higher targets 4–9 (grade 4 is overlapping). Higher includes more algebra, proof, advanced trig and functions; Foundation still covers the full ‘number’ strand and core algebra but with less depth. Your school enters you for a tier — revision should match past papers for that tier so you’re not practising topics you won’t see or missing ones you will. If you’re borderline, teachers weigh confidence, target grade and sixth-form requirements.
Worked examples & mini quiz
Use your exam board’s specification to see tier coverage. Past papers are the truth test: time yourself, mark strictly, then plug gaps with topic practice. StudyVector adapts practice to your course when you’ve set your exam board.
Example 1
Overlapping grades
Grade 4 and 5 can be awarded on both tiers on many boards — the demand of questions differs, not just the label.
Example 2
Higher-only examples
Topics like standard form across contexts, advanced trig, or certain proof questions typically sit in Higher papers — check your board’s list.
Tap a row to reveal the answer — then start full adaptive practice for instant marking and feedback.
1. Which is a sensible revision priority for any tier?
Correct: Past papers for your tier + fixing weak topicsExam-style practice and targeted gaps beat passive reading.
2. Before mocks, you should know:
Correct: Whether you’re entered Foundation or HigherTier determines which past papers and topics to prioritise.
3. Grade overlap between tiers often includes:
Correct: Grades 4 and 5Many boards award 4/5 on both tiers; check your specification.
Opens StudyVector practice with your exam board context when you're signed in. Mixed sets may include a second weak topic from the same subject when data supports it.
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GCSE Maths subject hub · Exam questions by topic · GCSE Maths predicted topics · Free question.
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