GCSE speed, density and pressure formula questions with worked examples, units, rearranging advice and examiner guidance.
Speed, density and pressure questions are usually accessible if you choose the right formula, convert units and rearrange accurately.
This guide is written for GCSE Maths students who want more than a formula list. It shows the method, the common traps and the exam thinking behind each worked example.
For the formula background, use Edexcel GCSE Foundation Maths Formula Sheet. For one-to-one support, see GCSE Maths tutoring or contact Sophie.
speed = distance / time. density = mass / volume. pressure = force / area.
Before using any formula, write down what each letter represents and check the units. Most GCSE mistakes come from rushing the setup, not from the final arithmetic.
Method: A car travels 150 km in 3 hours. Speed = distance divided by time, so speed = 150 / 3 = 50 km/h.
What the examiner is looking for: The examiner wants the correct formula and unit.
After completing this example, cover the solution and try to write the key first step from memory. That first decision is usually what separates a confident exam answer from a guessed one.
Then ask yourself why this method was chosen. Was it a particular word in the question, a diagram feature, a formula structure, a unit, or the type of unknown? That explanation is important because it helps you recognise the same idea when the numbers and context change.
Finally, rewrite the answer in a cleaner exam style: formula first, substitution second, calculation third, final answer with units or suitable rounding last. This builds the habit of showing enough working for method marks.
Method: A cyclist travels at 18 km/h for 2.5 hours. Distance = speed x time = 45 km.
What the examiner is looking for: Rearranging the formula is the key skill.
After completing this example, cover the solution and try to write the key first step from memory. That first decision is usually what separates a confident exam answer from a guessed one.
Then ask yourself why this method was chosen. Was it a particular word in the question, a diagram feature, a formula structure, a unit, or the type of unknown? That explanation is important because it helps you recognise the same idea when the numbers and context change.
Finally, rewrite the answer in a cleaner exam style: formula first, substitution second, calculation third, final answer with units or suitable rounding last. This builds the habit of showing enough working for method marks.
Method: If the time is 45 minutes, convert it to 0.75 hours before using km/h.
What the examiner is looking for: Unit consistency is often the mark students lose.
After completing this example, cover the solution and try to write the key first step from memory. That first decision is usually what separates a confident exam answer from a guessed one.
Then ask yourself why this method was chosen. Was it a particular word in the question, a diagram feature, a formula structure, a unit, or the type of unknown? That explanation is important because it helps you recognise the same idea when the numbers and context change.
Finally, rewrite the answer in a cleaner exam style: formula first, substitution second, calculation third, final answer with units or suitable rounding last. This builds the habit of showing enough working for method marks.
Method: If mass is 360 g and volume is 120 cm3, density = 360 / 120 = 3 g/cm3.
What the examiner is looking for: Include the compound unit in the answer.
After completing this example, cover the solution and try to write the key first step from memory. That first decision is usually what separates a confident exam answer from a guessed one.
Then ask yourself why this method was chosen. Was it a particular word in the question, a diagram feature, a formula structure, a unit, or the type of unknown? That explanation is important because it helps you recognise the same idea when the numbers and context change.
Finally, rewrite the answer in a cleaner exam style: formula first, substitution second, calculation third, final answer with units or suitable rounding last. This builds the habit of showing enough working for method marks.
Method: If density = 2.5 g/cm3 and mass = 50 g, volume = mass / density = 20 cm3.
What the examiner is looking for: This tests rearranging, not a new formula.
After completing this example, cover the solution and try to write the key first step from memory. That first decision is usually what separates a confident exam answer from a guessed one.
Then ask yourself why this method was chosen. Was it a particular word in the question, a diagram feature, a formula structure, a unit, or the type of unknown? That explanation is important because it helps you recognise the same idea when the numbers and context change.
Finally, rewrite the answer in a cleaner exam style: formula first, substitution second, calculation third, final answer with units or suitable rounding last. This builds the habit of showing enough working for method marks.
Method: If force is 200 N and area is 4 m2, pressure = 200 / 4 = 50 N/m2.
What the examiner is looking for: The examiner wants force divided by area, not multiplied.
After completing this example, cover the solution and try to write the key first step from memory. That first decision is usually what separates a confident exam answer from a guessed one.
Then ask yourself why this method was chosen. Was it a particular word in the question, a diagram feature, a formula structure, a unit, or the type of unknown? That explanation is important because it helps you recognise the same idea when the numbers and context change.
Finally, rewrite the answer in a cleaner exam style: formula first, substitution second, calculation third, final answer with units or suitable rounding last. This builds the habit of showing enough working for method marks.
Method: When units are mixed, convert before substituting. For example, change grams to kilograms if the density unit is kg/m3.
What the examiner is looking for: The working must show the conversion.
After completing this example, cover the solution and try to write the key first step from memory. That first decision is usually what separates a confident exam answer from a guessed one.
Then ask yourself why this method was chosen. Was it a particular word in the question, a diagram feature, a formula structure, a unit, or the type of unknown? That explanation is important because it helps you recognise the same idea when the numbers and context change.
Finally, rewrite the answer in a cleaner exam style: formula first, substitution second, calculation third, final answer with units or suitable rounding last. This builds the habit of showing enough working for method marks.
Choose two examples from this page and redo them without looking. Then change one number in each question and solve the new version. This is a simple way to check whether you understand the method rather than remembering the answer.
Next, find three mixed past-paper questions where the topic is not named in the title. Mixed practice matters because exams rarely tell you which formula to use. The aim is to recognise the trigger in the question.
When marking, compare your working with the mark scheme. Look for method marks, not just final answers. If your final answer is wrong but your setup is correct, that is a different problem from choosing the wrong method at the start.
Keep a correction log with short labels such as formula choice, substitution, calculator input, rearranging, units or rounding. These labels make revision more targeted and less overwhelming.
Strong working is not about writing a long essay. It is about making the mathematical route clear. A good answer normally begins with the formula, theorem or equation that connects the information in the question. Then it shows substitution, one or two sensible calculation steps, and a final answer that matches the question.
This matters because GCSE mark schemes often reward method. A student can sometimes recover marks even if the arithmetic goes wrong, but only if the examiner can see a valid method. If the answer jumps straight from the question to a calculator result, there may be very little evidence to reward.
Good notation also reduces mistakes. Keep equals signs lined up, avoid squeezing several steps onto one line, and use brackets around negative numbers or grouped expressions. These small habits are especially useful when questions involve formulae, angles, fractions, square roots or rearranging.
If the question is worded as a real-life problem, finish by checking that the answer is realistic. A negative length, an angle bigger than the diagram suggests, a speed with the wrong unit, or a pressure answer with no area unit should all make you pause before moving on.
Parents do not need to reteach the whole topic to be helpful. A useful role is to ask the student to explain the first step, the formula choice and the final unit. If the student can explain those three things clearly, they usually understand much more than just the answer.
It is also helpful to separate confidence from accuracy. A student might understand the method but make a calculator slip, or they might get the answer right without understanding why. The correction should match the real issue, otherwise revision can become frustrating and unfocused.
Short, regular sessions usually work better than one long session. Ten minutes spent redoing one example carefully, checking the working and writing one correction can be more valuable than rushing through a full worksheet without review.
If the same type of mistake appears several times, that is a good sign the topic needs more guided practice. This is where tutoring can help, because the lesson can slow down the exact step that is causing the problem.
In the first session, focus only on understanding the examples. Read each question, cover the method, and predict the first line of working. Do not worry about speed at this point. The aim is to make the decision process feel clear.
In the second session, practise accuracy. Redo the examples without looking, then check every substitution, bracket, unit and rounding choice. If you use a calculator, type the calculation again to check whether the original input was reliable.
In the third session, move to mixed questions. Choose questions from different worksheets or past papers so the topic is not obvious from the page title. This helps you practise recognising the method under exam conditions.
At the end of the third session, write a short summary: the formula or method, the trigger that tells you to use it, the most common mistake, and one example question to redo next week. This turns the topic into a reusable revision note rather than a one-off exercise.
Move on when you can complete a straightforward question, a question with one extra step, and a mixed exam-style question without needing the answer in front of you. If you can only do the straightforward version, the topic is not secure yet.
It is completely normal for this to take more than one attempt. GCSE Maths topics become secure through repeated retrieval, not through reading a perfect worked solution once. The goal is steady independence: fewer prompts, clearer working and more confidence with unfamiliar wording.
If you are aiming for higher marks, add a final challenge: explain the method to someone else or write your own question that uses the same idea. Creating a question forces you to understand the structure of the method much more deeply.
Worked examples should sit between formula revision and full past papers. Formula revision helps you remember the tools. Worked examples show the tools in use. Past papers then test whether you can choose between several possible tools under time pressure.
This middle stage is often the one students skip. They either reread notes or jump straight into a paper. That can work for topics that already feel secure, but it is less effective for topics where the method still feels fragile. Worked examples give you a bridge from understanding to independence.
For best results, keep the examples close to your formula sheet. When you revise a formula, immediately pair it with one worked example and one exam question. That makes the formula meaningful and reduces the chance of forgetting it when the question is worded differently.
If you are preparing for mocks or final exams, revisit this page after a week and again after a month. Spaced repetition is especially useful in Maths because it shows whether a method has genuinely stuck or only felt familiar on the day you first learnt it.
A useful final routine is to keep one page in your revision folder called methods to remember. Add the example title, the first line of working, and the mistake to avoid. This gives you a quick, personal checklist before tests, mocks and independent revision.
Use these related pages to connect the worked examples with formula revision and more personalised support.
Once you know the formulae, these worked-example guides show how to turn them into method marks in exam-style questions.
Start with five carefully marked examples, then move to mixed exam questions. Quality of review matters more than the number of questions completed.
You should know the formula, but the bigger skill is recognising when to use it and substituting accurately.
Marks can be lost through missing working, early rounding, wrong units, poor notation or choosing the right formula for the wrong values.
Write the exact reason for the mistake, then redo a similar question a few days later.
Yes. Tutoring can slow down the method, identify gaps and help students understand what examiners reward.
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