Why IGCSE Physics deserves real attention, not just a passing grade
IGCSE Physics — under both Cambridge and Edexcel syllabi — splits into Core and Extended tiers, and the tier a student takes actually caps the highest grade they can achieve. Many students are placed into Core without realising it limits their ceiling, or into Extended without the foundational support to handle the harder content confidently. Beyond the exam itself, IGCSE is where the conceptual habits for A-Level, AP, or IB Physics either get built properly or don’t — weak IGCSE physics tends to resurface as struggling in the next stage, not as an isolated one-time problem.
What the course covers
- Full Core and Extended tier content, Cambridge and Edexcel syllabi
- Guidance on which tier actually fits a student’s target grade
- Practical skills for the practical / alternative-to-practical paper
- Concept-first teaching that carries forward into A-Level, AP, or IB
- Past paper practice matched to the specific exam board
How the coaching works
Sessions build the physical intuition behind each topic before introducing the formula — the same concept-first approach used across every course here — since IGCSE is genuinely the last stage where that foundation is cheap to build and expensive to skip. Practical paper technique gets explicit attention, since it’s graded differently from the written theory paper and often under-prepared for.
Who this is for
Students aged roughly 14–16 studying IGCSE Physics under Cambridge or Edexcel, whether aiming for top grades or building a genuine foundation for A-Level, AP, or IB Physics afterward. Runs as 1:1 or small-group sessions, fully online.