useful links

https://qualifications.pearson.com/content/dam/pdf/International GCSE/computer-science/2017/specification-and-sample-assessments/international-gcse-in-Computer-Science-Specification.pdf ✦ (specification)

https://qualifications.pearson.com/en/support/support-topics/results-certification/grade-boundaries.html

https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1HIn1tGlAI0QqebVzugyPIQXLXT6Z9txi

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✧ (notes created by ching yiu liang, notion edited by alexa)

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https://apption.co/embeds/a09d95ef

Friday Morning, May 8th

<aside> 🌷

you got this! all up to you to study hard <3

</aside>

disclaimer! reading over this does NOT guarantee you a 9. this is only to offer help & review easily to help you get a good score!

☆ units (compiled notes!)

unit 1 — problem solving

unit 4 — computers

flashcards

unit 2 — programming

unit 5 — communication and the internet

unit 3 — data

unit 6 — the bigger picture

… last updated: 30/04/26

brief overview of the exam

this exam is monitored in your exam centre (typically your school). make sure you’ve had practice doing it on paper. for paper 2, a computer would be provided along with sample files, make sure you save your code in the correct format (file name and extension). if you have any special arrangements, make sure you practise using them too.

— paper 1: principles of computer science

— paper 2: application of computational thinking

score distributions (why not lols)

9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
8.0% 8.2% 7.5% 12.3% 10.9% 21.1% 12.2% 6.4% 0.8%

according to june 2025, this course has a pass rate of 50.5% (getting a 4 or higher)

suggested study schedule

thank your future self for not procrastinating. #donotprocrastinatepls.

(you don’t need to follow this to a tee, but what worked for me was actually doing past papers under timed conditions, but if you do need some structure then see the following.)