Coverage status
Launch ready
Practice and learning view are both live.
GCSE
Board-specific revision. Weak-topic repair. Clear next steps.
Explore 66 topics with exam-style questions, worked methods, and a subject route built to show where marks are leaking first.
Start with no-account low-focus cards, or browse exam questions by topic. Where available, derived exam-style and prediction content is labelled clearly so the route stays honest.
Board-specific revision
Chemistry
Coverage status
Launch ready
Practice and learning view are both live.
Topics live
66
Every topic below opens into its revision path.
Topic areas
10
Major syllabus blocks grouped for faster scanning.
Boards shown
9
AQA, Edexcel, OCR
Coverage note
This is one of StudyVector's deepest GCSE science routes right now. Board tags stay visible before practice starts, and the topic tree below is ready for direct revision sessions, equation repair, and topic-by-topic catch-up.
Predicted papers
Use these after topic revision to test timing, mark allocation and weak areas. They are independent practice papers, not official, leaked or guaranteed papers.
This route keeps AQA, Edexcel, OCR, WJEC, Eduqas, CCEA, CIE, SQA, OxfordAQA visible before you start, so practice stays tied to the right specification.
StudyVector is built to show where marks are leaking and what to fix next, not just give you another list of disconnected revision pages.
Progress comes from verified practice, weak topics become repair zones, and the motivation layer is tied to return behaviour instead of grind.
Featured topic guides
High-intent Chemistry pages built around atomic structure, bonding, equations, moles, and reaction-rate routes students repeatedly meet in exam season. These guides are the clearest routes from subject discovery into real topic repair and practice.
Atomic Structure & Periodic Table
Build secure particle language so proton, neutron, electron, ion, and isotope questions stop leaking easy marks.
Bonding & Structure
Use electron transfer and ion formation step by step instead of relying on half-remembered diagrams.
Bonding & Structure
Explain shared pairs, structures, and properties with the particle model rather than isolated definitions.
Quantitative Chemistry
Turn balancing into a repeatable counting method so you stop changing formulas and losing foundational marks.
Quantitative Chemistry
Use formula mass and structured conversion steps to make the mole feel like a routine instead of a panic topic.
Rate & Extent of Chemical Change
Connect collision theory, graph reading, and required-practical logic so rate questions feel predictable.
Where to start
These topics have the clearest explanations and most complete question coverage.
Atomic Structure & Periodic Table
Build secure particle language so proton, neutron, electron, ion, and isotope questions stop leaking easy marks.
Bonding & Structure
Use electron transfer and ion formation step by step instead of relying on half-remembered diagrams.
Bonding & Structure
Explain shared pairs, structures, and properties with the particle model rather than isolated definitions.
Quantitative Chemistry
Turn balancing into a repeatable counting method so you stop changing formulas and losing foundational marks.
Quantitative Chemistry
Use formula mass and structured conversion steps to make the mole feel like a routine instead of a panic topic.
Rate & Extent of Chemical Change
Connect collision theory, graph reading, and required-practical logic so rate questions feel predictable.
Tap a node to open the revision guide for that topic — each URL is indexed for search. Your mastery ring fills as you practise (signed in).
GCSE
Commander Vector: “Secure each node — build fluency before exam day.”
Low-focus subject cards · Play Daily · Predicted topics for this course · Exam questions by topic · Start low-focus cards · More predicted papers
Next step
Open structured topic lessons, or go straight into exam-style question practice for your board. If you want a lower-friction start, use low-focus cards first and let the topic signal decide the next step.
Jump between connected courses so you can compare specs, revise adjacent subjects, or keep the momentum going.