Pearson Edexcel Law A-Level Revision
Spec coverage, paper structure, exam approach and AI revision support tailored to the Pearson Edexcel specification.
What the Pearson Edexcel spec actually demands
Pearson Edexcel A-Level Law is assessed across three written papers sat at the end of Year 13. The specification rewards students who can do three things well: (1) cite the right authority for the right rule, (2) apply the rule to the facts in a structured way (Issue, Rule, Application, Conclusion), and (3) evaluate the underlying policy in essay questions. Rote learning of cases will get you a C; structured application will get you an A.
ThinkLikeLaw maps onto each paper individually, you can paste an exam-style scenario into the assistant and ask it to model an answer in the exact Pearson Edexcel command-word format (apply, evaluate, discuss).
Paper-by-paper structure
- 1
Paper 1: The legal system and criminal law
Sources of law, civil and criminal courts, legal personnel, plus criminal liability (offences against the person, theft, defences).
- 2
Paper 2: Law making and law of tort
Parliamentary supremacy, statutory interpretation, judicial precedent, and the law of tort (negligence, occupiers' liability, vicarious liability, nuisance).
- 3
Paper 3: Further law (option)
Choice of contract law, human rights law, or law of property, with synoptic essay-style questions linking back to the nature of law.
Sample exam approach
For a typical Pearson Edexcelproblem question, read the facts twice, underline the legal triggers (e.g. "without consent", "displayed in the window", "an explosion caused"), and then write a short opening sentence identifying the area of law in dispute. From there:
- State the rule and cite the leading authority for it (case name, year).
- Apply that rule to the facts, never simply restate them.
- Address any defence or counter-argument the facts hint at.
- Conclude on the most likely outcome in measured language.
Essay-style questions reward students who choose a clear thesis in their introduction and defend it paragraph by paragraph. Examiners flag "knowledge-dumping", answers that recite cases without evaluating them.
Common Pearson Edexcel pitfalls
- Confusing the civil and criminal courts when describing the legal system.
- Citing repealed legislation. Always check the up-to-date statute on legislation.gov.uk.
- Forgetting the synoptic links between papers, examiners credit students who connect tort and criminal liability where the facts allow.
- Skipping evaluation in essay answers, A-Level Law rewards reasoned judgment, not a textbook summary.
- Mis-stating Wednesbury or Caparo as the test for every problem; pick the right test for the right area.
How ThinkLikeLaw helps with Pearson Edexcel Law
- Drill Pearson Edexcel command words (apply / evaluate / discuss) with the assistant in the right register.
- Generate flashcards for the leading cases keyed to each paper.
- Stress-test essay outlines with the assistant before sitting a mock.
- Use IRAC scaffolding inside the assistant to structure problem questions.