Gain UK national university entrance qualification
Develop study skills required at degree level
Develop specialist subject expertise
Programme content
There are six components to the A-level programme at Kings:
1. Academic subjects
Depending on your future degree course and ability, you will study three or four subjects.
2. Academic skills development
You will also have classes in Academic language, communication and study skills.
These support your general and subject-specific learning.
3. IELTS preparation
You will develop specific skills to pass the IELTS exam at the level required for university entry.
4. Academic Enrichment programme
You will have opportunities to follow a range of topics outside your main subjects.
5. Examination practice
You will have practice exams every week.
This ensure you learn the disciplines of working concisely, accurately and to precise time limits.
These practice exams also give your teachers valuable information about your progress so they can ensure lessons are relevant to your exact needs.
6. Examinations
You will have your final examinations at the end of Year 2.
A-level subjects
Specialist subject knowledge
A-levels provide great depth of study in a few specialist subjects.
After two years, you will have gained subject knowledge that is often only acquired during the first year at university in many other countries.
Flexible subject choice
You can choose 3-4 subjects to study. You have the flexibility to choose any combination of subjects.
We will help you choose the perfect combination of subjects, ensuring they match your interests and future study plans.
Facilitating subjects
Your Advanced Level studies (whether A-level or Foundation) will develop your knowledge and your transferable skills. While there are common subject combinations, the actual choice is down to you.
However, some degrees may have specific subject requirements.
Some subjects are required more often. Until recently, the Russell Group of leading UK universities referred to these as 'facilitating' subjects.
These are:
Mathematics
Further Mathematics
English Literature
Biology
Physics
Chemistry
Geography
History
Modern Languages
You do not need all your subjects to be chosen from this selection. Many students will include one or two in their choices.
The best advice is to talk to our team of experts to help you decide which subjects suit you.
Below we introduce the subjects we offer across our colleges with links to more in-depth information.
Art and Design
Develops your intellectual, imaginative, creative and reflective skills.
Develops your investigative, analytical, experimental, practical, technical, and expressive skills, an aesthetic understanding and critical judgement.
Provides an understanding of the inter-relationships between art, craft and design, and an awareness of the contexts in which they operate as well as knowledge and understanding of art, craft and design in contemporary society and in other times and cultures.
Biology
The most accessible content of the three sciences, as it can be related naturally to all aspects of life.
You will study carefully, and in detail, how life in the world works:
How our bodies work; how diseases stop them working; how plants grow; how life may be threatened by poisonous substances; how ecosystems work; where energy comes from and how organisms use it; how genes and evolution affect us all.
Business Studies
Provides an holistic understanding of business in a range of contexts, a critical understanding of organisational behaviour, approaches to opportunities, issues and ethics.
You will develop your critical analysis, decision-making and problem-solving skills, all of which are transferable to a wide range of contexts.
Chemistry
You will learn to understand the things that make up the world; food, fuels and fabrics, building materials and manufactured goods, the air you breathe, the tools you use.
You will study atoms and reactions, bonding and structure, hydrocarbons, polymers and alcohols, energetics and transition elements.
You will use Mathematics to describe and understand chemical ideas. You'll devise and carry out practical experiments to test the principles you are learning.
Computer Science
An increasingly popular subject, this A-level will develop students’ problem-solving skills and introduce them to foundational programming and theoretical skills that prepares them well for a degree in Computer Science
You will study a range of aspects of Computer Science including fundamentals of programming, analysis, computer systems, organisation and architecture, communication and networking, data bases, functional programming, algorithms and big data
Economics
Develops an understanding of economic concepts and theories through critical consideration of current economic issues, problems and institutions that affect everyday life.
You will apply economic concepts and theories in a range of contexts and learn to appreciate their value and limitations in explaining real-world phenomena.
You will analyse, explain and evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of the market economy and the role of government within it.
Enables you to acquire and apply knowledge and understanding of physical and human processes, their interactions and outcomes over space and time, through the study of places and environments.
You will acquire and apply skills necessary for the pursuit of the discipline, and will develop an understanding of the opportunities, challenges and constraints that face people in different places and environments.
You will acquire a deeper understanding of the connections between different aspects of geography.
Government and Politics
Develops your critical awareness of the nature of politics and the relationship between political ideas, institutions and processes.
You will acquire knowledge and understanding of the structures of authority and power within the political system of the UK and of other countries.
You will also develop knowledge of the characteristics of the legislature, the executive and the judiciary, of the rights and responsibilities of the individual, and of ideologies, theories and traditions.
History
Develops your use and understanding of historical terms, concepts and skills.
The periods studied enhances your interest in, and understanding of, important developments allowing you to understand the wider perspective of change over time.
You will study significant individuals, societies, events and issues, analysing different historical perspectives, for example aesthetic, cultural, economic, ethnic, political, religious, scientific, social and technological.
Mathematics
Develops your understanding of mathematics and mathematical processes and your ability to reason logically and to recognize incorrect reasoning.
You will construct mathematical proofs and extend your range of mathematical skills and techniques for use in more difficult unstructured problems.
You’ll also develop an understanding of coherence and progression in mathematics and of how different areas of mathematics can be connected.
Mathematics (Further)
Broadens and deepens your mathematical knowledge and skills.
You can study it either alongside or after taking A-level Mathematics.
Taking both subjects together provides a foundation for further studies in any Science or Maths-based course, including Computer Science, Medical Sciences, and Psychology to Statistics, Management and Actuarial Science.
Photography
Allows you to expand your creative horizons through taking and editing photographs.
Teaches you about a whole range of photographic techniques and processes.
Helps you to develop an understanding of the creative process.
Physics
Develops your essential knowledge and understanding in physics and the applications of physics in new and changing situations.
You will develop an understanding of the link between theory and experiment, and will appreciate how physics is used in present day society.
You will recognise the quantitative nature of physics and understand how mathematical expressions relate to physical principles.