@jazz519 Hi, do you have any tips for physics in terms of memorising the content as well as preparing for the long responses (6 marks and above). I am very confused on how to answer the long responses properly to get full marks. Really appreciate your insight!
I haven't really looked too much into the new physics syllabus to be honest. I did physics in 2016 when it was the old syllabus, and I've heard of there now being like 8 and 9 markers which we didn't have in the past. Most of our long responses were on society and environment kind of things or history style questions, where you could just memorise a prepared answer or points to discuss.
For memorising I had already made a set of detailed notes, so I would just read through those before the exams. I did that for all my subjects as I found that was the best approach for me, but this will vary per-person. For actually practicing that content, same thing as chemistry did a lot of past papers.
For long responses I tried to always draw diagrams of things, so for example if I had a question on the photoelectric effect, then I would draw the set-up of the photoelectric effect and maybe the graph as well with the labels of things like threshold frequency and work function. I also used headings so it isn't just one massive slab of writing. This can help in a lot of subjects where you have 5+ markers so it trains you on answering to the marking criteria and easier for the marker to see you have addressed things. If there is a verb like evaluate, you need to also make a judgement.