Dear Edexcel GCSE PE student,
Yes, you! The one reading this post. I wanted to ask for a few moments of your time now that your Paper 1 PE exam is behind you in order to share a few ideas about how to really prepare sharply for your Paper 2 exam.
With the Paper 1 exam behind you – I hope it went well! – I want to share guidance for Edexcel GCSE PE Paper 2.
The aim of this post is to give you 10 ideas that you can use to prepare better for your Edexcel GCSE PE Paper 2 exam. Follow these guidelines as part of a thorough revision experience and I am confident you will fly.
My 10 top tips:You will notice that none of these top tips involve common-sense advice such as eating well, exercising regularly and getting enough sleep. You don’t need me to tell you these things. Instead, we’ll be focusing on the key behaviours that lead to success.
Well, this one is pretty obvious. Edexcel ask a wide range of question totals on Paper 2. Take a look at this graph:
It should be noted that the Paper 2 structure has changed the nature of these averages but, overall, we can see that Edexcel tries to ask a balanced range of question totals across their paper. As your teacher will already have told you, you will only receive one nine-mark question in 2024. If you’re unsure about the new paper structure, please read tip 7 below.
There is nothing more impacting that you can do in order to prepare for your Paper 1 exam than to practise and become skilled at writing and marking one-, two-, and especially four-mark questions. If we take the one-markers as a given, this gives you a major focus on two-, and four-mark questions.
There are hundreds of examples available for you to practise on. If you do not already have access to ExamSimulator via TheEverLearner.com, speak to your teacher about this. Within this system, there are hundreds of relevant questions for you to engage with.
It is so easy to think of your exams as testing your knowledge... Well, they do, of course. But your exams (and, in this case, your Edexcel GCSE PE Paper 2 exam) also test your skills.
The skills that you need to perform have a degree of consistency. Identify (often for one mark) is obvious but take a look at explaining and evaluating. If you are able to really understand the requirements of these skills, you are going to develop an excellent advantage.
So, what do these skills actually mean? Take a look at the table below and start to think about how to respond when asked to develop each different skill. I also encourage you to highlight the skills that appear most commonly on Edexcel GCSE PE Paper 2 exams.
As you can see above, explaining is a key skill. Edexcel consider that explaining…
In other words, you need to be able to state “how” and/or “why” for every single topic on the course. Simply knowing a definition or being able to describe a concept well within “Explain” responses is not enough.
Let’s take an example. Let’s say I get two different questions about the same topic. The answers to each question are completely different. Let’s have a go:
Now, if I changed Q2 to “Explain how James blogs,” can you see how the answer would change? Do you agree that we may need to talk about my use of English, my computer, my website and even processes such as getting the articles proofread and a graphic designer making the imagery? Can you see that my answer is specific to the question posed? You need to do this.
If you are asked to explain, which you will be, you must explain! Here’s some language that you should use in your explain responses:
Explain why... | Explain how... |
because | through |
this means | by |
as a result | via |
therefore | as a result of |
the reason for this | caused by |
Just like you prepare for your knowledge, you need to prepare for your skills. I will take this further below.
AO2 skills (otherwise known as making examples) is the second biggest feature of a successful Edexcel GCSE PE Paper 2 performance:
On average, 24 marks have previously come from making examples effectively. Therefore, you need to prepare for this and I encourage you to use the E-I-O method. Thankfully, this is nice and simple:
When you make your example, you MUST state the impact and the outcome of the concept on the example. Let’s take our own example:
Our author has clearly stated what the example is (manual guidance in table tennis), has stated the impact of the concept/manual guidance and has gone on to state the outcome of the concept. This is the standard I urge you to achieve when making your own examples.
Let’s look at another example from Paper 2:
This second example has a double outcome, in fact.
Teachers and students wishing to study the E-I-O method in more detail should visit...
How can I put this without being accused of predicting your 2024 paper? I guess the only way I can say it is that, by some margin, Commercialisation, Types of feedback and Ethics - Sportsmanship, gamesmanship and deviance have been the most heavily examined topics between 2018 and 2022.
Therefore, only a fool would not have these topics absolutely nailed down in preparation for their exam in 2024.
So, in summary, whilst there are no guarantees about what might appear on a 2024 exam paper, preparing for these three topics diligently and with the key skills in mind is a very good investment of your revision time.
With this in mind, I urge you to take part in my utterly free Paper 2 revision in May.
As you will probably already know, you will answer one nine-mark extended writing piece in your Edexcel GCSE PE Paper 2 exam. Whilst it is true that two-markers and four-markers carry more total raw marks, it’s really useful to become competent at answering this question because it is the exact area where most students perform less well. Therefore, if you want to mark yourself out and get a better mark than others taking your paper, extended writing is an excellent way to do so:
In order to do that, I strongly recommend that you use my preparation document for the nine-mark writing. Using these resources in preparation for your exam will serve you very well.
If you are a teacher and are wondering about the best use of these resources, you can watch a webinar on scaffolding synoptic writing for AQA GCSE PE students I broadcast around this time last year.
Calling all teachers and students of Edexcel GCSE PE: The Paper 2 exam in 2024 is formatted differently than 2022 and earlier. Ensure you are aware of this. To be fair, if you didn't know this already I would be worried...
I have blogged extensively on this topic in the past and you can read full details here. But here is the most important information as a summary:
Edexcel have also stated that Paper 2 will now be split into three specific sections:
Section C of Paper 2 (containing the nine-mark question) will only be taken from the Sport Psychology and Sociocultural Influences part of the content (examined in section B). This will provide centres with the opportunity to focus their practice on this area of the course only.
I urge teachers and students to become fully aware of this new structure in advance of May 2024.
As I think you can probably tell, I think about how to perform well on Edexcel GCSE PE Paper 2 quite a lot. All of my thinking has been put into writing a highly relevant National Mock Exam paper which I published in January 2024. I urge you to download this paper and mark scheme and answer it, ideally under assessment conditions, before marking it using the mark scheme. You will find our Edexcel Paper 2 PE National Mock Exam in our Edexcel Revision Hub.
There is quite literally no better preparation for your exam that you can do.
The model answers for the National Mock Exam are available for everyone to download and read. I am going to make a very fundamental point about them here: LEARN THE MODEL ANSWERS. I mean, really now, please learn them. The model answers are hyper-relevant to your exam experience this summer and represent the ideal ways to answer all kinds of questions including the skills discussed in many of the points above. You will find my model answers for the Edexcel Paper 2 PE National Mock Exam in our Edexcel Revision Hub.
Please, please, please, learn those answers. You will not regret one second of doing so.
And finally… a very, very simple message: I actually broadcast my live revision show yesterday, Tuesday 28th May (recording available after the live broadcast), based on all the points made above.
Folks, I cannot make this clearer: Be there! Whilst I can’t promise you entertainment like Netflix or giggles like going out with your mates, I can guarantee you that this session is delivered with everything I am and will help you massively in your preparations for the exam itself. The revision is utterly free and comes with an entire notes pack as well as the previously published infographics, mock exam, mark scheme and model answers. You can access the revision session here live on the day or on demand.
BE THERE!!!
Thank you for reading and have a wonderful day.