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IB Math Revision

Master IB Math AA SL —
one exam question at a time.

A dedicated practice platform for IB Diploma students taking Mathematics: Analysis & Approaches Standard Level. Attempt real exam-style questions across all five syllabus topics, get instant AI feedback on your written working, and watch your mastery grow — one confidence-weighted percentage point at a time.

Start Revising → How it works ↓
Your Overall Mastery Needs 30 attempts per unit for full

Pick a Topic

Each syllabus topic has its own standalone practice engine. Questions are drawn randomly from a bank covering every sub-topic, presented one at a time — with worked reasoning behind every answer — so you actively build understanding of a specific weakness or work through all five topics in sequence.

Topic 1

Number & Algebra

Sequences & series, binomial theorem, exponents and logarithms — the algebraic foundations for the rest of the course.

0/0 marks · 0/30 attempts
Practice →
Topic 2

Functions

Linear, quadratic, exponential, logarithmic and rational functions; domain, range, composition, and transformations.

0/0 marks · 0/30 attempts
Practice →
Topic 3

Geometry & Trigonometry

Circle geometry, the unit circle, trigonometric identities, sine and cosine rules, and geometric proof.

0/0 marks · 0/30 attempts
Practice →
Topic 4

Statistics & Probability

Data analysis, correlation, probability rules, discrete distributions, and the normal distribution.

0/0 marks · 0/30 attempts
Practice →
Topic 5

Calculus

Differentiation from first principles, product/quotient/chain rules, integration, kinematics, and curve sketching.

0/0 marks · 0/30 attempts
Practice →

Built for the IB Way of Thinking

Three things separate this from a generic problem set — and they're the same three things that separate a 6 from a 7 in the real exam.

Feature

Marking That Explains Itself

Type your workings and Gemini AI compares them line-by-line against the official IB mark scheme. You see exactly where each method mark was earned, where the accuracy dropped, and what an examiner would have circled in red.

Try it →
Feature

Mark Schemes That Teach

Every question hides a fully worked solution with method marks broken out, alternative approaches marked as accepted, and the accuracy tolerances that quietly decide grade boundaries.

Peek inside →
Feature

Honest Progress, Not Vanity Stats

Your topic mastery bar only fills once you've genuinely proved it — twenty questions per topic is the confidence threshold. No inflated 91%-after-three-questions nonsense.

Check my progress →

How the AA SL Exam Works

Your final grade comes from three pieces: two calculator-assumed written papers sat at the end of Year 2, and a written investigation you complete during the course. Here's how the weighting breaks down — so your revision matches what actually earns marks.

Paper 1 · 40%

Non-Calculator

90 minutes, no GDC allowed. Short and extended-response questions across the full syllabus. Algebraic fluency and clear working are essential here.

Paper 2 · 40%

Calculator

90 minutes, GDC required. Short and extended-response questions using technology to solve, model, and interpret.

IA · 20%

Mathematical Exploration

A written mathematical investigation on a topic you choose. Marked by your teacher, moderated by the IB. Often the difference-maker for borderline grades.

Four Habits of Top Scorers

Every year I watch two students with the same ability get two different final grades. The gap almost always comes down to these four habits.

  1. Sanity-check the size of your answer. A village of 2.7 million people is obviously wrong. A savings account earning €4.71 in year 1 might not be. Ask "does this feel right?" before you move on.
  2. Reuse your own answers. Multi-part questions almost always feed forward — the value you found in (a)(i) is meant to slot straight into (b). If a later part looks impossible, go back and check whether you've already computed what you need.
  3. Write down what you did, not just what you got. Method marks are still awarded when the final answer is wrong. A single line labelled "substituting into the formula" is often worth 1 mark on its own.
  4. Own your GDC. Both papers assume you're fluent with your calculator. Knowing how to store a variable, use Solver, or run a t-test in three keystrokes saves precious minutes and avoids arithmetic slips.

Tips From Current IB Students

Advice that actually helped real students during their revision. All quotes are from students taking this exact course in the current academic year.

For Paper 1 practise without a calculator every time. If you always have one out, exam-day non-calculator feels twice as hard.
Priya · Y13 · Predicted 7
Trig identities are muscle memory. I made a flashcard deck of the 8 SL identities and drilled them daily for two weeks. Paid off massively.
Ethan · Y12 · Predicted 6
The IA is 20% of your grade — start it in Year 12 if you can. My teacher said mine went from 5→6 because I actually had time to refine it.
Nadia · Y13 · Predicted 6
For the calculus section, always sketch the graph on your GDC first, even if the question doesn't ask. Half the time it tells you the answer directly.
Owen · Y13 · Grade 7

Frequently Asked Questions

Who is this platform for?

Any IB Diploma student sitting Mathematics: Analysis & Approaches at Standard Level for the May 2024 exam session onwards. If your class textbook covers Number & Algebra, Functions, Geometry & Trigonometry, Statistics & Probability, and Calculus — this is built for you.

How does a typical session work?

Pick a topic from the tiles above. A randomised question appears — attempt it on paper or on-screen. When you're ready, either reveal the worked mark scheme, or paste your workings in for Gemini to mark them against the official rubric. Whichever route you take, your marks are silently logged so your progress bars stay accurate.

Do I need to pay upfront?

No — sign in with any account (Google, Microsoft or email) and you get seven full days of everything, including AI marking and mark schemes. If you decide it's worth it after the trial, a one-time €49 payment gives you a full 12 months. There's no auto-renewal.

What's "confidence-weighted mastery"?

Regular percentage scores lie when you've only tried a few questions. If you get 3 out of 3 correct, that's technically 100% — but you clearly haven't proved mastery yet. This platform waits until you've attempted 30 questions in a topic before your bar can hit its true percentage. Below that, the bar shows a scaled-down "provisional" mastery — an honest picture of where you actually stand.

What if I change my mind?

Because it's a single payment rather than a subscription, there's no auto-renewal to cancel. If you've paid and hit a genuine problem, click "Manage Subscription" once you're signed in — the two-button menu that appears will let you email pbromfield@ibmathrevision.com directly to sort it out.

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