this is great thanksa former chief examiner one said that exams should eventually cover all the aspects of the syllabus within the life of the syllabus.
we only have 3 more exams before new syllabus comes into effect, 2024, 2025 and 2026, and i think there may be an aspect not covered well yet, and that is fallacious proofs - like a student did this proof and made mistakes, identify where the mistakes are, or something like that.
so perhaps we may see something like that, if not this year, then 2025 or 2026
pretty sure they are, i remember them getting taught very shortly thoughHonestly I don't see vector planes, I'm not sure if they're explicitly in syllabus?
There was one of these types of questions in one of the year’s multiple choice but it was very easya former chief examiner one said that exams should eventually cover all the aspects of the syllabus within the life of the syllabus.
we only have 3 more exams before new syllabus comes into effect, 2024, 2025 and 2026, and i think there may be an aspect not covered well yet, and that is fallacious proofs - like a student did this proof and made mistakes, identify where the mistakes are, or something like that.
so perhaps we may see something like that, if not this year, then 2025 or 2026
planes are defo OOS from what I've heardpretty sure they are, i remember them getting taught very shortly though
I reckon 2023-ish difficultywhat are we thinking for 4u
its been getting harder each year and last years exam was diabolical so im expecting some crazy stuff this year
maybe vector planes probably a calculus inequality proof
thoughts?
Decent chance something will be in there like that since there is always something new, could be in maybe like q14-15 since q11-13 are almost the same every year
Are there any other questions that haven't been tested in topics like Complex Numbers, Vectors, Integrals, Mechanics, etc. ?a former chief examiner one said that exams should eventually cover all the aspects of the syllabus within the life of the syllabus.
we only have 3 more exams before new syllabus comes into effect, 2024, 2025 and 2026, and i think there may be an aspect not covered well yet, and that is fallacious proofs - like a student did this proof and made mistakes, identify where the mistakes are, or something like that.
so perhaps we may see something like that, if not this year, then 2025 or 2026
Wait can you send an example of one of these vector plane questions please?pretty sure they are, i remember them getting taught very shortly though
Ifrm my school assignment
View attachment 44699
ive done this question where is this frommaybe some euler form questions which are not just basic ones, but ones which makes the solution much more efficient than would otherwise be the case, and i don't just mean roots of complex numbers, but perhaps a more scaffolded version of this:
View attachment 44587
so with eulers's formula we get this
but try without euler's form and it is horrendous
- especially since they are deleting euler's form in new syllabus - might not happen this year since exam was written long before new syllabus came out, but could happen next year or 2026