i have my igcse tomorrow and my geography teacher literally never taught us how to do paper 2. For our mocks, he gave us the mock exam one day before. Thank you so much for helping out
when we're in online class during school, we don't pay attention at all. when we aren't in school, we search up an online class and pay full attention.
@@GEOHACKS exactly, when I'm being forced to do something, I do everything I can to get out of it. when I'm not being forced to do that exact same thing, I find it alright and don't try to get out of it
Thank you for this amazing video it helped a lot I have my paper 2 for geography tomorrow and this video has really helped, I don’t feel as stressed and worried about the exam now thank you
For part e, how do you know if you have to add 5 or subtract 5 using the contour lines? Because you first added 5 and put 35 but then subtracted 5 putting 30,25... It would be highly appreciated if you can explain this part. Thank you.
Really depends on the features around you. Generally, the land slopes down to something like a river or coast. Or I find the next chunky contour line along and work out if that is higher or lower.
sir fi the contou l;ines get closer to you add the contour intevals - cos its getting taller. and if there getting wider you - ? thanks i m really confused on this.
You just to look at the units the lines are drawn in - every 5/10/100 metres - see key. Then look for the broad thick lines they will show you the height and you can work it out from there. Also look for clues, such as you go downhill to a river.
I divided up the route into as many straight parts as possible. Measured the distance in cm and then times by 250 as the scale is 1 cm equals 250 metres
Hope to at least. In the mean time, work through as many papers as possible and review against the markscheme. I am sure your teacher would be all too happy to help you.
1 : 25000 map so 1 cm is 250m. A grid square is 4 cm by 4cm so that means there are 40 mm. In a 6 figure the 3 and 6 number goes from 0 to 9, 10 numbers. So 40 ÷ 10 = 1. For the 2 I rounded down. The ruler on the screen is slightly out.
@@GEOHACKS man, whatever you said I didn't understand but thanks for atleast helping, I have a test tomorrow(Annual test), and I'm the top on Geo(don't ask about others...), so it kinda worries, you know... When the master expects so much from you... Thanks again
i have my igcse tomorrow and my geography teacher literally never taught us how to do paper 2. For our mocks, he gave us the mock exam one day before. Thank you so much for helping out
Anytime. Good luck!
hows lani
Thank you very much for taking your time in teaching us this, with this video you are saving my life 🙏
No problem. Good luck for tomorrow.
I agree with this person
when we're in online class during school, we don't pay attention at all.
when we aren't in school, we search up an online class and pay full attention.
Interesting point. Reflects the difference between wanting to find something out and being forced to do something.
@@GEOHACKS exactly, when I'm being forced to do something, I do everything I can to get out of it. when I'm not being forced to do that exact same thing, I find it alright and don't try to get out of it
Thank You so much for helping me out..I was really worried for my paper 2 tmrw but u have helped a alot.. Thank You so much.
Thank you for the positive feedback. Good luck!
Thank you for this amazing video it helped a lot I have my paper 2 for geography tomorrow and this video has really helped, I don’t feel as stressed and worried about the exam now thank you
That is very kind of you to say. Thank you! All the best for tomorrow!
@@GEOHACKS thanks man I feel ready for this exam 😂
Thank you very much for explaining this very elegantly..Tommorow is my Geography Paper 2 IGCSE examm..Wish me luck ;)
All the best. Do a few past papers tonight and you will be fine! Many thanks for the feedback!
mine is tmrw too!
Good luck!
How did u find the mud flats and flood plain here?
The river is middle to lower so going to be a floodplain.
Thank you sir. And what about the mudflats?
Check the key.
@@GEOHACKS 👍🏻. Thank you so much
thx alot this helped me get a A+ in my igcse exams
🙌🙌🙌👏✍🙏🥺
Thank you for the feedback. I hope your friends have also found it useful.
got mines in like 2 hours, remind me to tell you how it goes, because you helped loads!!
Hope it went well.
@@GEOHACKS yup it was easy, thanks!
Unit is given as degrees Celcius which is temperature, but bearing is angle so only degrees
Yep. That looks like a mistake in the markscheme. I think I mentioned it.
Thanks for pointing it out again!
Thank you for this video - very helpful. How did you find out the centre of Ste-Anne-d'Auray?
Pretty much i assumed it was the road intersection as most towns or cities are centred around a point like that.
@@GEOHACKS Thank you!
Can this be used for AQA GCSE Geography? Seems really helpful
In terms of the skills - scale, direction yes. Questions, probably some similarity. Use the video chapters to go to specific questions and see.
For part e, how do you know if you have to add 5 or subtract 5 using the contour lines? Because you first added 5 and put 35 but then subtracted 5 putting 30,25... It would be highly appreciated if you can explain this part. Thank you.
Really depends on the features around you. Generally, the land slopes down to something like a river or coast. Or I find the next chunky contour line along and work out if that is higher or lower.
you're my hero thank you so much
Thanks 😊. Good luck for your exam.
sir fi the contou l;ines get closer to you add the contour intevals - cos its getting taller. and if there getting wider you - ? thanks i m really confused on this.
The closer together the steeper the land, further apart the flatter.
You just to look at the units the lines are drawn in - every 5/10/100 metres - see key. Then look for the broad thick lines they will show you the height and you can work it out from there. Also look for clues, such as you go downhill to a river.
@@GEOHACKS so if the interval is 5 m each. And they are grttting closer and there is 5 lines in between you add 5 x 5 so Add 25 m right. Thanks
@@GEOHACKS if your going to the left of a river you - most likely right.
More like 5 + 5 + 5 + 5 + 5
Can you use the for gcse
The skills (6 FGR etc) I would have thought most definitely.
Do you get a key sheet for the geography paper2? Sorry I'm new
Yes on the map.
@@GEOHACKS okay thanks and your videos are really helpful
how did you get 10.5 because my marks are no where near the the answer question 1.(d)
I divided up the route into as many straight parts as possible. Measured the distance in cm and then times by 250 as the scale is 1 cm equals 250 metres
thank you . I was struggling with paper2 but now this video has happened me slightly😤
are they any links of geography paper 1 cause I am struggling A lot I need help
This is a project for next school for me. Sorry.
really
Hope to at least. In the mean time, work through as many papers as possible and review against the markscheme. I am sure your teacher would be all too happy to help you.
ok. in paper 2 are there any questions about finding the gradient
It is very unlikely.
6:50, 9÷4=2.25, where did you get 2? And also how did you know 4mm is one point...
1 : 25000 map so 1 cm is 250m. A grid square is 4 cm by 4cm so that means there are 40 mm. In a 6 figure the 3 and 6 number goes from 0 to 9, 10 numbers. So 40 ÷ 10 = 1.
For the 2 I rounded down. The ruler on the screen is slightly out.
@@GEOHACKS man, whatever you said I didn't understand but thanks for atleast helping, I have a test tomorrow(Annual test), and I'm the top on Geo(don't ask about others...), so it kinda worries, you know... When the master expects so much from you... Thanks again
@@adzen1 Yeah man alot of pressure , even me man you know I top chemistry (annuals) but I don't understand , so much pressure you know
Sorry to hear that. It cannot be easy. Whatever happens good luck!
Agreed. Especially after 2 years of disruption.
the degree Celsius in the bearing question 🤣🤣
Whoops. Well spotted! The first one.