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You’re probably here because A Levels are feeling a bit… a lot.
Lecture notes piling up, tutorials not fully done, school tests coming non-stop, and on top of that, everyone keeps saying, “You should use AI to study!”
“Stuck on a question? See simple explanations that help you understand fast.”
👉 Give it a try and turn confusion into clarity in minutes.

What Exactly Is An AI Tutor For A Levels?
Let’s clear this up first.
“Access more than 1000+ past year papers to practice”
👉 Start a paper today and test yourself like it’s the real exam.

An AI tutor is not a human tutor. It’s a website where you can type in your A Level question—like:
“Can you explain how to use the binomial distribution for this question?”
or
“I don’t understand how to structure a 25-mark Econs essay on market failure.”
Then it replies with:
- A worked solution or explanation
- Step-by-step reasoning
- Sometimes alternative methods or extra practice questions
For Tutorly.sg, it’s tuned specifically for:
- MOE JC syllabus (H 1/H 2)
- A Level exam style and phrasing
- Local topics like J 1 promo content, J 2 revision, prelim style questions
What it’s not:
- It’s not a replacement for your school teachers.
- It’s not a magic button that “makes you smart”.
- It’s not here to do your homework for you (if you use it that way, you’ll suffer during exams).
The right way to see an AI tutor:
Think of it as a 24/7, always-awake “study buddy” that explains things and gives worked solutions when you’re stuck.
Why A Level Students In Singapore Actually Need This
The A Level grind in Singapore is intense:
- Long school hours + CCAs + enrichment
- Heavy content subjects like H 2 Chemistry, Physics, Biology, History, Geog, Econs
- Skills-based subjects like GP and H 1/H 2 Math
Typical problems I hear from JC students:
- “I only realise I don’t understand a topic when I do the tutorial at 11pm.”
- “My teacher is good, but there’s no time to answer my personal questions.”
- “I’m scared to ask ‘basic’ questions in class.”
- “Tuition is expensive, and sometimes I just need a 10-minute explanation, not a 2-hour class.”
This is exactly where an AI tutor like Tutorly.sg fits in:
- You can ask “basic” questions without feeling paiseh.
- You get instant explanations any time, even late at night.
- You can revise at your own pace, topic by topic, aligned to MOE.
You can try it here (no need to download anything):
👉 https://tutorly.sg/ai-tutor-singapore
How An AI Tutor Helps For Different A Level Subjects
Let’s go subject by subject, because the way you use AI for Math is very different from GP or Econs.
1. H 1/H 2 Math: From “Stuck” To “Ohhh I See”
Common struggles:
- Not knowing which formula or method to start with
- Getting lost in long questions (especially vectors, calculus, statistics)
- Making careless mistakes and not knowing where you went wrong
How to use an AI tutor effectively:
a) When you’re stuck on a question
- Try it yourself first.
- If you’re stuck, paste the question into Tutorly.sg.
- Ask:
“Show me the full solution step-by-step, and explain why each step is done.”
Tutorly will:
- Check your final answer (if you have one)
- Show you a step-by-step solution from scratch
- Explain the reasoning behind each step
Then you:
- Compare your attempt with the solution.
- Identify exactly where you went off (e.g. wrong substitution, misreading limits).
b) For revision by topic
Before a test on, say, Differentiation:
- Go to your tutorial or school worksheet.
- For each question you’re unsure of, ask Tutorly:
“Explain this differentiation question in detail, and then give me 2 similar practice questions with answers.”
You’re turning one question into multiple practice opportunities, which is what you actually need for A Levels.
2. H 2 Chemistry: Understanding, Not Memorising Blindly
Common struggles:
- Organic mechanisms (SN 1, SN 2, E 1, E 2, electrophilic addition, etc.)
- Explaining trends (Group 2, Group 17, Period 3)
- Application questions that mix multiple topics
How an AI tutor helps:
a) Clarifying concepts you “kind of” understand
Example prompt to Tutorly:
“Explain SN 1 vs SN 2 mechanisms in H 2 Chem, using A Level Singapore syllabus terms. Then give me 3 exam-style questions to test my understanding, with full solutions.”
You get:
- A concise breakdown of the concept
- Local exam-style questions
- Step-by-step answers you can study from
b) Explaining why an answer is wrong
If you lost marks in a test, you can type:
“This was my answer to this Chem question (paste question + your answer). Explain exactly why it’s wrong in A Level marking terms, and show a model answer.”
This helps you learn how examiners think, which is key for A Levels.
3. H 2 Physics: Visualising The Logic
Physics is tough because it needs both math and conceptual understanding.
How to use AI here:
- For each question, don’t just ask “What is the answer?”
- Ask:
“Explain the physics principles used in each step, not just the math.”
Tutorly can:
- Break down the question into smaller conceptual chunks
- Show which formula is used and why
- Highlight common misconceptions (e.g. confusing weight and normal reaction, or misusing 𝐹 = ma in non-inertial frames)
You want to come away thinking:
“I know exactly why we used this method, not just how.”
4. H 1/H 2 Economics: Essays + Case Studies
Econs is where many students feel very lost, especially with essays.
a) Essay planning practice
Instead of asking AI to write your full essay (bad idea), use it for planning.
Example:
“I have this H 2 Econs essay question: ‘Discuss whether a government should always intervene in markets where there is market failure.’
Help me:
- Identify the key issue and command word
- Suggest a clear essay structure
- List the key points and diagrams I should include.”
You still write the essay yourself, but now with a strong structure.
b) Marking your essay with feedback
You can paste your essay and ask:
“Mark this like a Singapore A Level H 2 Econs examiner.
- Give me an estimated band (L 1/L 2/L 3 style)
- Show where I lost marks
- Rewrite 1 paragraph to show me a stronger version.”
You’ll see what high-level writing looks like, and how to improve your own.
5. General Paper (GP): Arguments, Examples, Clarity
GP is tough because it’s skills-based.
How an AI tutor helps:
a) Generating ideas and examples
Prompt Tutorly:
“Give me 5 possible points for this GP question: ‘To what extent is technology beneficial to education?’
For each point, include:
- A clear topic sentence
- 1 real-world example (preferably Asia/Singapore if possible)
- A short explanation.”
This gives you a bank of ideas, but you still need to:
- Choose the best ones
- Link them logically
- Write in your own words
b) Improving your writing style
Paste a paragraph and ask:
“Rewrite this GP paragraph to be clearer and more concise, but keep the same meaning. Then explain what you changed and why.”
Over time, you’ll absorb better phrasing and structure.
How To Fit An AI Tutor Into Your A Level Study Routine
You don’t need to sit in front of AI for hours. Instead, use it sparingly but consistently.
A simple weekly plan (JC 1 or JC 2)
On school days (Mon–Fri):
- During homework:
- When stuck for more than 10–15 minutes, ask Tutorly for a step-by-step solution.
- After homework:
- Pick 1–2 questions you got wrong.
- Ask Tutorly:
“Explain my mistake and show me a similar practice question.”
On weekends:
- Choose 1–2 subjects to focus on.
- For each subject:
- Revise 1 topic using your notes.
- Then use Tutorly to:
- Check understanding with extra questions
- Clarify any parts of your notes that are confusing
This way, AI is part of your routine, not a distraction.
You can access Tutorly any time here:
👉 https://tutorly.sg/app
Why Use Tutorly.sg Specifically (Not Just Any Random AI)?
Most generic AI tools:
- Are not tuned to MOE A Level syllabus
- May give examples or methods that don’t match Singapore exam style
- Might not understand local terms like “prelims”, “promos”, “H 1 vs H 2”, etc.
Tutorly.sg is built for Singapore students only, from Primary 1 all the way to JC 2.
For you as an A Level student, this means:
- Explanations match MOE terminology
- Question style is closer to A Level exam questions
- You can get help across all your subjects, not just one
And again, it’s a website, not an app—so you can easily use it on your laptop while doing tutorials:
👉 https://tutorly.sg/ai-tutor-singapore
How Not To Misuse An AI Tutor (Very Important)
If you’re not careful, AI can actually hurt your A Level prep.
Here’s what to avoid:
-
Copy-pasting solutions without thinking
If you just copy, you’ll blank out during exams. Always:- Read the explanation
- Try to re-do the question on your own after seeing the solution
-
Using AI for every small doubt
Struggle a bit first. The struggle is what makes you remember.
Use AI when you’re genuinely stuck or want to check your method. -
Letting AI write full essays for you
For GP and Econs, you must practise writing.
Use AI for:- Planning
- Feedback
- Improving paragraphs
But the writing should be yours.
-
Not checking if the solution fits your syllabus
With Tutorly.sg, this is much less of an issue because it’s MOE-aligned.
But still, if something looks off, cross-check with:- Your lecture notes
- School teacher
- Ten-Year Series (TYS)
Worksheet: Sample Questions + Step-by-Step Solutions
Try these like a mini revision set. I’ll keep them at a level suitable for H 1/H 2 A Level students in Singapore.
Question 1 (H 2 Math – Differentiation)
A function is defined by
- Find 𝑓'(𝑥).
- Find the coordinates of the stationary points.
- Determine the nature (maximum or minimum) of each stationary point.
Solution (step-by-step)
Step 1: Differentiate 𝑓(𝑥)
We have:
Differentiate term by term:
So,
Why: Basic power rule for differentiation; needed to find stationary points where 𝑓'(𝑥) = 0.
Step 2: Find stationary points by solving 𝑓'(𝑥) = 0
Set:
Factor:
So 𝑥 = 0 or 𝑥 = 2.
Now find 𝑦-coordinates by substituting into 𝑓(𝑥):
-
For 𝑥 = 0:
So point is (0, 4). -
For 𝑥 = 2:
So point is (2, 0).
Why: Stationary points occur where the gradient is zero; solving 𝑓'(𝑥)=0 gives the 𝑥-values, then we find corresponding 𝑦-values.
Step 3: Find 𝑓''(𝑥) to determine nature
Differentiate 𝑓'(𝑥):
So:
Now evaluate at each stationary point:
-
At 𝑥 = 0:
So (0, 4) is a local maximum. -
At 𝑥 = 2:
So (2, 0) is a local minimum.
Why: Second derivative test:
- If 𝑓''(𝑥) < 0 → maximum
- If 𝑓''(𝑥) > 0 → minimum
Answer check (common wrong answers + why)
-
Wrong: Stationary points at 𝑥 = 1 and 𝑥 = 2
Why: Usually from solving and then mis-solving . Must factor as 𝑥(𝑥-2)=0. -
Wrong: Forgetting to find the 𝑦-coordinate
Why: A stationary point is a coordinate pair (𝑥, 𝑦), not just 𝑥. -
Wrong: Saying (0,4) is a minimum because “ is the largest value I see” (or random guess)
Why: Nature must be justified using 𝑓''(𝑥) or sign of 𝑓'(𝑥) around the point, not by guessing.
Question 2 (H 2 Chemistry – Energetics)
The enthalpy change of combustion of ethanol, , is .
- Write a balanced thermochemical equation for the complete combustion of ethanol.
- Explain why the enthalpy change of combustion is negative.
Solution (step-by-step)
Step 1: Write the balanced combustion equation
General combustion of an alcohol:
Balance C:
- 2 C atoms on LHS → need 2 on RHS:
Balance H:
- 6 H atoms on LHS (5+1) → need 3 on RHS:
Count O on RHS:
- = 4 O
- = 3 O
Total = 7 O atoms.
On LHS:
- Ethanol has 1 O
- So need 6 more O from → molecules of .
Final balanced equation:
Thermochemical equation with enthalpy:
Why: A thermochemical equation must be balanced and include the correct value for the reaction as written.
Step 2: Explain why is negative
The enthalpy change of combustion is negative because heat is released to the surroundings when ethanol burns. The total energy released by forming strong bonds in and is greater than the energy required to break bonds in ethanol and oxygen.
Why: In exothermic reactions, more energy is released in bond formation than absorbed in bond breaking, so the overall enthalpy change is negative.
Answer check (common wrong answers + why)
-
Wrong: Using on LHS without adjusting
Why: The given enthalpy change is per mole of ethanol. If you double the moles in the equation, you must also double . -
Wrong: Saying “ is negative because the reaction is spontaneous”
Why: Spontaneity depends on Gibbs free energy (), not just . -
Wrong: Forgetting to include the physical states (l, g)
Why: For A Level standard, thermochemical equations should include states because enthalpy values depend on them.
Question 3 (H 2 Physics – Kinematics)
A car moves in a straight line. Its velocity 𝑣 (in ) at time 𝑡 seconds is given by
- Find the car’s acceleration at time 𝑡.
- Find the time when the car comes to rest.
- Find the displacement of the car from 𝑡 = 0 to the time it comes to rest.
Solution (step-by-step)
Step 1: Find acceleration as a function of time
Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity:
Given:
Differentiate:
Why: In 1 D motion, acceleration is the derivative of velocity with respect to time.
Step 2: Find time when the car comes to rest
Car at rest means 𝑣 = 0.
Set:
Factor:
So 𝑡 = 0 or 𝑡 = 4.
We want the later time when it comes to rest, so .
Why: At 𝑡=0, that’s the starting instant; the question is usually asking for the next time when the car’s speed becomes zero.
Step 3: Find displacement from 𝑡=0 to 𝑡=4
Displacement is the area under the velocity–time graph:
Integrate term by term:
So:
Free on Tutorly.sg
Practise with step-by-step help — free to start
On Tutorly.sg/app you can practise unlimited Singapore syllabus questions, get instant explanations when you are stuck, and use past-year papers — no sign-up needed to start.
- ✓ PSLE, O Level, A Level, and more
- ✓ Step-by-step working when you are stuck
- ✓ Works on phone and laptop
Evaluate at 𝑡=4:
Write as :
At 𝑡=0, expression is , so displacement is:
Why: Displacement is the definite integral of velocity over time; definite integral gives net displacement.
Answer check (common wrong answers + why)
-
Wrong: Acceleration 𝑎 = 4𝑡 - 2
Why: Mis-differentiation. Correct derivative of 4𝑡 is 4, and of is -2𝑡. -
Wrong: Using 𝑡=0 instead of 𝑡=4 to find displacement
Why: 𝑡=0 is the initial time; we need the time after starting when the car next comes to rest. -
Wrong: Answering displacement as
Why: Forgot to subtract or mis-handled fractions. Always carefully evaluate the definite integral.
Question 4 (H 2 Economics – Market Failure)
Explain how a negative externality of production can lead to market failure. Use a clear, exam-style explanation suitable for Singapore A Levels.
Solution (step-by-step)
Step 1: Define negative externality of production
A negative externality of production occurs when the production of a good imposes external costs on third parties that are not compensated, such as pollution affecting nearby residents.
Why: A precise definition shows you understand the concept and sets up the analysis.
Step 2: Link to divergence between private and social costs
For the firm, the marginal private cost (MPC) is lower than the marginal social cost (MSC) because the firm does not bear the full cost of the external damage (e.g. health costs, environmental cleanup).
So:
Why: This divergence is the core reason why the market outcome is inefficient.
Step 3: Explain overproduction and welfare loss
In an unregulated market, firms base output decisions on MPC and consumers base decisions on MPB (marginal private benefit). The market equilibrium occurs where:
resulting in output .
However, the socially efficient output is where:
resulting in a lower output .
Because , there is overproduction, leading to a welfare loss (deadweight loss) to society.
Why: A Level Econs requires you to connect externalities to overproduction/underproduction and welfare loss.
Step 4: Conclude clearly on market failure
Market failure occurs because the market equilibrium does not maximise social welfare. The negative externality means that some units of the good produce more cost to society than benefit, yet they are still produced. Hence, the free market overallocates resources to this good, causing market failure.
Why: A clear concluding sentence shows you can link the concept back to the question.
Answer check (common wrong answers + why)
-
Wrong: Saying “negative externality of production means demand is too high”
Why: The issue is on the cost side (supply), not demand. It’s the producers’ costs that are understated. -
Wrong: Not mentioning MSC, MPC, and welfare loss
Why: For A Level standard, you should use the proper terminology and explain the mechanism, not just say “it is bad for society”. -
Wrong: Mixing up production and consumption externalities
Why: Production externalities shift the supply curve; consumption externalities affect demand.
“Doing Secondary Science? Pick a topic and practise like it’s a real exam — with clear answers right after.”
👉 Try Tutorly now and start a Science topic in seconds.

Question 5 (General Paper – Argument Skills)
Question: “‘Social media has done more harm than good to young people.’ Discuss.”
Write one strong body paragraph arguing that social media has done more harm than good to young people. Focus on clarity and explanation.
Solution (step-by-step)
Step 1: Start with a clear topic sentence
“Social media has harmed young people by exacerbating mental health issues such as anxiety, depression and low self-esteem.”
Why: A topic sentence states your main point for the paragraph clearly, directly answering the question.
Step 2: Explain the mechanism
“Platforms like Instagram and TikTok encourage constant comparison with idealised images of beauty, success and lifestyle. Young users, who are still forming their identities, may measure their self-worth against these unrealistic standards. When their own lives appear ordinary or ‘less than’ in comparison, they may feel inadequate or insecure.”
Why: GP essays need you to show how and why the harm occurs, not just state it.
Step 3: Provide an example or evidence
“For instance, several studies in the US and UK have found a correlation between heavy social media use and higher rates of depressive symptoms among teenagers. In Singapore, the Institute of Mental Health has also highlighted rising youth mental health concerns, with social media pressure cited by counsellors as a contributing factor in some cases.”
Why: Concrete examples, especially including Singapore where possible, make your argument more convincing and exam-appropriate.
Step 4: Link back to the question
“Therefore, by worsening mental health outcomes and undermining young people’s confidence and emotional stability, social media has arguably done more harm than good for this vulnerable group.”
Why: A link-back sentence shows you are still answering the exact question, not going off-topic.
Answer check (common wrong answers + why)
-
Wrong: Only stating “Social media is bad because of cyberbullying” with no explanation
Why: GP requires depth; you must explain the process and consequences, not just list issues. -
Wrong: No example or evidence
Why: Without examples, your paragraph sounds like a general opinion. A Level markers expect at least some real-world grounding. -
Wrong: Ending without linking back to “more harm than good”
Why: The question is comparative. You should show that the harm outweighs the benefits, not just that some harm exists.
Question 6 (H 1 Math – Probability)
A bag contains 5 red balls and 3 blue balls. Two balls are drawn at random without replacement.
- Find the probability that both balls are red.
- Find the probability that the two balls are of different colours.
Solution (step-by-step)
Step 1: Probability both balls are red
Total balls = 5 red + 3 blue = 8.
First draw:
Second draw (without replacement):
Remaining: 4 red, 3 blue → 7 total.
So:
Why: For “without replacement”, probabilities change after each draw; we multiply conditional probabilities.
Step 2: Probability that the two balls are of different colours
Method 1 (direct):
Two cases:
- Red then blue
- Blue then red
So:
Method 2 (using complement):
“Different colours” is the complement of “both same colour”.
- Both red: already found = .
- Both blue:
So:
Answer check
-
Q 1 expected answer: .
- If you wrote , you likely multiplied , treating it like “with replacement”.
-
Q 2 expected answer: .
- If your answer is greater than 1 or negative, you probably made an arithmetic or complement mistake.
- If you only counted “red then blue” and forgot “blue then red”, you’d get , which is too small.
How an AI Tutor for A Levels Can Help You Use These Techniques
An effective AI tutor for A Levels should not just give you answers; it should help you think like an examiner and practise exam-style reasoning.
Here’s how a good AI tutor can support you in subjects like Econs, GP and Math:
1. Instant, exam-style explanations
When you’re stuck on a question (e.g. “Explain how a negative production externality leads to market failure” or “Find the probability that…”), a strong AI tutor can:
- Break the solution into clear steps (identify concept → choose method → apply → conclude).
- Use A Level terminology (MSC, MPB, opportunity cost, evaluation, variance, etc.).
- Show you how to phrase answers in a way that earns marks, not just the final number.
This is especially useful for Econs case studies and GP essays, where how you explain matters as much as what you say.
2. Practice with feedback, anytime
For A Levels, improvement comes from repeated, targeted practice:
- Econs: drawing and explaining externalities, market structures, macro policies.
- GP: writing strong topic sentences, explanations, examples, and link-backs.
- Math: setting up equations, choosing the right method, avoiding common traps.
A good AI tutor can:
- Generate similar practice questions on demand.
- Walk you through the reasoning process when you get stuck.
- Point out typical mistakes (e.g. mixing up MPC/MSC, misinterpreting “without replacement”, or writing vague GP paragraphs).
3. Personalised to your syllabus and level
A Level standards differ from O Level or university. An AI tutor tuned for A Levels will:
- Use syllabus-appropriate depth (e.g. not overloading you with university-level math, but also not staying at Sec 3 level).
- Help you upgrade your answers from “basic pass” to “distinction-level” by:
- Adding evaluation in Econs.
- Improving argument structure and examples in GP.
- Emphasising method marks and clear working in Math.
4. Building exam habits, not just content knowledge
Beyond content, an AI tutor can remind you to:
- Underline command words (“explain”, “assess”, “discuss”, “show that”).
- Check for units, signs and reasonableness of answers in Math.
- Always link back to the question in Econs and GP.
- Practise timed responses and concise phrasing.
These habits often make the difference between a B and an A.
Try an AI Tutor for A Levels with Tutorly
If you want an AI tutor that’s built specifically for students in Singapore (including A Levels), you can try Tutorly.
Tutorly is a text-based online AI tutor that you access through your browser. It’s designed to help you:
- Get step-by-step explanations for questions in A Level Econs, GP, Math and more.
- Practise exam-style questions and improve your phrasing.
- Study anytime, without needing to schedule a human tutor.
You can learn more or start using it here:
- Overview of Tutorly’s AI tutor: https://tutorly.sg/ai-tutor-singapore
- Go straight to the Tutorly web platform: https://tutorly.sg/app
Use it to:
- Paste a question you’re stuck on and ask for a guided explanation.
- Practise turning your rough ideas into exam-ready paragraphs.
- Clarify specific concepts (e.g. “Explain negative externalities in A Level terms” or “Help me structure a GP paragraph on social media”).
With consistent practice and the right support, an AI tutor for A Levels can be a powerful complement to your school lessons and any human tuition you may already have.
Bonus: Mini Worksheet – Test Yourself with an AI Tutor for A Levels
Use this short worksheet to see how well you can apply the ideas from earlier. Try each question on your own first, then compare with the model solution and answer check.
Question 1 (Econs – Negative externalities, 8–10 m style)
A Level style (micro, market failure):
A factory produces chemical fertilisers. Its production releases harmful fumes that affect nearby residents’ health, but the firm does not pay for the medical costs caused.
(a) Explain why this situation leads to market failure.
(b) Using A Level terminology, explain how a government tax on the firm could help correct this market failure.
Model solution (outline)
(a) Why this leads to market failure
-
Identify the externality
- The factory’s production creates a negative production externality: third parties (nearby residents) suffer health costs that are not borne by the firm.
-
Private vs social costs
- The firm’s Marginal Private Cost (MPC) excludes the external health costs.
- The Marginal Social Cost (MSC) = MPC + external cost.
- Therefore, MSC > MPC at each level of output.
-
Overproduction and welfare loss
- In a free market, the firm produces where MPB = MPC (profit-maximising output).
- The socially efficient output is where MSB = MSC.
- Because MSC > MPC, the market equilibrium output is greater than the socially efficient output.
- This leads to overproduction and a welfare loss (deadweight loss), so the market outcome is allocatively inefficient.
- Hence, there is market failure.
(b) How a tax can correct it
-
Corrective / Pigouvian tax
- The government can impose a per-unit tax on the firm equal (or close) to the marginal external cost at the socially efficient output.
-
Effect on costs and output
- The tax raises the firm’s MPC curve so that it becomes closer to the MSC curve.
- The firm now faces higher production costs and will reduce output.
-
Moving towards social optimum
- With the tax, the new market equilibrium output is lower, closer to the socially efficient level where MSB = MSC.
- The welfare loss is reduced because fewer units are produced where MSC > MSB.
-
Evaluation (brief)
- The effectiveness depends on whether the government can accurately estimate the external cost.
- If the tax is set too low or too high, the market may still not reach the socially efficient output.
Answer check (self-marking)
- Did you:
- Explicitly mention “negative production externality”?
- State that MSC > MPC and link this to overproduction?
- Use terms like “allocative inefficiency”, “welfare loss” or “deadweight loss”?
- For the tax, explain that it raises MPC towards MSC and reduces output towards the social optimum?
If you only wrote “pollution is bad so government should tax” without discussing MPC/MSC and overproduction, your answer is too generic for A Level. An AI tutor like Tutorly can help you rewrite your explanation with proper diagrams-in-words and syllabus language.
Question 2 (GP – Paragraph practice, 12 m essay support)
Essay-style prompt:
“Social media does more harm than good to young people.”
Write one PEEL paragraph (Point, Explanation, Example, Link) either supporting or challenging this statement.
Try to write this in full before reading the model paragraph.
Model solution (sample PEEL paragraph)
Point
On one hand, social media can harm young people by distorting their self-image and increasing mental health problems.
Explanation
Platforms that emphasise appearance and popularity often encourage teenagers to compare themselves with highly curated and edited images. Over time, this can create unrealistic expectations of beauty and success, leading to feelings of inadequacy and low self-esteem. The constant search for validation through likes and comments may also make young people more vulnerable to anxiety when their posts do not receive the response they hope for.
Example
For instance, several studies by organisations such as the Royal Society for Public Health in the UK have found a correlation between heavy use of image-based platforms and higher rates of anxiety, depression and body dissatisfaction among teenagers. In Singapore, counsellors have also reported that some students experience stress and cyberbullying arising from online group chats and anonymous platforms.
Link
Therefore, by amplifying social comparison and exposing young people to cyberbullying and unrealistic standards, social media can indeed cause significant psychological harm, supporting the view that it does more harm than good for this age group.
Answer check (self-marking)
Check your paragraph against the PEEL structure:
- Point: Did you clearly state one main argument linked to the question (e.g. mental health, misinformation, connection, empowerment)?
- Explanation: Did you unpack the logic, not just repeat the point in different words?
- Example: Did you provide at least one concrete example (study, news event, local observation, or plausible scenario)?
- Link: Did you explicitly link back to whether social media does more harm than good?
If your paragraph is just a list of mini-points with no clear explanation or link, an AI tutor can help you restructure it into a stronger PEEL format and suggest ways to tighten your phrasing.
Question 3 (Math – Probability with “at least one”)
A Level style (discrete probability):
A box contains 6 red pens and 4 blue pens. Three pens are drawn at random without replacement.
(a) Find the probability that all three pens are red.
(b) Find the probability that at least one of the pens is blue.
Model solution
Total pens: 6 red, 4 blue → 10 pens.
(a) All three pens are red
Without replacement:
Simplify step by step:
So:
(b) At least one blue
Use the complement:
“At least one blue” = 1 – “no blue” = 1 – “all red”.
We already found:
So:
Answer check (self-marking)
- (a) Expected answer: .
- If you got , you treated it as with replacement. Remember the denominators change when you do without replacement.
- (b) Expected answer: .
- If you tried to add multiple cases manually (e.g. exactly 1 blue, exactly 2 blue, exactly 3 blue) and made a slip, using the complement is usually faster and less error-prone.
- “At least one” is a classic trigger to think about 1 – P(none).
If you are unsure when to use the complement or how to set up the fractions, an AI tutor can walk you through one step at a time and highlight the pattern so you can reuse it in exam questions.
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