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7037 · AQA A Level

Geography 7037 Exam Tips

In AQA A Level Geography, the biggest trap students fall into is writing descriptive, narrative-heavy answers. AQA marks are strictly divided between AO1 (Knowledge and Understanding) and AO2 (Application of Knowledge). For every essay you write—whether it is a 9-mark response or

Source: AQA

Papers

2

Total marks

240

Time limit

5h

Grade scale

A*ABCDEU

Additional note

Calculator policy

A scientific or graphical calculator that meets JCQ regulations may be used (some GCSE Mathematics and Science papers are non-calculator). Graphical calculators must be set to exam mode; you must clear any stored programs, notes or data before the exam, and the calculator must not be able to retrieve stored text or formulae.

Assessment objectives

AO1). Top scorers will instead focus on evaluating the direct, localized impacts of these changes on the global carbon budget and regional water cycle transfers (AO2), assessing feedback loops and thresholds. Always ask yourself: "How does this specific fact prove my overall argument?"

2

Papers

5

Strategies

5

Mistakes

  • In AQA A Level Geography, the biggest trap students fall into is writing descriptive, narrative-heavy answers. AQA marks are strictly divided between AO1 (Knowledge and Understanding) and AO2 (Application of Knowledge). For every essay you write—whether it is a 9-mark response or a 20-mark synoptic blockbuster—the examiner's grid demands balance. Top-tier candidates understand that they cannot secure an A* simply by dumping case study facts. You must constantly evaluate, connect, and link those facts back to the specific prompt.

Tips are paraphrased for study purposes from exam structure data and marking patterns. Always verify against your official syllabus and mark scheme.