Examiner-informed workshops. Not more content — exam mastery.
If you are sitting AQA A Level Mathematics 7357 -- England's largest awarding body for A Level Maths -- this page covers every paper, current grade thresholds, and exactly how our workshops are mapped to your specification.
AQA mark schemes place particular emphasis on the clarity and logical structure of mathematical reasoning, not just correct answers. Students who understand the content consistently lose marks on:
AQA examiner reports consistently identify proof as the highest-loss topic area on Paper 1 -- not because students can\'t do the mathematics, but because they can\'t write it in the form AQA mark schemes accept.
Paper 1 is the only non-calculator paper -- students who rely on calculator habits built up on Papers 2 and 3 make avoidable arithmetic and manipulation errors under exam conditions.
AQA Mechanics questions often require explicit statement of modelling assumptions (e.g. "the particle is modelled as...") -- omitting this loses marks even when the subsequent calculation is correct.
Large data set familiarity and statistical interpretation in context are tested directly -- students who can perform the calculation but can't interpret it in the scenario given lose the interpretation marks.
Our workshops are built from these patterns — not from the textbook.
Every workshop follows the same structure: the examiner's pattern for that paper is deconstructed first (Anatomy), then solved live with the mark scheme revealed at each stage (Drill), then you attempt it yourself with peer comparison (Close), then your own questions are answered (Open Forum). 87% of students report that seeing a peer's different approach revealed a method they had never considered.
AQA 7357 is a linear A Level assessed across three papers, all sat in the same series (300 marks total). Paper 1 is non-calculator; Papers 2 and 3 are calculator papers. Our workshops are scheduled per paper, not per topic.
| Paper | Title | Duration | Marks | Weighting | Key Topics |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P1 | Pure (No Calculator) | 2h | 100 | 33.3% | Proof, algebra, functions, calculus, trigonometry, vectors, sequences |
| P2 | Pure & Mechanics | 2h | 100 | 33.3% | Pure continuation, kinematics, forces, Newton's Laws, moments, projectiles |
| P3 | Pure & Statistics | 2h | 100 | 33.3% | Pure continuation, statistical sampling, hypothesis testing, normal distribution, probability |
Grade boundaries are set after marking based on cohort performance and paper difficulty -- Ofqual's comparable outcomes system. The table below shows the official overall qualification threshold (300 marks total).
| Session | A* | A | B | C | D | E |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 2025 | 260 | 221 | 183 | 145 | 108 | 71 |
Out of 300 (overall qualification -- Papers 1, 2, 3). Source: AQA published subject grade boundaries, June 2025. Always verify current boundaries at aqa.org.uk -- boundaries are set after each series and change every session.
An A* in June 2025 required 260/300 -- 87% of available marks, among the highest A* thresholds of any A Level subject that session. Small mark losses across three papers compound quickly at this level.
Mark schemes attach specific meaning to command words. Misreading one of these costs marks the student's working had already earned.
| Command Word | What It Demands | Common Student Error | Workshop Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prove / Show that | A complete, logically structured argument written in formal mathematical language -- every step must follow from the last with stated justification | Mathematically correct working that "jumps" between steps without stating the justification AQA mark schemes require to see explicitly | Anatomy phase: Paper 1 proof questions deconstructed line-by-line against AQA's published mark scheme language |
| Verify | Substitute the given value and confirm it satisfies the condition, with the substitution and result shown explicitly | Stating "this satisfies the equation" as a conclusion without showing the substitution step that earns the mark | Drill phase: "Verify" questions drilled until the substitution-and-state structure becomes automatic |
| Model | State the modelling assumption explicitly (e.g. "modelled as a particle," "string is light and inextensible") before using it in calculation | Using a modelling assumption implicitly in the calculation without stating it, which AQA Mechanics mark schemes require as a separate step | Close phase: peer comparison of Mechanics answers shows which students state assumptions automatically vs as an afterthought |
| Interpret | For Statistics, explain what a calculated value means in the context of the scenario given in the question | Performing the correct statistical calculation but not relating the result back to the context, losing the interpretation mark | Open Forum: rapid "interpret" drills linking statistical results back to the large data set and scenario context |
Facilitation is led by team members who have sat this exact specification — not generic A Level tutors working from a textbook.
"AQA rewards how you write mathematics as much as whether you can do it. Proof questions are where this becomes most visible -- and where the easiest marks are lost."
✓ Enhanced DBS ClearedYear 12 or Year 13, AS or A Level, any combination of papers — UK, Africa, the Gulf, or anywhere else this specification is examined.
You understand the content but want to close the gap between "knowing the subject" and "winning the marks."
Two scheduled sessions a week, paper-mapped, with Discord support between sessions — not unstructured self-study.
No payment, no card details. One full 60-minute workshop, then decide.
The Mastery plan (£199/month) includes 8 live workshops, full recordings, and Discord support 7 days a week. Try one session free before paying anything.
✓ No card required · ✓ 7-day refund on paid plans · ✓ Cohorts capped at 15
All subjects
View all 9 subjects & boards →✓ No card required · ✓ Cancel anytime · ✓ Capped at 15 students