Edexcel A-Level Chemistry Courses Now Available
A-Level Chemistry opens doors to medicine, pharmacy, chemical engineering, biochemistry, and dozens of other degree programmes. It is also a subject where the sheer volume of content can feel overwhelming without a clear structure to follow.
LearningBro has launched 11 new courses covering the complete Edexcel A-Level Chemistry specification. Together, they contain 110 lessons and 1,100 practice questions, giving you a comprehensive resource for learning the material from scratch or revising what you have already covered in class.
The 11 Courses
Here is what each course covers.
Atomic Structure and Periodicity -- Electron configurations, ionisation energies, atomic orbitals, and periodic trends. This is the foundation that everything else builds on, and examiners expect you to use these ideas to make predictions throughout the rest of the specification.
Bonding and Structure -- Ionic, covalent, and metallic bonding, intermolecular forces, molecular shapes, and how bonding type determines physical properties. You will learn to apply electron pair repulsion theory and distinguish between different types of solid structure.
Amounts and Redox -- The mole concept, molar calculations, empirical and molecular formulae, concentration, titrations, and the fundamentals of oxidation and reduction. Quantitative chemistry runs through every part of the specification, and this course builds confidence with multi-step problems.
Energetics -- Enthalpy changes, Hess's law, bond enthalpies, and Born-Haber cycles. The questions require you to work through calculations methodically, which is exactly the skill the exam demands.
Kinetics and Equilibrium -- Rate equations, the Arrhenius equation, orders of reaction, equilibrium constants, and Le Chatelier's principle. You will practise interpreting rate-concentration graphs and calculating Kc and Kp.
Organic Chemistry I -- Naming conventions, functional groups, reaction mechanisms, alkanes, alkenes, halogenoalkanes, and alcohols. This course gives you structured practice with curly arrow notation and mechanistic reasoning, which makes the more advanced organic chemistry significantly easier.
Organic Chemistry II -- Carbonyls, carboxylic acids and their derivatives, aromatic chemistry, amines, and polymers. The questions are more synoptic here, requiring you to plan multi-step synthetic routes and identify unknown compounds from spectral data.
Inorganic Chemistry -- Transition metal chemistry, including complex ion formation, variable oxidation states, catalysis, and colour, plus the reactions of Period 3 elements and their oxides. This topic is often underestimated by students but carries significant weight in the exam.
Acids, Bases, and Buffers -- pH calculations, strong and weak acids, buffer solutions, and titration curves. This is one of the more calculation-heavy parts of the specification, and students who practise thoroughly here tend to pick up marks that others leave on the table.
Analytical Techniques -- Mass spectrometry, infrared spectroscopy, NMR spectroscopy, and chromatography. You will learn to interpret spectra, identify functional groups from IR absorptions, and determine molecular structures from NMR data.
Exam Preparation -- Exam technique and strategy specific to Edexcel A-Level Chemistry: approaching different question types, structuring extended responses, managing time across papers, and avoiding the most common mistakes. This is the course to work through in the weeks before your exams.
The Learning Path
Studying 11 courses is much more manageable when you have a clear route through them. The Edexcel A-Level Chemistry learning path links all 11 courses in specification order, so you can work through them sequentially without having to decide what to study next.
The path starts with foundational topics -- atomic structure, bonding, and quantitative chemistry -- before moving into energetics, kinetics, and organic chemistry. This sequencing matters because later topics build directly on earlier ones. Understanding bonding properly makes organic reaction mechanisms far more intuitive. Getting energetics right makes kinetics and equilibrium easier to grasp.
You can also use the path non-sequentially. If you are revising and need to focus on specific weak areas, jump to the relevant course directly. The path provides a recommended order for those who want one.
How the Courses Work
Each of the 110 lessons covers a focused topic within the specification. After working through the lesson content, you answer 10 practice questions that test your understanding at exam level. The questions are not trivial recall -- they require you to apply concepts, perform calculations, draw mechanisms, and explain reasoning, just as the real exam does.
If you get stuck, the AI tutor provides hints and explanations without simply giving you the answer. This is particularly useful for chemistry, where a small misunderstanding early in a problem can lead you down the wrong path entirely.
Your progress is tracked across all courses, so you can see at a glance which areas you have covered and which still need attention.
Get Started
These courses are designed for anyone studying Edexcel A-Level Chemistry, whether you are in Year 12 learning the material for the first time, in Year 13 revising for final exams, or studying independently.
All 11 courses are available now. Head to the Edexcel A-Level Chemistry learning path to see the full sequence and start with the first course, or jump directly to whichever topic you need most.