GCSE · OCR

Chemistry GCSE Foundation Revision

Get ready for your OCR Chemistry GCSE Foundation exam with AI-generated exam papers, instant marking of your handwritten answers, and exam questions by topic that always show you what to work on next. Free sample questions included. No payment required to get started.

Exam Questions

AI generates questions on any Chemistry GCSE Foundation topic. Mark yourself against the answer, and every question you miss builds your personal revision list.

Exam Papers

Every OCR Chemistry GCSE Foundation exam paper is generated fresh, with a full mark scheme, weighted toward the topics most likely to come up.

AI Marking

Photograph your handwritten answers. The AI reads your writing and marks it against the mark scheme. Results in seconds.

Topics covered

Questions and exam papers cover every Chemistry GCSE Foundation topic on the OCR GCSE specification.

Particles
Elements, Compounds and Mixtures
Chemical Reactions
Predicting and Identifying Reactions and Products
Monitoring and Controlling Chemical Reactions
Global Challenges

Also available for AQA, Edexcel, OCR-GATEWAY-SCIENCE, OCR-TWENTY-FIRST-CENTURY.

Start revising Chemistry GCSE Foundation today

Free sample questions included. No payment required to get started.

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Frequently asked questions

Is ExamPass.ai free for Chemistry GCSE Foundation?

Yes. Every new account includes a free set of sample questions, no payment required. Extra exam questions and exam papers run on a credit pack from £14.99.

Does ExamPass.ai support OCR Chemistry GCSE Foundation?

Yes. Exam papers and exam questions are built specifically for the OCR Chemistry GCSE Foundation specification, and marked to OCR mark scheme conventions.

Can ExamPass.ai mark my handwritten Chemistry GCSE Foundation answers?

Yes. Photograph your handwritten answer with your phone. The AI reads it and marks it against the stored mark scheme, then gives you detailed feedback in seconds.

Will I see the same questions twice?

No. We track every question you’ve seen, and new practice sessions are built to cover ground you haven’t been tested on yet. Each session builds on the last one.