GCSEs 2025: 21 things parents can do at home to help children prepare - as exams draw closer

Watch more of our videos on ShotsTV.com 
and on Freeview 262 or Freely 565
Visit Shots! now
These next few weeks will be crucial for young people sitting their GCSEs in May and June✍
  • There are now just weeks to go until GCSE exams begin
  • Secondary schools say there is plenty parents can do to help the exam process go smoothly
  • These can start right away, while pupils still have access to their teachers
  • It’s always worth being mindful of young people’s feelings and the pressure they are under as well

The 2025 summer exam season is fast approaching, and many secondary school pupils will already be feeling the heat.

Across England, Wales, and Northern Ireland, this year’s GCSE exams will kick off the week of May 5, running through to June 20. Candidates will then face a tense two-month wait until results day, which falls on Thursday, August 21 this year.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

For many young people this will be their first real brush with formal exams, and they’ll have as much as two years of learning to go over. Fortunately, there is plenty parents and caregivers can do at home to streamline this process. We’ve taken a look at two parent guides written by secondary schools; one from Unity College in Burnley, Lancashire, and one from Kingston College in Southwest London.

Unity says that parents can play a big role in the exam process, without having to become subject matter experts or give up their own life or responsibilities. They can even be the difference between students passing or failing, or getting low or high passing grades.

Both schools agree it comes down to spending the time you do have in the best possible way, at each stage of the pre-exam process. Here are some of their tips for what you can do at each:

These next few months of exam prep will be crucialThese next few months of exam prep will be crucial
These next few months of exam prep will be crucial | (Image: National World/Adobe Stock)

Tips for the classwork and preparation stage

The 2024/25 school year’s summer term has just begun, and GCSEs candidates enter their final days in class with full access to their teachers before exams begin. Pupils will be preparing to start revising soon - if they haven’t already. The schools say that there are a number of things you can do to help them along:

Hide Ad
Hide Ad
  1. Make sure your child gets to school on time - and understands the importance of making the most of their remaining time in class.
  2. Encourage them to empty their bag and file handouts and information from lessons at the end of each day, for easy access later.
  3. Go to any available parents’ evenings and ask questions about how you can best help your child at home.
  4. Talk to your child about how you can support them and what they would find helpful over the coming months.
  5. Buy revision tools like folders, dividers and wall charts so they have everything they need to start.
  6. Help them choose one good revision guide for each subject - ask their teacher if you’re not sure which is best.
  7. Sit down and create a revision timetable together, planning what they’ll study and when in the lead-up to each of their exams.

Tips for the revision stage

Pupils can often spend years at school covering the course content for their GCSEs. With each young person typically taking seven to nine of them, that’s a lot of material to cover - some of which won’t exactly be fresh in their mind. Here are some of the schools’ tips for supporting and guiding them once revision is underway:

  1. Help your child stick to their revision plan, including start and end times. You can even help them come up with a reward structure for meeting their study goals.
  2. Keep topping up their study area with pens, notepads, and other basic study tools - and don’t make a big deal about them getting misplaced.
  3. Offer them water and their favourite snacks while they’re revising.
  4. Be flexible - if a social occasion comes up during planned study time, agree on when they can make it up.
  5. Stick to regular ‘check in’ times while they’re studying to see how it’s going.
  6. Be sensitive to the pressure they’re feeling - and help them keep things in perspective.
  7. If they start falling behind (as most students will at some point) or feeling anxious or overwhelmed, encourage them to talk about their feelings and help them find a sensible solution.

Tips for exam day

For the most part, when the big day finally arrives it’ll be all up to your child. But there still a few things parents can do to help it go smoothly:

  1. The exam period can be very stressful. Remind your teen they’ll soon be on the other side, and try to keep the home environment as stress-free as possible.
  2. On the day, make sure they know where to go and have everything they need - from black pens, to calculators, to water.
  3. Remind them to store or hand over their phones or smart watches to you first - these are not allowed in the exam with them.
  4. On exam days, ask them if there is a breakfast study session they should be attending (and make sure they have a good breakfast regardless).
  5. Make sure they set off with plenty of time to spare to avoid being late.
  6. Before the exam, remind them that you love them no matter how it goes.
  7. After an exam, ask how it went, “but don’t insist on a post-mortem”. If it went badly, remind them that tomorrow is another day.

If you have an education story to share, we’d love to hear from you. You can now send your stories to us online via YourWorld at www.yourworld.net/submit. It's free to use and, once checked, your story will appear on our website and, space allowing, in our newspapers.

Comment Guidelines

National World encourages reader discussion on our stories. User feedback, insights and back-and-forth exchanges add a rich layer of context to reporting. Please review our Community Guidelines before commenting.

News you can trust since 1886
Follow us
©National World Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved.Cookie SettingsTerms and ConditionsPrivacy notice