GCSE French Past Papers: How to Get Real Help
How to use GCSE French past papers well: which papers still count after the reform, why all four skills matter, and how to judge a tutor on evidence.
GCSE French Past Papers: How to Get Real Help
The fastest way to get GCSE French past papers help is to download the papers, mark schemes and examiner reports straight from your child's exam board — AQA, Pearson Edexcel, OCR or WJEC Eduqas all publish them free — then use them the right way: one paper at a time, under timed conditions, marked honestly against the mark scheme, and always matched to the current specification and the four skills your child is actually examined on. Past papers are the single best revision tool for GCSE French, but only if you use recent ones, because the subject was reformed and older papers test vocabulary and task formats that have since changed. The harder part is not finding the papers. It is knowing which papers still count, how to turn a marked paper into real improvement, and how to judge whether the tutor you bring in to help actually knows the current French exam.
Where to get GCSE French past papers
Go to the source. Every exam board publishes its own past papers, mark schemes and examiner reports at no cost:
- AQA — the most widely sat GCSE French specification in England.
- Pearson Edexcel — the second common board; check which one your child's school uses before you download anything.
- OCR and WJEC Eduqas — used by a smaller number of schools, so confirm first.
The board matters more in French than parents expect. A paper only helps if it matches the specification your child studies, and each board sets its own vocabulary lists, question styles and speaking tasks. A Pearson paper worked through by an AQA student rehearses the wrong format. So the first job is not downloading — it is confirming the exact board and tier your child sits, then only using papers from that board.
You will also find past papers on revision sites and PDF aggregators. Those are fine as a convenience, but the board's own site is the only place you can be sure the paper, its mark scheme and its examiner report all belong together and are current. Third-party sites often mix specifications and drop the examiner report, which is the most useful document of the three.
Why GCSE French past papers are different from maths
This is the point most generic "past papers" advice misses, and it is the thing that decides whether an old paper helps your child or wastes an afternoon.
First, the subject was reformed. According to Ofqual, the reformed GCSE modern foreign languages specifications — French included — were first taught from September 2024, with the first exams that follow in summer 2026. The reform changed what is on the paper: a defined set of vocabulary students are expected to know, a dictation task, and reading aloud within the speaking assessment. A French past paper written for the previous specification can therefore test words, tasks and mark schemes that no longer apply. Unlike maths, where the topics repeat year on year and a ten-year-old paper is still good practice, an old French paper can quietly drill the wrong thing. Use the most recent papers that match the current specification, and treat older ones as reading practice only, not as a real mock.
Second, French is examined across four separate skills — listening, speaking, reading and writing — and each carries equal weight. A written past paper can only ever rehearse two of those four. The speaking exam is a separate assessment, usually conducted and recorded by the teacher against the board's criteria, and there is no written "paper" to sit for it in the same way. So a child who does nothing but written past papers is preparing for half the exam. Good preparation pairs past papers for reading and writing with deliberate listening practice from the board's audio materials and structured speaking rehearsal — role play, the photo card, and general conversation.
There is a third thing to get right, and it trips up a lot of home revision: tier. GCSE French is tiered — students sit either the Foundation papers or the Higher papers, and the boards publish past papers for both. The two tiers overlap in the middle grades but differ in difficulty and in the grades they can reach. Practising on the wrong tier gives a false reading: Higher papers can crush the confidence of a Foundation candidate, while Foundation papers can lull a Higher candidate into thinking they are further ahead than they are. Before you print anything, confirm which tier your child is entered for and download only that tier's papers. If you are unsure, that is a question for the class teacher, and it is one a good tutor will ask you on day one.
This is exactly why a subject-specialist tutor earns their fee in French where a general one might not. Knowing which paper matches the current specification, picking the right tier, and building a plan that covers all four skills rather than the two a paper happens to cover, is specialist knowledge — not something you can pick up from the front page of a search result.
How to use a French past paper well
Downloading ten papers and skimming them is the most common mistake and the least useful thing you can do. One paper used properly beats ten papers half-read. The method:
- Read the examiner report for that series first. It tells you where students across the country lost marks — misreading the question, thin vocabulary, tenses that drift, running out of time. Knowing the common traps before your child starts is worth more than the paper itself.
- Do the reading and writing papers under real timed conditions, with no notes. French rewards accuracy under pressure — the right tense, the right gender, the right word order. That only shows up when the clock is running.
- Mark honestly against the mark scheme. For writing, the marks reward range and accuracy of language, not length. For reading, they reward precise comprehension. Marking generously hides exactly the gaps revision is meant to close.
- Note where the marks were actually lost — recall, grammar, comprehension or timing — then do a different paper that targets that same weakness. Targeted beats scattergun every time.
- Rehearse speaking and listening separately. Use the board's audio for listening, and practise the speaking tasks out loud with someone who can respond in French. A past paper cannot do this for you.
A tutor's real job with past papers is not to sit beside your child while they read one. It is to run this loop with them — diagnose from a marked paper, target the weakness, and cover the two skills a paper leaves out. If you want a fuller revision structure across all four skills, our guide to GCSE French revision sets out a practical plan, and GCSE French exam preparation covers the run-up to the exams themselves.
How to judge a tutor before you book
Here is where the search for "past papers help" usually stalls. You find a directory of tutors, every profile says "experienced" and "qualified", and you have no way to tell which claims are real. A five-star rating means little if anyone can write their own bio and collect a handful of reviews from friends. You are being asked to trust a self-description with your child's grade riding on it.
Tutorwise is built to remove that guesswork. On Tutorwise, a tutor does not just write a profile — they carry a computed credibility score. It is not a star rating they can inflate. It is built from real, checkable signals across six areas: how they deliver, their credentials, their network, trust, their digital footprint, and the impact of their work. In practice that means the platform checks the things you would want to check yourself but cannot: a DBS certificate, verified identity, real qualifications, sessions actually delivered on the platform, and genuine reviews from real bookings. Those verifications earn the tutor points; an unverified profile does not score.
The difference is concrete. On an ordinary directory, "DBS checked" is a phrase someone typed. On Tutorwise it is a verification the platform holds and rewards in the score, so the credibility you see is earned and checkable rather than claimed. When you are choosing someone to help your child with an exam that decides sixth-form and college options, judging on evidence instead of a self-written bio is the whole point.
One caution the score cannot replace: fit. A tutor with a strong credibility score is a safe, verified professional — but for French you still need to confirm they teach your child's exam board and are current on the reformed specification and the four-skill format. A credible tutor preparing your child for the wrong board is still the wrong tutor. Use the score to screen for who is genuinely verified, then ask the practical questions about board, tier and the speaking exam. If you want help finding one, our guide to choosing a GCSE French tutor walks through what to look for, and there is a companion piece on finding a GCSE French online tutor you can actually trust.
The short version
Get the papers free from your child's exam board. Use only recent ones that match the current, reformed specification. Work one paper at a time — timed, marked honestly, then targeted at the weakness it exposes — and pair written papers with separate listening and speaking practice, because a paper only covers half the exam. And when you bring in a tutor to run that loop, judge them on verified evidence, not a bio you cannot check. That is the part Tutorwise is built to make easy.
Frequently asked questions
Where can I get GCSE French past papers?
Free from your child's exam board directly — AQA, Pearson Edexcel, OCR or WJEC Eduqas all publish past papers, mark schemes and examiner reports on their websites. Confirm the board and tier your child sits before downloading anything, because a paper from the wrong board rehearses the wrong format and vocabulary.
Are old GCSE French past papers still useful?
Only the recent ones. The GCSE modern foreign languages specifications were reformed for first teaching from September 2024, so papers written for the previous specification can test vocabulary and tasks that have changed. Use recent papers that match the current specification as real practice, and treat older ones as light reading only.
Do past papers cover the whole French GCSE?
No. French is examined across four skills — listening, speaking, reading and writing — each carrying equal weight. A written past paper rehearses reading and writing. The speaking exam is a separate assessment run by the teacher, and listening needs the board's audio. So pair past papers with deliberate speaking and listening practice, or your child is preparing for only half the exam.
What should my child do with a past paper beyond reading it?
Read the examiner report for that series first, then sit the paper under the real time limit with no notes, and mark it honestly against the mark scheme. Note where the marks were lost — recall, grammar, comprehension or timing — then do a different paper that targets that same weakness. Timed, marked and targeted beats skimming ten papers.
How do I know a French tutor is any good before I book?
On Tutorwise every tutor carries a computed credibility score built from verified signals — DBS and identity checks, real qualifications, sessions delivered on the platform, and genuine reviews — so you judge them on evidence rather than a self-written bio. Then check the practical fit: do they teach your child's exam board and know the reformed specification and the four-skill format? A verified tutor drilling the wrong board is still the wrong tutor.