Coverage status
Launch ready
Practice and learning view are both live.
GCSE
Board-specific revision. Weak-topic repair. Clear next steps.
Explore 42 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
English Language
Coverage status
Launch ready
Practice and learning view are both live.
Topics live
42
Every topic below opens into its revision path.
Topic areas
6
Major syllabus blocks grouped for faster scanning.
Boards shown
9
AQA, Edexcel, OCR
Coverage note
This is one of StudyVector's clearest GCSE English routes right now. Board tags stay visible before practice starts, and the topic tree below is designed to move you straight into method-heavy source, essay, quotation, analysis, and timing repair.
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 GCSE English Language pages built around the exam skills that move marks fastest: precise analysis, viewpoint comparison, source handling, persuasive writing, and timing under pressure. These guides are the clearest routes from subject discovery into real topic repair and practice.
Reading: Fiction
Move from spotting devices to explaining how one precise word or phrase shapes meaning, tone, and reader response.
Reading: Fiction
Track shifts in focus, withholding, openings, endings, and turning points so structure stops feeling like feature-spotting with bigger labels.
Reading: Fiction
Read between the lines with evidence, so implied feelings and attitudes become arguable rather than guessed.
Reading: Non-Fiction
Compare attitudes, priorities, and methods across two texts without writing two disconnected mini-essays.
Writing: Transactional
Build a clear argument with deliberate paragraph control, rhetorical choice, and audience awareness instead of piling up techniques.
Writing: Transactional
Choose the right voice for the task so writing feels controlled, matched to the brief, and easy for an examiner to reward.
Where to start
These topics have the clearest explanations and most complete question coverage.
Reading: Fiction
Move from spotting devices to explaining how one precise word or phrase shapes meaning, tone, and reader response.
Reading: Fiction
Track shifts in focus, withholding, openings, endings, and turning points so structure stops feeling like feature-spotting with bigger labels.
Reading: Fiction
Read between the lines with evidence, so implied feelings and attitudes become arguable rather than guessed.
Reading: Non-Fiction
Compare attitudes, priorities, and methods across two texts without writing two disconnected mini-essays.
Writing: Transactional
Build a clear argument with deliberate paragraph control, rhetorical choice, and audience awareness instead of piling up techniques.
Writing: Transactional
Choose the right voice for the task so writing feels controlled, matched to the brief, and easy for an examiner to reward.
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 · 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.