🏆 PSLE Science 2026 — AL1 Strategy Guide

Score AL1 in
PSLE Science.

The complete exam-focused study plan — what to study, when to study it, and exactly how to write answers that earn full marks. Everything is free on ScienceStar.

📋 What AL1 requires
📅 12-week study plan
✏️ Open-ended answer formulas
⚠️ Common mistakes to avoid
Understanding AL1

What does AL1 actually mean?

AL1 is the highest Achievement Level in PSLE Science. Here's exactly what score you need and how the paper is structured.

🏆 AL1 = 90 marks and above (out of 100)

PSLE Science is marked out of 100 marks total. To achieve AL1, you need a raw score of 90 or above. The paper has two booklets taken on the same day. You must perform well in both to reach AL1 — strong MCQ alone is not enough.

AL1
90 – 100 marks
Target: 90+
AL2
85 – 89 marks
Very good
AL3
80 – 84 marks
Good
Booklet A
Multiple Choice Questions
56 marks
  • 28 MCQ questions × 2 marks each
  • 4 options per question (A, B, C, D)
  • 1 hour for Booklet A
  • No partial marks — all or nothing
  • Covers all topics from P3–P6 syllabus
  • No working required — just circle the answer
Booklet B
Open-Ended Questions
44 marks
  • Structured questions, 1–4 marks each
  • Written answers — every word counts
  • ~1 hour for Booklet B
  • Keywords must appear in your answer
  • Includes data interpretation & fair test
  • This is where AL1 is won or lost
💡

The key insight: Most students who miss AL1 lose marks in Booklet B — not because they don't know the science, but because they don't use the right keywords and sentence structure. This guide will fix that.

12-Week Plan

Your AL1 Study Roadmap

Follow this week-by-week plan using ScienceStar. Each phase builds on the last — don't skip ahead.

📚
Phase 1 — Weeks 1–4: Build the Foundation
Master P3 & P4 topics. Cover every topic at least once.
Mon & Tue
P3 topics — 1 topic per session. Read study notes → do quiz → flip flashcards.
🌈 P3 App → 8 topics total · ~2 per week
Wed & Thu
P4 topics — same method: notes → quiz → flashcards.
🔬 P4 App → 8 topics total · ~2 per week
Friday
Weak topic review — redo quizzes on topics scored below 70%.
Focus on understanding, not just memorising.
Weekend
Diagram Labelling — practise 2 diagrams per weekend.
🏷️ Diagrams → Plant Cell, Digestive System, Circuits

Phase 1 goal: Complete all P3 and P4 quiz topics with at least 70% score. No skipping topics — even "easy" ones appear in PSLE.

🔬
Phase 2 — Weeks 5–7: Master P5 & PSLE Topics
The harder concepts. This is where many students lose marks.
Mon & Tue
P5 topics — Cells, Reproduction, Respiratory, Transport, Water Cycle.
🌿 P5 App → Pay extra attention to Transport System
Wed & Thu
PSLE-exclusive topics — Forces, Photosynthesis, Electrical Systems, Environment.
🔭 PSLE App →
Friday
Fair Test practice — learn to identify Variables (IV, DV, CV) and write Method.
🧪 Fair Test → Worth 4–6 marks in Booklet B every year
Weekend
Data Interpretation — practise reading graphs, tables and identifying trends.
📊 Data Skills → Worth 4–6 marks in Booklet B every year

Phase 2 goal: Know all 15 PSLE topics. Complete at least 3 Fair Test experiments and 5 data sets. Start memorising keywords.

📝
Phase 3 — Weeks 8–10: Exam Technique
Stop losing marks you deserve. Lock in Booklet B writing skills.
Mon
Past Year Questions — Booklet A (2019 or 2020). Time yourself: 28 MCQ in 45 min.
📜 Past Year Qs →
Tue–Thu
Past Year Questions — Booklet B. Write full answers. Check against model answers.
Circle every mark you lost. Identify why you lost each mark — usually a missing keyword.
Friday
Keyword drill — use flashcards to test yourself on the 10 most common answer keywords.
🃏 Flashcards →
Weekend
Full paper simulation — sit one complete past year paper under exam conditions.
No looking at notes. 2 hours total. Mark it yourself after.

Phase 3 goal: Consistently scoring 50/56 in Booklet A and 36/44 in Booklet B (total: 86+). If not there yet, go back to Phase 2 weak topics.

🏆
Phase 4 — Weeks 11–12: Final Push
The last 2 weeks. Sharpen, don't over-revise. Rest matters.
Week 11
Sit 2022 and 2023 past year papers — full timed conditions.
Focus only on topics where you lost marks. Don't re-learn topics you already know.
📜 Past Year Qs →
Mon–Wed
Week 12
Light revision only — flashcards, diagram labelling, keyword lists.
20–30 minutes max per day. No new material.
Day before
Prepare your stationery. Sleep by 9:30pm.
Quick 15-minute flashcard review of keywords. No full papers.
Exam day
Eat breakfast. Bring extra pencils. Read each question twice before writing.
Check your answer to Booklet B question by question before submitting.
Topic Priority

Which topics appear most in PSLE?

Based on past year papers (2019–2023), these topics are tested every single year. Master these first.

Topic Level Priority Why it matters for AL1 Avg. marks
Respiratory & Circulatory System
Heart, lungs, blood flow, gas exchange
P5PSLE 🔴 High Appears in Booklet B every year. Requires precise keyword answers. 8–10
Photosynthesis
Light, chlorophyll, glucose, oxygen, carbon dioxide
P5PSLE 🔴 High MCQ and open-ended. Equation must be memorised perfectly. 6–8
Electrical Systems
Series, parallel, conductors, insulators, circuit symbols
P4PSLE 🔴 High Diagram labelling, predicting brightness, explaining open/closed circuits. 6–8
Forces (Gravity, Friction, Springs)
Effects of forces, elastic spring force, resultant force
P5PSLE 🔴 High Requires "because…therefore" logic. Calculation-style questions possible. 6–8
Water Cycle
Evaporation, condensation, precipitation, transpiration
P5PSLE 🔴 High Diagram labelling + written explanation questions every year. 4–6
Interactions in Environment
Food chains, food webs, adaptations, ecosystems
P4P5PSLE 🔴 High MCQ often trick questions. Must trace energy flow correctly. 4–6
Plant Reproduction
Pollination, fertilisation, seed dispersal methods
P4PSLE 🟡 Medium Vocabulary-heavy. Students lose marks using everyday words instead of science terms. 4–6
Matter & States of Change
Solid, liquid, gas, melting, boiling, evaporation, condensation
P4P5 🟡 Medium Concept is simple but MCQ options are very close. Know all state change terms precisely. 4–6
Digestive System
Organs, enzymes, nutrients, absorption
P4 🟡 Medium Diagram labelling (order of organs). Written function-of-organ questions. 4–6
Heat & Light
Conduction, convection, radiation, reflection, refraction
P3P4 🟡 Medium P3 and P4 versions tested. Don't assume you know it — check the differences. 2–4
Animal Life Cycles
Complete vs incomplete metamorphosis, stages
P3 🟢 Lower Usually MCQ only. But students still mix up complete vs incomplete metamorphosis. 2–4
Magnets
Poles, attraction/repulsion, magnetic materials
P3P4 🟢 Lower Straightforward concept — easy marks if revised. Don't neglect it. 2–4
Exam Technique

How to write answers that score full marks

Knowing the science is only half the battle. AL1 students write answers differently. Here's exactly how.

🅰️
Booklet A — MCQ Strategy
  • Read the question stem twice before looking at options.
  • Cover the options and think of your answer first, then match.
  • For "which is correct / which is incorrect" questions — check every option, not just the first one that looks right.
  • Cross out options you are sure are wrong. Choose from what remains.
  • If unsure between 2 options, look for a key word difference — PSLE MCQ options are designed to test precision.
  • Never leave blank — guess if you must. No penalty for wrong answers.
  • Flag difficult questions and return to them. Don't spend more than 2 minutes on any one question.
✏️
Booklet B — Open-Ended Formula
  • For 1-mark answers: one clear keyword + context. Never one word alone.
  • For 2-mark answers: give the cause AND the effect. "Because [X], therefore [Y]."
  • For "explain" questions: always include a science reason. "The plant wilted because it did not have enough water for photosynthesis" — not just "no water".
  • For "compare" questions: state both sides. "A has more [X] than B" — not just "A has a lot of X".
  • For "predict and explain": state the prediction first, then the reason with a keyword.
  • Avoid everyday words: don't write "eating" — write "ingestion". Don't write "breathing in" — write "inhalation".
  • Never write "etc." or vague phrases like "and so on" — examiners cannot give marks for what they cannot see.
⏱️
Time Management
  • Booklet A (56 marks): Aim to finish in 45 minutes. Leave 15 minutes to check.
  • Booklet B (44 marks): Spend ~1 mark per minute. A 3-mark question = 3 minutes maximum.
  • Do not spend more than 4 minutes on any single question in Booklet B.
  • If stuck, write a partial answer and move on — come back later. Partial marks exist.
  • Leave 10 minutes at the end of Booklet B to re-read your answers and add missing keywords.
  • Use ScienceStar's 30-second quiz timer daily to build speed under pressure.
🚫
Fair Test Questions — guaranteed marks
  • Independent Variable (IV): What you change. State it specifically — not just "temperature" but "the temperature of water".
  • Dependent Variable (DV): What you measure. Must be measurable — "the time taken for the ice to melt", not "how fast it melts".
  • Controlled Variables (CV): List at least 2 specific things kept the same — "the size of the ice cube", "the same container".
  • Method: Start with "Measure the [DV]…". Use past tense. Be step-by-step.
  • Prediction: State direction — "The higher the temperature, the faster the ice will melt."
  • Never write "everything else" as a controlled variable. Name each one.
Keywords

Keywords that unlock marks in Booklet B

Examiners look for these exact words. Using the wrong word — even if your meaning is right — will cost you a mark.

Photosynthesis
  • chlorophyll (not "green stuff")
  • carbon dioxide (not "CO2" alone)
  • glucose (not "food" or "sugar")
  • light energy (not just "sunlight")
  • absorbed / released
Respiratory / Circulatory
  • oxygenated / deoxygenated blood
  • contract / relax (for heart/muscles)
  • diaphragm moves down / up
  • diffuse / diffusion
  • capillaries (not "small tubes")
Forces
  • resultant force (not "total force")
  • direction of force
  • elastic spring force
  • friction acts opposite to motion
  • gravitational force / weight
Electrical Systems
  • complete / incomplete circuit
  • series / parallel connection
  • conductor / insulator
  • current flows through
  • brighter / dimmer (not "more light")
Water Cycle / Matter
  • evaporation / evaporate
  • condensation / condenses
  • precipitation (not "rain")
  • transpiration (plants lose water)
  • water vapour (not "steam" or "gas")
Interactions in Environment
  • producer / consumer / decomposer
  • predator / prey
  • energy is transferred (not "passed")
  • adapted to / adaptation
  • population increases / decreases
🃏

Use ScienceStar flashcards to drill these keywords daily. The built-in "Got it / Unsure / Again" system will automatically focus your revision on the words you keep forgetting. Open PSLE flashcards →

Common Mistakes

How students accidentally lose marks

These are the most common errors seen in PSLE Science Booklet B. Knowing them before the exam is worth several marks.

✗ Wrong answer
"The plant wilted because it did not get water."
✓ Model answer
"The plant wilted because without water, its cells lost water and could not remain turgid, causing the plant to droop."
✗ Wrong answer
"The ice melted faster because it was warmer." (for a fair test DV)
✓ Model answer
"The dependent variable is the time taken for the ice cube to melt completely, measured in minutes."
✗ Wrong answer
"Bulb X is brighter because it gets more electricity."
✓ Model answer
"Bulb X is brighter because in a parallel circuit, each bulb receives the same voltage as the battery, whereas in a series circuit the voltage is shared."
✗ Wrong answer
"The population of rabbits increased because there were less foxes to eat them."
✓ Model answer
"The population of rabbits increased because fewer rabbits were consumed by foxes, so more rabbits survived and reproduced."
✗ Wrong answer
"Plants take in CO2 and release O2 during photosynthesis." (incomplete — missing conditions)
✓ Model answer
"In the presence of light and chlorophyll, plants absorb carbon dioxide and water to produce glucose and oxygen."
✗ Wrong answer
"The heart pumps blood around the body." (too vague for 2 marks)
✓ Model answer
"The heart pumps oxygenated blood from the lungs to the rest of the body, and returns deoxygenated blood from the body to the lungs."
Use ScienceStar

The right tool for every part of your revision

Each ScienceStar tool is designed to target a specific part of the PSLE paper. Use them all.

🔭
PSLE Quiz & Notes
150+ MCQ questions, flashcards and complete study notes for all 15 PSLE topics. Instant answer explanations.
Targets: Booklet A (56 marks)
Start PSLE practice →
🧪
Fair Test Design
10 full experiments. Practise identifying IV, DV and CV, writing a method and making predictions with model answers.
Targets: Booklet B (4–6 marks)
Design experiments →
📊
Data Interpretation
9 question sets. Read graphs and tables, identify trends, explain anomalies and draw conclusions in exam-style format.
Targets: Booklet B (4–6 marks)
Practise data skills →
🏷️
Diagram Labelling
Interactive drag-and-click labelling for every diagram tested in PSLE — Plant Cell, Digestive System, Circuits, Water Cycle and more.
Targets: Booklet B (2–4 marks)
Start labelling →
📜
Past Year Questions
Full PSLE papers from 2019–2023. Booklet A MCQ and Booklet B open-ended questions with complete model answers.
Targets: Full paper (100 marks)
Practise past papers →
🌈
P3 & P4 Revision
Don't neglect the foundation topics. P3 and P4 content makes up 40% of the PSLE paper. Revise all 16 topics.
Targets: Booklet A & B (40+ marks)
Revise foundation →
🌿
P5 Topics
Cells, Reproduction, Respiratory, Transport, Water Cycle, Adaptations, Food Webs and Matter. Often tested in the harder Booklet B questions.
Targets: Booklet B harder questions
Study P5 topics →
📖
Science Articles
In-depth explanations of the trickiest concepts — Photosynthesis, Food Webs, Water Cycle, Circuits and more in plain English.
Targets: Conceptual understanding
Read articles →
Final Checklist

Are you ready for AL1?

Tick off each item. If you can honestly check every box, you are ready to score AL1.

📚
Content Knowledge
  • I have studied all 8 P3 topics and scored 80%+ on quizzes
  • I have studied all 8 P4 topics and scored 80%+ on quizzes
  • I have studied all 8 P5 topics and scored 80%+ on quizzes
  • I have studied all 15 PSLE topics and scored 80%+ on quizzes
  • I can write the photosynthesis equation from memory
  • I know the difference between complete and incomplete metamorphosis
  • I can label a plant cell, digestive system and electrical circuit correctly
✏️
Exam Technique
  • I know how to identify the IV, DV and CV in a fair test question
  • I can read a bar graph and describe the trend in one sentence
  • I write science keywords (not everyday words) in all open-ended answers
  • I use "because… therefore" structure for 2-mark explain questions
  • I have completed at least 3 full past year papers under timed conditions
  • I consistently score 50+/56 in Booklet A on past year papers
  • I consistently score 36+/44 in Booklet B on past year papers
🏆

You've got this.
AL1 is within reach.

Every tool you need is free on ScienceStar. Start with the topics you find hardest, and come back to this page whenever you need to reset your plan.

Start PSLE Revision → Try Past Year Papers