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Physics - A Level

St Gregory's Catholic School

Reynolds Lane, TUNBRIDGE WELLS, TN4 9XL

GCE A/AS Level or Equivalent
Level 3
Science and Mathematics

Available start dates

Available start dates

Tuesday, 01 September 2026
St Gregory's Catholic School
2 Year(s)
Full time
Daytime/working hours
NULL

Application Instructions

Applications Open: 3 November 2025 at 9.00am

Applications Close: 31 January 2026 at 5.00pm

Entry Requirements: At least five GCSE's at grade 4 or above. In addition, you will need to achieve specific subject entry requirements for all subjects.

How to Apply - September 2026 entry

Applications will open on Applicaa on 3 November 2025. Please refer to our Course Guide which lists subjects available along with entry criteria - this can be found on our website under Sixth Form Admissions along with our Admissions Policy. Please note our Course Guide for 2025 entry is currently displayed, Course Guide for 2026 will be available shortly.

If you need advice on Sixth Form courses or completing an application, please email sixthformadmissions@sgschool.org.uk or phone 01892 527444.

When applying students MUST enter three subject choices PLUS a reserve - in preference order - one being first choice and four being the reserve.
Please do not enter a fifth choice.
Please note some subjects cannot be studied together - these are indicated on the relevant subject page and also in the Course Guide.

Internal Applicants to Sixth Form (current St Gregory’s students)

Our current students will join a Sixth Form Taster Day in September 2025, this is an opportunity to experience Sixth Form subjects and lessons.

All students will receive ongoing support and guidance with the online application process through discussions with dedicated members of staff, subject leaders and members of the Sixth Form team. Students will also receive a session with an external Careers Advisor.

External Applicants to Sixth Form

External applicants will be required to submit their applications via Applicaa using the link provided on the school website on 3 November 2026.

External applicants will also need to complete a Sixth Form Supplementary Information Form (SIF) if they are Catholic or 'Looked After' children. This can be found on the school website under Learn/Sixth Form/Sixth Form Admissions - Supplementary Information Form 2025-26. This must be returned to sixthformadmissions@sgschool.org.uk by the closing date.

Prospective students may be invited into school for a meeting with the Sixth Form team.

Course Summary

The Physics A Level course has been designed as a concept-led approach. It begins with a study of the laws, theories and models of physics and finishes with an exploration of their practical applications.

Independent study commitment:

Five hours per week minimum.

Course Details

Paper 1: Advanced Physics 1

Covers half the Year 13 topics and some Year 12 content: further mechanics, electric and magnetic fields, nuclear and particle physics.

Assessment: written examination of 1 hour 45 minutes. 30% of A Level.

Paper 2: Advanced Physics 2

Covers half the Year 13 topics and some Year 12 content: thermodynamics, space, nuclear radiation, gravitational fields, oscillations.

Assessment: written examination of 1 hour 45 minutes. 30% of A Level.

Paper 3: Advanced Physics 3

Covers all the Year 12 and Year 13 topics.

Assessment: written examination of 2 hours 30 minutes. 40% of A Level.

Assessment of practical skills

Students are assessed through a series of 16 core practical experiments, reported separately to the A Level grade as pass or fail. This is a teacher assessed component.

How will it be delivered and assessed?

A combination of classroom study, self study and enrichment activities.

Entry requirements

GCSE: 6 in Physics or Trilogy Science, 6 in Maths

Your next steps...

Why study Physics?

Physics tries to answer the really big questions. Physicists use the laws they uncover to develop new materials, machinery, and technology to improve our lives and help us explore the universe further, from computers to telescopes and spacecraft.

Where can it lead?

Physics students become good problem- solvers, can work in teams and develop research and analytical skills which can be applied to a variety of work places.

Physics is a highly regarded A Level by universities. It can lead to degree courses in physics, mathematics, engineering, natural sciences, astrophysics, climate science, computer science.

A Level Physics can also lead to careers in engineering, astrophysics, biophysics, medicine, food science, forensic science, nuclear physics, theoretical physics, computer game design, cosmology and geophysics.

What does it combine well with? Mathematics, Further Mathematics, Chemistry, Biology and Computer Science. Physics can only be taken if studied alongside Mathematics.


For more courses like this, check our courses page.