Tell us where you are now and how much time is left, and see what is realistically within reach, with the path to get there. This is a guide to what you can do from here, not a prediction set in stone.
No tool can predict your A Level grade, and anyone who says otherwise is guessing. What we can do is show you the realistic range from your starting point, and the work that closes the gap. The earlier you start, the wider it opens.
Pick your most recent Economics grade and how much time is left before the A Levels.
Pick your current grade and how much time is left to see what is realistically within reach, and how to get there.
Honest tools beat flattering ones. We do not run a formula on your grade and hand you a guaranteed result, because that is not how the A Levels work. What history shows, across many cohorts, is that a student's starting grade is a weak predictor of their final grade once they learn to answer well and practise consistently. We have seen U grades become A grades, and complacent A grades slip.
So this guide shows a realistic range from where you are, weighted by how much time you have, and points you to the work that matters. The earlier in JC you start, the wider the range opens. Wherever you are, the next move is the same: fix the technique, then practise it under exam conditions, every week.
Yes, it happens. A U at promos is common and very recoverable, especially from JC1 or early JC2. Students who rebuild their answering technique and practise consistently over the following months routinely climb several grades. The earlier you start, the more room you have.
No, and no tool honestly can. Your A Level grade depends on the work you do from here and how well you do it, not on a calculation. This is a guide to what is realistically within reach from your starting point, and the path to get there.
It depends mostly on time and technique. From JC1, several grades is realistic with consistent work. In the final months, focused work on how you answer can still lift you a grade or two. The students who improve most fix technique early and practise under exam conditions.
The notes are free to read because the concepts should be. Join the mailing list for the 112 page Summary and Diagrams pack, drawn the way ETG teaches them, plus new chapters and worked answers as we publish. You can also follow along on Telegram.
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A grade you are not happy with is a starting point, not a verdict. With the right technique and weekly practice, the gap closes faster than most students expect. A free trial lesson with a specialist ETG economics tutor is a good first move.