We are currently doing some research around our psychology course offer and if you are a current teacher of psychology at GCSE or International A level we would love to hear from you. The first of the surveys below is to capture your views on GCSE psychology to inform future developments. You can also complete our short survey so we can get in touch if you are interested in future consultations wherever you teach.
Psychology
November 2025 Psychology subject update
Hi everyone,
Your November Psychology Update Is Here! This month’s update has important news for UK A Level Psychology teachers about improvements to the 'formulae and statistical tables' section at the start of exam papers (and a reminder about the timing changes previously shared). There are also recordings of the September training events for GCSE and IAL Psychology, and more free resources published for A level Psychology along with a new survey for teachers in international centres to inform the development of future qualifications.
Best wishes,
Tim Lawrence
Psychology Subject Advisor
This update includes:
- Key dates: including training opportunties in November and January entries for IAL psychology.
- UK A Level exam paper changes: formulae and statistical tables improvements and timing changes.
- Have your say: let us know if we can contact you as part of our research around our psychology course offer.
- Training and professional development: Exam Insight training coming up in November.
- Free teaching and learning resources: the BPS Teacher Toolkit and Research Digest blog, Tutor2U Psychology in the News, and new Maths in Psychology and Supplementary Topic Support resources for A Level Psychology.
- FAQs from psychology teachers: specifications, IAL entry rules and resources.
| 12 November | A Level Psychology Exam Insights training at 16.00 |
| 15 November | Amendment fees (high late fees) for IAL January 2026 entries begin |
| 18 November | GCSE Psychology Exam Insights training at 16.00 |
| 12 December | Access to Scripts deadline for June 2025 series |
| 21 January | IG and IAL results from October/November series to centres |
| 22 January | IG and IAL results from October/November series to candidates |
Final exam timetables for the summer 2026 exam series are available on our webpage linked below along with those for International A Level exams in January 2026.
We’ve got two key updates for teachers preparing students for A level Psychology exams in 2026.
More time for Papers 1 and 2 - 9PS0 01 and 9PS0 02
As announced in July, from the June 2026 exam series, students will have 2 hours and 15 minutes to complete Paper 1 and Paper 2. That’s an extra 15 minutes in each exam to help reduce exam-day pressure and give students more time to show what they know. Paper 3 stays at 2 hours, as it carries fewer marks (80 compared to 90).
Our specification and sample assessment materials have been updated to reflect this change.
Updates to formulae and statistical tables - A level Psychology (8PS0 and 9PS0)
In response to teacher feedback, we’ve made some changes to the formulae and statistical tables to improve clarity and ease of use:
Mann-Whitney U test tables are now ordered from lowest to highest level of significance, making it easier for students to find the right one.
The instructions in the formulae and statistical tables section of each paper for the Wilcoxon Signed Ranks test have been clarified to avoid confusion.
You’ll find the updated materials in the Course materials section of our website, along with a full breakdown in the Summary of Change Document, and you can also download these below.
What about mock exams?
Past papers on our website will stay as they were when students originally sat them. But we expect teachers will want to:
- Give students the extra 15 minutes for Papers 1 and 2
- Provide the updated formulae and statistical tables as a separate exam aid for mocks.
Sign up for our free Exam Insights training for GCSE and A Level Psychology using the link below,. These sessions share feedback from senior examiners on the June 2025 series - including lessons from specific questions and broader trends. The dates and times of the sessions are:
- A Level Exam Insights: Wednesday 12 November, 16.00-18.00
- GCSE Exam Insights: Tuesday 18 November, 16.00-17.30
Exam Insights training for IAL Psychology took place on 4 November - a recording of this will be available soon on YouTube and I will share it in a future update.
These events are a great way to sharpen your understanding of what examiners are looking for and help students feel more confident going into their exams.
This event in September covered key resources and sources of support available, advice and guidance for the year ahead and some exam technique FAQs.
This event in September covered key resources and sources of support available, advice and guidance for the year ahead (including on the specification changes for January 2026 exams) and some exam technique FAQs.
Videos
Apologies that there has been a delay uploading the recording of this training - it will be published shortly and will appear here when it does!
We are continuing to add to our free teaching resources for A Level Psychology teachers, with a new 'Maths in Psychology' worksheet on sampling, and two new packs in our 'Supplementary Topic Support' series. These are based on articles from the British Psychological Society's Research Digest blog, with the latest looking at power imbalance in social psychology, and neurodiverse voices in child psychology.
Last month we shared the links below to the BPS Teacher Toolkit and Research Digest blog. We're re-sharing these along with a link to the excellent magazine The Psychologist.
Recent articles include this important piece on the expereince of a Black psychologist: Rebuilding Psychology – Between rage and reckoning - Joshua Chinedu on Black healing, Black pain, and the future of our field.
The BPS Teacher Toolkit is a great selection of free resources for psychology teachers, ready to download and use in the classroom.
The BPS Research Digest is a great recommendation for students who want to deepen their understanding of psychological issues and research practices, with short and accessible summaries of current research.
I've had a number of good questions recently about practicals for A Level and IAL psychology. The expectations are basically the same for both qualifications. The specifications set out the requirements for each practical. There are suggestions, but any practical that meets the requirements in the specification is fine as long as it's ethical (candidates will not receive credit in the exam for describing unethical investigations!).
Students can work individually or in groups on practical activities, and it's perfectly acceptable to run a 'class practical' to ease the support burden on the teacher! They should write a report on the practical, but this doesn't need to be assessed. What matters is that they understand what was done and why, how the results were analysed and what they showed, and can evaluate the investigation - this is what the exam questions will test.
I've collected together IAL and A Level exam questions in a document you can download from our community group via the link below - the UK A Level ones have mark schemes and examiner reports. Whichever course you teach, both sets of questions are relevant.
In psychological research, findings and conclusions are closely linked - but they’re not the same thing. Here's how to help students distinguish them clearly:
🔍 Findings: What the data shows
Findings are the results of a study — the raw or processed data that emerge from the research. This might include:
- Statistical outcomes (e.g. mean scores, correlation coefficients)
- Observed behaviours
- Patterns or trends in the data
They are descriptive and objective - they tell us what happened, but not why.
For example, in a study on screen time and language skills, a finding might be:
“Children who used screens for more than 3 hours a day scored lower on vocabulary tests.”
This is a result, not an interpretation.
🧠 Conclusions: What the researcher infers
Conclusions go a step further. They are interpretations of the findings - what the researcher believes the results mean in the context of the hypothesis or theory.
They often involve:
- Inference (e.g. suggesting a relationship or cause)
- Evaluation (e.g. considering limitations or implications)
- Judgement (e.g. deciding whether the hypothesis was supported)
Using the same example, a conclusion might be:
“Excessive screen time may negatively impact children's language development.”
This is a claim based on the findings - and it mus be justified with evidence.
🧪 Common candidate pitfalls
Insights from the latest exam analysis in show that many candidates:
- Summarise findings but don’t go on to draw conclusions
- Confuse correlation with causation, especially when drawing conclusions from correlational data
- Miss AO3 marks by failing to justify their conclusions with data
For example, some candidates inferred cause and effect from correlational findings, which is a misstep. Others described the results well but didn’t interpret them - meaning they missed the chance to demonstrate deeper understanding.
✅ How to support students
1. Teach the difference explicitly. Use examples from past papers to show how findings and conclusions are assessed separately under AO2 and AO3.
2. Use sentence starters. Encourage students to use phrases like:
- “The data shows…” (for findings)
- “This suggests that…” or “This may indicate…” (for conclusions)
3. Practice with unseen data. Give students unfamiliar graphs or tables and ask them to:
- Describe the findings
- Draw a justified conclusion
4. Highlight the importance of justification. Remind students that conclusions must be backed up with data - this is where AO3 marks come from.
The sensory register is difficult to 'pin down' compared to STM and LTM, both in terms of researching into it and in terms of explaining it. This accounts for the range of descriptions in textbooks and other sources.
Here are some suggested key teaching points:
- Sensory register capacity is very large - potentially equalling the total of all the information that is sensed. For example the iconic (visual) register holds all the information that our visual system extracts from our eyes, but only very briefly.
- Duration is very short but depends to some extent on the sense involved. Iconic (visual) is less than a second whereas echoic (auditory) is a little longer (up to 4s).
- We can't directly access the contents of the sensory register to measure it - we rely on what participants report having seen / heard etc, and in order to report what they have sensed they need to pay attention to it and transfer it into their STM. This leads to some apparently contradictory findings!
The last sentence of Sperling's (1960) abstract is helpful: "It is also concluded that the high accuracy of partial report observed in the experiments does not depend on the order of report or on the position of letters on the stimulus, but rather it is shown to depend on the ability of the observer to read a visual image that persists for a fraction of a second after the stimulus has been turned off."
To make sense of this students need to understand that 'partial report' means that participants were only asked to report on one row of letters (indicated by a high, medium or low pitched tone immediately after they disappeared). The 'visual image that persists for a fraction of a second' is all the information that was seen, while it lasts in the sensory register.
The terms 'rehearsal', 'maintenance rehearsal' and 'elaborative rehearsal' are used in different ways in different texts describing the MSM and cause considerable confusion for teachers as well as for students.
I suggest that the best option to use when describing the MSM is to simply use the term 'rehearsal' - as you suggest this is what Atkinson and Shiffrin used when they introduced the model.
A good evaluation point for the MSM is that it over-emphasises the importance of rehearsal (in general) as the means of transferring information into LTM. A good counter-theory is Craik and Tulving's 'level of processing' explanation which (put simply) states that it isn't the amount of rehearsal that matters, but rather how deeply the information is processed. The concept of 'elaborative rehearsal' is influenced by this concept and can be seen as an improvement / clarification of the original rehearsal concept, as it emphasises the need to deeply process and link information to existing LTM contents in order to transfer it, whereas 'maintenance rehearsal' (e.g. repeating a phone number to ourselves while looking for a pen or a phone to record it with) only holds information in STM while the rehearsal continues.
Having first identified the importance of consistency for minority influence in 1969, Moscovici went on to conduct further experiments and in 1976 set out a more detailed theoretical framework for understanding the process of minority influence. This is quite 'overlapping' with his conclusions from 1969 but had more of a focus on the underlying cognitive processes involved. The following summary of his 1976 theory contains more detail than students need, but is intended as a guide for teachres as this is genarlly dealth with quite briefly in textbooks.
Moscovici’s 1976 Theory of Minority Influence:
Core Aspects
In his 1976 paper Studies in Social Influence: III. Majority versus Minority Influence in a Group, Moscovici proposed a conversion theory of minority influence. This theory was designed to explain how a consistent minority can bring about deep, lasting change in the beliefs of the majority.
1. Innovation vs Conformity
Moscovici made a clear distinction between:
- Conformity: Majority influence leads to compliance - a change in outward behaviour without internal belief change.
- Innovation: Minority influence leads to conversion - a change in the underlying cognitive structure or belief system of the majority.This was a major shift from earlier models (e.g. Asch), which focused almost entirely on majority pressure.
2. Behavioural Style as a Source of Influence
Moscovici argued that behavioural style, especially consistency, is the key to minority influence:
- A minority must be consistent over time, across individuals, and in their message.
- Consistency signals confidence and commitment, which prompts the majority to re-evaluate their own views.
This was tested experimentally by varying whether the minority was consistent or inconsistent in their responses. Consistent minorities had a significantly greater impact.
3. Validation Process
Unlike majority influence, which relies on comparison (normative pressure), minority influence works through validation:
- The majority is forced to think deeply about the minority’s position.
- This leads to private acceptance (internalisation), rather than just public compliance.
This process is slower, but results in more durable change.
4. Cognitive Restructuring
Moscovici’s experiments showed that minority influence could lead to changes in the perceptual-cognitive code - how people interpret and process information:
- In his study, participants exposed to a consistent minority began to see colours differently, not just report them differently.
- This suggests that minority influence can reshape perception, not just opinion.
Experimental Evidence
Moscovici’s 1976 study involved:
- Groups of participants judging the colour of slides.
- Confederates (minority agents) consistently or inconsistently giving incorrect answers.
- Results showed that consistent minorities influenced the majority’s responses significantly more than inconsistent ones.
Evaluation for IAL Psychology
- Strengths: Groundbreaking shift in focus; supported by experimental evidence; explains long-term social change.
- Limitations: Lab-based studies may lack ecological validity; real-world minorities face more complex challenges; later research added nuance (e.g. flexibility, identification).
For the 12 mark 'evaluate' essay on Paper 2 for GCSE Psychology, and for 'evaluate' essays for A Level and IAL Psychology, the higher level descriptors in the level based mark schemes for AO3 mention conclusions. These don't necessarily need to come at the end of the answer in a 'concluding paragraph' - instead 'mini-conclusions' can be given throughout the answer. However they do need to be 'summing up statement' about the overall value of a theory, study or method, supported by evidence.
The 9 mark 'assess' questions for GCSE Psychology, and essays for A Level and IAL Psychology that use the 'assess' or 'to what extent' command words don't have any mention of conclusions in their mark schemes, but they do call for judgements. A judgement is similar to a conclusion but it is not a 'summative statement' on the value of an explanation (for example). They are decisions about how useful an explanation is, in a particular sense or context, based on evidence.
To illustrate the difference, the 9 mark 'assess' question on Paper 1 for GCSE Psychology requires candidates to use ideas from two areas of psychology (two topics) to explain a behaviour given in a scenario. A conclusion here would be an overall decision about which of the two areas / two explanations was better. However the use of 'assess' recognises that this isn't really a fair question - it's likely that both explanations offer some useful insights but also have limitations, and it's very difficult to pick a winner! Instead judgements about the value / usefulness of each one are called for.
Subject advisor
Tim Lawrence
Psychology and international Science
Subject updates
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October 2025 Psychology subject update
Hi everyone,
Your October Psychology Update Is Here! This month’s update brings you key dates, training news, and some brilliant free resources to enrich your teaching.
As always, if there’s anything I can help with, get in touch using the contact options below.
Best wishes,
Tim Lawrence
Psychology Subject Advisor