← Maths Guides

A-level

Guides for Years 12 and 13 — core topics explained with interactive examples.

Pure mathematics

Integration: The Three Main Tricks

Substitution, integration by parts, and changing the form — the three techniques that unlock the vast majority of integrals. Includes partial fractions, trig identities, and De Moivre's theorem for Further Maths.

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Study skills

The Power of Checking

Mathematics is almost unique among school subjects in letting you verify your own answers. A systematic guide to twelve checking techniques — from back-substitution to dimensional analysis to recovering simpler cases.

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Further Core Pure

Pythagorean Triples

Discover the infinite family of Pythagorean triples and how a 4,000-year-old Babylonian tablet fits into modern matrix algebra. Includes a live Python code editor.

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Further Core Pure

Improper Integrals

When a limit of integration is infinite or the integrand blows up, replace the problem point with a parameter and take a limit. Convergence, divergence, the p-integral, and where L'Hôpital's rule appears.

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Decision mathematics

The Handshaking Lemma and Graph Traversability

The sum of all vertex degrees equals twice the number of edges — and this one fact immediately tells you whether a graph can be traversed without repeating an edge, and whether the journey must start and end at the same point.

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Further Mechanics

1D and 2D Collisions: Avoiding Double-Counted Signs

The most common error in collision problems is mixing signed velocities with unsigned speeds. Use the velocity form of Newton's Experimental Law throughout and the algebra handles the signs automatically.

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Further Mechanics

Centres of Mass: Integrals as Limits of Sums

The integral formula for centre of mass is the natural limit of a discrete weighted average. Laminae, regions between curves, and solids of revolution — all follow from the same idea.

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Statistics

Statistics: All Roads Lead to Hypothesis Testing

Binomial, normal, t, Poisson, chi-squared and more — every test asks the same question. See how eleven distributions and tests are unified by one central idea.

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Statistics

Generating Functions are Maclaurin Series

Polynomials, binomial expansions, and standard series (eˣ, sin x, cos x, ln) are all the same thing. One formula — differentiate, evaluate at zero, divide by n! — derives them all.

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Further Pure (optional)

L’Hôpital’s Rule: a rule for determining limits

The rule is formally examined only in optional Further Pure, yet the limits it resolves appear throughout A-level Maths and compulsory Further Pure. Includes the rewriting trick for products and recursive application.

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