Guide context
What this page is designed to answer
Students want specialist preparation advice for a named admissions test with a clearer route than generic maths revision.
StudyVector is an early-stage exam platform. These pages are written to help students revise better, then move into useful practice without pretending official specifications or past papers do not still matter.
Use this page to prepare for TMUA with stronger algebra, cleaner decision-making, and a better approach to multiple-choice admissions questions.
Supported boards
Cross-check official specifications and past papers with AQA, Pearson Edexcel and OCR. StudyVector is independent and not exam-board affiliated.
TMUA catches students out because it rewards mathematical reasoning under time pressure, not just the ability to complete longer textbook questions. This page is built to help students make that shift. It focuses on the reasoning patterns, topic families, and paper habits that matter most once the basics are in place.
Start light first
Start with low-focus cards, drill by topic, or see summer 2026 predicted angles — then set your course and exam board when you want the full loop.
Start low-focus cards · Exam questions by topic · Predicted topics 2026 · All subjects
Guide context
Students want specialist preparation advice for a named admissions test with a clearer route than generic maths revision.
Revision method
TMUA rewards fast reasoning, clean algebra, and the ability to tell which idea is relevant without grinding through every possible route. That makes it different from both school papers and open-ended problems like STEP.
Preparation should therefore combine topic security with plenty of short reasoning checks and review of why an option was right or wrong.
Rotate between core algebra, functions, graphs, sequences, and logical reasoning habits. Then add timed multiple-choice sets where the review is as important as the score.
StudyVector helps most by strengthening the underlying maths topics and giving students a clearer diagnostic picture before they jump back into timed admissions practice.
Example questions
Reasoning
Understanding why the chosen route was wrong and what clue should have pushed you towards the correct reasoning pattern.
Timing
Because speed without understanding just hardens mistakes. Untimed review helps students build the right pattern first.
Foundation
Secure algebra, function reasoning, graph interpretation, and strong symbolic manipulation all matter a lot.
The page is built around the actual demands of STEP or TMUA rather than pretending normal school revision is enough.
Admissions tests reward selection of method, algebraic control, and calm checking habits more than volume alone.
Difficult maths improves faster when mistakes are diagnosed clearly instead of filed under 'need to practise more'.
Students can move from the strategy page into harder maths guides, topic revision, and a free practice start without losing the thread.
Pick your route
Subject cards show board support and coverage upfront, so you can decide faster instead of clicking through blind.
No. It draws heavily on school maths, but the style and reasoning pressure are different enough that preparation should be more targeted.
Yes, but not all the time. Untimed review is useful for understanding why the reasoning works before you push the pace.
Treating it like a normal school paper and not adjusting for the speed and reasoning demands of multiple-choice admissions maths.
Questions follow AQA, Edexcel, OCR, WJEC, Eduqas, CCEA, Cambridge International (CIE), Pearson Edexcel International, OxfordAQA International, SQA, IB, AP spec wording — not generic AI answers. Start light, then save progress when you want the full loop.