
A-Level biology past papers are the single best predictor of what your child will face in the real exam. The question styles repeat, the mark scheme expectations are consistent, and the topics that examiners favour come up again and again. But most students use past papers as nothing more than a mock test — and when the marks don’t improve, they assume they’re just “not good at biology.”
They’re almost always wrong. The issue is method, not ability.
The Real Problem
If your child has been doing past papers and the grade isn’t moving, the issue is almost always in how they express their answers — not what they know. A-Level biology mark schemes are exceptionally precise about vocabulary, and most students don’t study them closely enough.
Why A-Level biology past paper marks stay flat
Relying on passive revision
A-Level biology is content-heavy. Students often feel like they’ve revised because they’ve re-read their notes, made flashcards, or watched videos. But the exam doesn’t test whether your child can recognise information — it tests whether they can recall it, apply it to unfamiliar scenarios, and express it using precise scientific language. Past papers are supposed to bridge that gap, but only if the student actively engages with why they lost each mark.
Not learning the mark scheme vocabulary
A-Level biology mark schemes are demanding about terminology. A question about the immune response might require “antigen-presenting cell” rather than “cell that shows the antigen.” A question about respiration might need “decarboxylation” rather than “removing carbon dioxide.” Students who don’t study the mark scheme carefully keep writing answers that are broadly correct but miss the specific terms that carry marks.
Spending equal time on every topic
Your child almost certainly finds some parts of the biology syllabus more natural than others. Spending equal revision time on every topic means the weak areas never get the focused attention they need. Past papers should expose those weak spots and direct revision towards them — but that only works if your child is tracking errors systematically.
Is Your Child Writing Correct Answers but Missing Marks?
A tutor can show them exactly what the examiner wants to see — the vocabulary, the structure, the level of detail.
Book Your Free ConsultationHow to use A-Level biology past papers properly
A-Level Biology Past Papers by Exam Board
Download past papers, mark schemes, and examiner reports directly from your exam board:
Work by topic, not by paper
Group questions by topic area — cellular biology, genetics, ecology, physiology — and work through them in focused sessions. This builds depth and makes gaps visible immediately. Most exam boards publish topic-sorted question banks, or your child can sort questions manually using the specification checklist.
Treat the mark scheme as a revision resource
The mark scheme isn’t just for checking answers. It’s a guide to what the examiner expects. Your child should read through mark schemes for questions they’ve attempted and for questions they haven’t, paying close attention to the vocabulary used, the level of detail expected, and how multi-mark questions are broken down. This is especially valuable for the extended prose questions that carry six or more marks.
Keep an error log
After each session, record what went wrong and categorise the error: vocabulary gap, content gap, misread the question, or poor exam technique. Over a few weeks, patterns emerge — and those patterns tell your child exactly where to focus.
Seeing the same topics come up in your child’s error log week after week? That’s a sign self-study has hit its limit. Get in touch and we’ll match them with a biology specialist who can fix the gap directly.
Save timed papers for the end
Full timed conditions belong in the last two to three weeks before each exam. Before that, untimed practice with mark scheme review is more productive — it turns each question into a learning exercise rather than a test.
When past papers aren’t enough
Biology past papers test recall and application. They don’t teach concepts your child hasn’t properly grasped. If your child keeps losing marks on the same topics — whether that’s gene expression, the cardiac cycle, or ecological sampling methods — doing more papers won’t fix the underlying gap.
The signs that self-study has reached its limit: your child can define terms but can’t apply them to unfamiliar data or scenarios. They can describe a process but can’t explain why it happens. They write long answers but consistently miss the top mark band because they lack specificity.
An A-Level biology tutor can read your child’s answers and identify exactly what’s keeping them from the next grade boundary — and fix it in a way that sticks.
Meet some of our A-Level biology tutors

Kriszta
Kriszta read Biological Sciences at the University of Oxford, graduating with a First (top 10 in a cohort of 120+ students) and winning the Moore Prize for the best MBiol research dissertation. She’s currently pursuing a PhD in Cancer Biology at Cambridge. Kriszta’s depth of biological knowledge goes well beyond the A-Level syllabus, which means she can explain concepts in their wider context and help students see how different parts of the course connect — something that’s particularly valuable for the synoptic questions that carry the highest marks.

Clemmie
Clemmie graduated with a First in Psychological and Behavioural Sciences from Trinity College, Cambridge, with A*s in Biology, Chemistry, and Maths at A-Level. Her Part II dissertation was supervised by Professor Simon Baron-Cohen, and she’s published research as an undergraduate. Clemmie tutors A-Level biology with a focus on understanding rather than memorisation — she helps students move beyond rote learning to the kind of deep comprehension that the top mark bands require.

Gonzalo
Gonzalo holds a First Class MChem in Chemistry from the University of Oxford with an A* in Biology at A-Level. Gonzalo is particularly strong at the crossover between chemistry and biology — topics like enzyme kinetics, respiration, and photosynthesis — where students often find things tricky because the concepts draw on both disciplines.
Want your child to reach the top mark bands?
If revision isn’t translating into the grades your child is aiming for, a specialist tutor can find the gap and close it. Get in touch and we’ll match your child with an A-Level biology tutor who knows exactly what the examiners want.
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PRECISE, TARGETED SUPPORT FROM BIOLOGY SPECIALISTS
Our tutors specialise in helping students master the precise vocabulary and structured responses that A-Level biology examiners reward. Get personalised feedback that past papers alone can’t provide.
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