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Additional Mathematics

CSEC Additional Mathematics Exam Breakdown

PDF
Matthew Williams
|May 16, 2026|7 min read
BreakdownCSEC Additional MathematicsExam

A breakdown of the CSEC Additional Mathematics exam format, weighting, and syllabus structure.

Format

The CSEC Additional Mathematics examination assesses three cognitive profiles:

  • Conceptual Knowledge (CK)
  • Algorithmic Knowledge (AK)
  • Reasoning (R)

These profiles determine how your marks are distributed across the exam.

ProfilePercentage
Conceptual Knowledge20%
Algorithmic Knowledge50%
Reasoning30%

Total marks: 200

The exam consists of three papers.

Paper 01 – Multiple Choice

Duration: 1 hour 30 minutes Questions: 45

Paper 01 is a knowledge and procedure test. It rewards fast, accurate recall of formulas, rules, and standard techniques.

Content is drawn from all four sections:

  • Section 1 (Algebra, Sequences and Series) — 15 items
  • Section 2 (Coordinate Geometry, Vectors, Trigonometry) — 15 items
  • Section 3 (Introductory Calculus) — 10 items
  • Section 4 (Probability and Statistics) — 5 items

Trigonometry alone accounts for 9 of the 45 items. Calculus accounts for 10. Together they represent nearly half of Paper 01.

Tip/Paper 01 Tips
  • There are no part marks. A wrong answer scores zero, so eliminate clearly wrong options first.
  • Never leave an item blank — a guess is better than nothing.
  • Move at roughly 2 minutes per item. If an item is taking too long, mark it and return.
  • Exact values, index laws, and differentiation rules appear as single-step items — these should be instant.

Paper 02 – Structured Questions

Duration: 2 hours 40 minutes

This is the most important paper. All six questions are compulsory.

Structure:

  • 2 questions from Section 1 (Algebra and Series) — 30 marks
  • 1 question from Section 2 (Geometry, Vectors, Trigonometry) — 20 marks
  • 2 questions from Section 3 (Calculus) — 30 marks
  • 1 question from Section 4 (Statistics and Probability) — 20 marks

Each question is broken into labelled parts: (a), (b), (c). Later parts are typically harder and worth more marks. Earlier parts often feed into later ones.

Tip/Paper 02 Tips
  • Read all parts of a question before starting. Part (a) almost always sets up part (b).
  • Show all working. A correct answer with no method shown may lose marks. A wrong answer backed by correct working can earn most of them.
  • Allow roughly 1.6 minutes per mark. A 5-mark part should take about 8 minutes.
  • Attempt every part of every question. Method marks are available even when the final answer is wrong.

Paper 03 – School-Based Assessment (SBA)

This paper assesses your ability to apply mathematics to a real-world context and contributes 20% of the final grade.

There are two project types:

  • Project A — Theory-based. No data collection required. Uses mathematical concepts to model or describe a real-world phenomenon.
  • Project B — Experiment-based. Involves data collection, presentation, and mathematical analysis.
Tip/SBA Tips
  • Choose a topic where the mathematics is clearly central, not decorative.
  • Present all calculations neatly with full working.
  • Include a proper conclusion that interprets your results in context.
  • A well-structured, focused project scores better than an ambitious one that is incomplete.

Paper 032 – Alternative to SBA (Private Candidates)

Duration: 1 hour 30 minutes

This paper replaces the SBA for private candidates.

It tests:

  • Mathematical modelling
  • Interpretation of results
  • Application of concepts to unfamiliar situations

Syllabus Structure

The Additional Mathematics syllabus is divided into four sections:

Section 1 – Algebra, Sequences and Series

Topics include:

Algebra and Polynomials

  • Polynomial operations and long division
  • Remainder Theorem and Factor Theorem
  • Finding unknown coefficients

Quadratics

  • Completing the square and vertex form
  • Discriminant and nature of roots
  • Root relationships and forming quadratic equations

Inequalities

  • Linear and quadratic inequalities
  • Rational inequalities using sign diagrams

Surds, Indices, and Logarithms

  • Simplifying surds and rationalising denominators
  • Laws of indices and solving exponential equations
  • Logarithm laws and solving logarithmic equations
  • Linearising non-linear data

Sequences and Series

  • Arithmetic and geometric sequences
  • Sum formulas and sum to infinity
  • Convergence condition for geometric series

Section 2 – Coordinate Geometry, Vectors, and Trigonometry

Topics include:

Coordinate Geometry

  • Gradient, midpoint, and distance formulas
  • Equations of lines (parallel and perpendicular)
  • Circle equations — standard form and general form
  • Tangents, normals, and line-circle intersection

Vectors

  • Column vectors, magnitude, and unit vectors
  • Displacement vectors and parallel/collinear conditions
  • Scalar (dot) product and angle between vectors
  • Perpendicular vectors

Trigonometry

  • Radians, arc length, and sector area
  • Exact values and the CAST diagram
  • Pythagorean identity and compound-angle formulas
  • Double-angle formulas
  • Proving identities and solving equations in [0,2π][0, 2\pi][0,2π]

Section 3 – Introductory Calculus

Topics include:

Differentiation

  • Power rule, chain rule, product rule, quotient rule
  • Derivatives of sin⁡ax\sin axsinax and cos⁡ax\cos axcosax
  • Tangents, normals, and stationary points
  • Kinematics and connected rates of change

Integration

  • Power rule and integration of sin⁡ax\sin axsinax, cos⁡ax\cos axcosax
  • Finding curves from gradient functions
  • Definite integrals and area under a curve
  • Volume of revolution about the x-axis
  • Kinematics using integration

Section 4 – Probability and Statistics

Topics include:

Statistics

  • Data types, measures of central tendency
  • Quartiles, IQR, variance, and standard deviation
  • Stem-and-leaf diagrams and box-and-whisker plots

Probability

  • Addition rule and conditional probability
  • Independent and mutually exclusive events
  • Tree diagrams, Venn diagrams, and possibility spaces

How You Are Actually Tested

Additional Mathematics tests three levels of thinking:

Conceptual Knowledge

  • Recalling definitions and properties
  • Identifying the correct theorem or rule to apply
  • Stating formulas from memory

Algorithmic Knowledge

  • Carrying out multi-step procedures accurately
  • Manipulating algebraic expressions
  • Differentiating, integrating, and solving equations without error

This is 50% of all marks. The exam rewards fluency in procedures above everything else.

Reasoning

  • Modelling real-world problems mathematically
  • Interpreting results in context
  • Evaluating whether a solution makes sense

Common Mistakes

  • Forgetting the constant of integration in indefinite integrals
  • Applying the chain rule incorrectly (not multiplying by the inner derivative)
  • Using the wrong form of cos⁡2A\cos 2Acos2A when proving identities
  • Confusing mutually exclusive with independent events
  • Not converting degrees to radians before using arc length or sector area formulas
  • Leaving Paper 02 parts blank instead of attempting a method

Study Strategy

Master the Procedures First

AK makes up 50% of marks. You must be fluent in:

  • Differentiating composite, product, and quotient functions
  • Integrating and evaluating definite integrals
  • Completing the square
  • Solving exponential and logarithmic equations

These should be automatic before the exam.

Prioritise High-Yield Areas

Trigonometry (9 Paper 01 items) and Calculus (10 Paper 01 items plus two Paper 02 questions) together carry the most marks. Treat them as non-negotiable priorities.

Practise Showing Working

Paper 02 awards method marks. A student who shows clear steps and makes one arithmetic error still earns most of the marks. A student who writes only a final answer earns nothing if it is wrong.

Use Past Papers

Past papers reveal:

  • How questions are phrased
  • What mark schemes reward
  • Where marks are typically lost

Work through papers under timed conditions.

Understand, Don't Memorise

You will not be asked to reproduce a proof from memory. You will be asked to apply concepts to unfamiliar setups. Understanding why a rule works lets you adapt it. Memorising it without understanding leaves you stuck when the question looks slightly different.

Final Insight

Additional Mathematics is not hard because of its content. It is hard because half the marks test accuracy under time pressure.

Students lose marks by:

  • Making algebraic errors in routines they know
  • Rushing and skipping steps
  • Leaving parts blank because they are unsure

Slow down in Paper 02. Show every step. Attempt every part.

Next in syllabus order
Algebra and Polynomials