Board support stays visible before you click
Every subject route shows exam board tags and readiness labels up front, so you do not waste time on the wrong spec or a thin page.
Pick your subject, verify your board, answer a real question, and move into flashcards, AI practice, or Error Log repair without getting lost in a generic revision directory.
Supported boards
GCSE revision usually breaks down for one simple reason: students spend too long trying to work out which resource actually matches their exam board, their weak topic, and the way they need to revise right now. This hub is built to fix that. Start with the subject that matters, see the coverage labels before you click through, and then move into real topic routes, worked examples, flashcards, AI practice, and Error Log repair. Mathematics, sciences, humanities, English, social sciences, and languages are all surfaced earlier here because exam-season demand is not limited to one lane.
Why students switch
These pages are designed to do more than list resources. They show your board, surface the next useful action, and keep revision tied to real exam improvement.
Every subject route shows exam board tags and readiness labels up front, so you do not waste time on the wrong spec or a thin page.
Maths, sciences, humanities, English, social sciences, languages, computing, and business now surface stronger topic-entry routes instead of sitting behind generic subject names.
Use the free GCSE revision path to see how weak-topic detection and feedback work, then save progress when you want the full loop.
GCSE routes
These are the fastest subject routes for GCSE students. Each card shows board tags, readiness, topic depth, and where to go next.
GCSE
Source work, period understanding and essay planning across GCSE topics.
Launch-ready against strict trust/depth gates.
GCSE
Human and physical geography organised into easier revision sections.
Launch-ready against strict trust/depth gates.
GCSE
Number, algebra, geometry and statistics with step-by-step support.
Launch-ready against strict trust/depth gates.
GCSE
Biology, Chemistry and Physics combined into a single GCSE revision path.
Launch-ready against strict trust/depth gates.
GCSE
Reading analysis, transactional writing and creative writing support.
Launch-ready against strict trust/depth gates.
GCSE
Texts, quotations, themes and essay structure in calmer revision blocks.
Launch-ready against strict trust/depth gates.
GCSE
Atomic structure, bonding and reactions broken into manageable topics.
Launch-ready against strict trust/depth gates.
GCSE
Cells, organisation, infection and ecosystems for GCSE revision.
Launch-ready against strict trust/depth gates.
More subject routes
Sample topic depth
Percentage change appears everywhere in GCSE Maths — from shop discounts to interest and data questions. Examiners reward clear structure: find the change, divide by the original, then multiply by 100. Reverse percentages are the same idea backwards: treat the new amount as a percentage of the original you do not yet know.
Read the full guide (shareable link) →
Example 1
Basic increase
A £40 jacket increases in price by 15%. Change = 0.15 × £40 = £6. New price = £40 + £6 = £46. As one multiplier: £40 × 1.15 = £46.
Example 2
Reverse percentage (after a sale)
After a 20% reduction, a console costs £360. What was the original price? Sale price is 80% of original → 0.8 × original = £360. Original = £360 ÷ 0.8 = £450. Check: 20% off £450 is £90, leaving £360.
Tap a row to reveal the answer — then start full adaptive practice for instant marking and feedback.
1. A stock rises from £50 to £58. What is the percentage increase?
Correct: 16%
Change = £8. 8/50 = 0.16 → 16%.
2. A population falls by 30% to 14,000. What was the population before the fall?
Correct: 20,000
New = 70% of old → old = 14,000 ÷ 0.7 = 20,000.
3. Which step is always wrong for percentage change?
Correct: Dividing the change by the new value
Percentage change uses the original value as the denominator.
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.
Try one free question (no account)·Sign up for full adaptive practice
Summer 2026 GCSE exams run from Monday 11 May to Friday 26 June across all major exam boards (AQA, Edexcel, OCR). Most students sit exams in the morning and afternoon slots during this period, with English Language and Maths typically scheduled in the first two weeks. Check your school timetable for exact dates as individual exam slots vary by board and subject combination.
Mock exams usually take place in February and March 2026, giving you a clear benchmark of where you stand before the final push. Use StudyVector's practice mode to simulate exam conditions and identify weak topics early, so you can focus revision time where it matters most in the months leading up to May.
Use this page as a route selector, not as a place to get stuck reading about revision forever. First, pick the subject that matches your actual course. Second, check the board tags and the coverage label so you know whether the lane is launch ready, partial, beta, or still coming soon. Third, open the subject hub or topic tree and move into the topic you are weakest on.
If you are not ready to make an account yet, use the free GCSE revision or free-question path first. That lets StudyVector prove the feedback loop before you commit. Once you know the experience fits, you can save progress, keep your board attached, and turn weak topics into the next practical revision steps, whether that is percentage repair in Maths, chemical analysis in Chemistry, source analysis in English Language, or equation repair in Physics.
A normal free revision page can explain a topic, but it often cannot tell you whether the next useful task is recall, method, application, or exam technique. StudyVector links exam-board revision, AI practice, flashcards, weak-topic detection, and the Error Log so a missed answer becomes a named repair task instead of a vague note to revise harder.
That matters for broad searches like GCSE revision and free GCSE revision websites because students do not need more tabs for the sake of it. They need a path from subject, to topic, to question, to feedback, to the next best practice step.
Start by matching the exam board and the subject name, then look at the readiness note. That note matters because two GCSE routes can both exist while having different depth or different practice states. History and Geography are especially important here because students often assume they are less supported than the core STEM subjects, and Maths matters because students need method-led entry points rather than another giant list of mixed topics; this hub makes that visibility explicit.
The strongest revision route is usually the one that sends you into a specific topic quickly. If you already know your weak area, jump there. If you do not, answer one question first and let the feedback push you into the right part of the course. That is much safer than scrolling through generic study tips with no clear next action, especially in subjects like Maths, English Language, English Literature, Psychology, Economics, Religious Studies, French, Spanish, Computer Science, and Business where method matters as much as content.
Topic list
These are the strongest entry-point GCSE pages right now: method-heavy, exam-aware, and designed to move students from understanding into practice quickly across the most in-demand routes.
Start with the subject you actually take, then use board tags and coverage notes to avoid wasting time on the wrong lane.
Worked examples, mini-checks and topic guides sit underneath the hub, so you can tell the difference between a real route and a thin landing page.
Students who are not ready to sign up can answer one real GCSE question first, then decide whether to continue with the full loop.
Use the hub to get straight into the topic that is costing marks, then use AI practice, flashcards, and the Error Log to repair it.
Use it to choose the right subject route quickly. Check the board tags and readiness note, open the subject hub or topic tree, then move into the topic you need most. If you are unsure, try the free GCSE revision path or one free question first and let the feedback guide the next step.
Yes. Open the subjects truth layer to compare GCSE cards by board tags, readiness labels, topic counts, and preview topics before creating an account.
Yes. Maths, History, and Geography are surfaced directly from this hub and the subjects page, and curated English Language, English Literature, Psychology, Economics, Religious Studies, French, Spanish, Computer Science, Business, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, and Combined Science topic guides now sit alongside them for faster exam-season routing.
Major GCSE routes include AQA, Edexcel, OCR, WJEC, Eduqas, CCEA, Cambridge International (CIE), SQA, IB, AP where listed. Always check the board tags and readiness note on the subject card for the most accurate view of current coverage.
Yes. Use the free-question route to answer one real question first, then sign up when you want to save progress and continue with the full revision loop.
Questions follow AQA, Edexcel, OCR, WJEC, Eduqas, CCEA, Cambridge International (CIE), SQA, IB, AP spec wording — not generic AI answers. Start free, or try one question first.