11/06/2026
A-level biology summer school 2026
We're running our online A-level biology summer school again this year - with sessions designed to help new year 12s, and those heading into year 13.
We're offering summer masterclass sessions on key A-level biology topics like biological molecules, mitosis and gas exchange as well as exam technique and practice. Useful for all UK exam boards - including AQA, Edexcel SNAB as well as AQA-Oxford International A-level biology.
We're also offering one-to-one sessions throughout the summer.
Our tutoring is 5-star rated on Google thanks to feedback from past students.
Take your time looking at our site and our reviews and please get in touch for a chat if you have any questions or to sign up!
https://wooltontutors.co.uk/a-level-biology-summer-school/
Best wishes,
John.
Dr John Ankers
Specialist biology tutor
A-level biology summer school – get a head start on next year
Our online A-level biology summer school sessions are here to help. The sessions are designed to reassure and prepare - whether you're making the transition from GCSE to A-levels (and we have a blog that may help), or looking to recap and test your knowledge as you head towards your exam year and mo...
01/06/2026
Some tips for the night before a big exam. Hope they're useful for everyone. Good luck to our students doing their A-levels and GCSEs. Nearly there! :-)
Tips for the night before the exam | Woolton Tutors
You're almost there. You've worked really hard and the exams are finally here. Revision at this stage is probably just finishing touches. But there are a few tips to keep in mind the night before the exam and to take with you on the big day. Read the question I know, I know - this
21/04/2026
Do you have biology mocks or exams coming up? Come and join us for A-level biology exam paper practice in our friendly, supportive masterclass sessions.
More information here:
A-level biology exam technique masterclasses
Weekly online A-level biology exam technique masterclasses for Year 12 and 13 students. Hosted by Dr John Ankers of Woolton Tutors.
14/01/2026
https://wooltontutors.co.uk/how-to-make-a-revision-timetable-that-works/
Our blog on how to make a revision timetable that works. Hope it's useful for you. :-)
How to make a revision timetable that works
Making a revision timetable or a revision plan is an important step in learning anything. We've already written a post on how to revise, here we're sharing what you need to bring those ideas together in a revision plan. We find that revision is most effective as part of your weekly routine alongside...
08/01/2026
A belated Happy New Year to all of our students, parents and friends! I hope 2026 brings you health, happiness and success in whatever your plans are.
John
10/11/2025
AQA A-level biology exam technique masterclasses
These are 55 minutes sessions focussing on exam questions from different topics every session. We look at how to answer the questions effectively, and tips and tricks for getting all the marks.
Year 12 (topics 1-4) on Tuesday evenings at 6:05PM
Year 13 (topics 5-8) on Wednesday evenings at 6:05PM
Please see the masterclass page for more details:
https://wooltontutors.co.uk/a-level-biology-masterclasses
Please do let me know if you'd like to join!
John
Dr John Ankers
Woolton Tutors
17/09/2025
We still have a couple of spaces left on each of our A-level biology exam technique masterclasses.
Tuesdays from 30/09/25 for Year 12 topics
Wednesdays from 01/09/25 for Year 13 topics
Helping you apply your knowledge to real exam questions on different A-level biology topics each week.
A-level biology exam technique masterclasses
Weekly online A-level biology exam technique masterclasses for Year 12 and 13 students. Hosted by Dr John Ankers of Woolton Tutors.
17/09/2025
A new blog post on p-values, statistics and significance in A-level biology. Hope it helps!
How to use the p-value in A-level biology
The problem with biological processes is that they’re messy. The same measurements taken on different days are likely to be slightly different (in some cases very different) due to the random nature of biological molecules sloshing around in cells. Scientists call this randomness “noise”. Nois...
14/08/2025
Good luck to all our A-level biology students getting their results today! You've all worked so hard. Well done! :-)
25/07/2025
Stereo Balance
Inside our ears, in a region called the cochlea, we have millions of tiny hair-like bristles called stereocilia. They wave around as sound floods over them, like arms at a music festival (although 10,000-times smaller). Watching this cochlea Coachella inside mouse ears, researchers find clues to how our hearing works. A high-powered microscope peers inside, highlighting waving stereocilia in purple, bunched together at 'roots' highlighted in green. The team find that properly formed bundles of stereocilia rely on a careful balance of a protein called taperin. Mice with too little or too much taperin lose their precisely arranged stereocilia, and have impaired hearing. They believe that taperin helps the stereocilia to remain flexible after a blast of loud noise which might otherwise lead to permanent damage in mice or human ears.
Written by John Ankers Woolton Tutors
Image from work by Inna A. Belyantseva & Chang Liu, and colleagues
Laboratory of Molecular Genetics, National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD; Dept of Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN, USA National Institutes of Health (NIH) Indiana University
Image originally published with a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Published in Journal of Cell Biology, June 2025
Originally on bpod.org.uk/archive/2025/7/23
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