The specification for the course is shown on the left. This is a modified version of the AQA AS Computer Science specification in which some parts have been made more granular. For each part of the specification, statistics are shown for how many past papers it was examined in and the percentage of the total of all past marks that it makes up (where a question covers multiple parts of a specification, marks are divided equally between them for the purpose of this calculation). You can also click to view matching flashcards and past paper questions which will be shown on the right.

Paper 2 covers sections 5-9 of the AQA AS Computer Science specification.

5 Fundamentals of data representation

5.1 Number systems

5.1.1 Natural numbers

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.1.1.1
View

Be familiar with the concept of a natural number and the set ℕ of natural numbers (including zero).

ℕ = {0, 1, 2, 3, …}

Exams: 8 / 16Marks: 0.38%Questions: 9

5.1.2 Integer numbers

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.1.2.1
View

Be familiar with the concept of an integer and the set ℤ of integers.

ℤ = { …, -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, … }

Exams: 7 / 16Marks: 0.24%Questions: 7

5.1.3 Rational numbers

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.1.3.1
View

Be familiar with the concept of a rational number and the set ℚ of rational numbers, and that this set includes the integers.

ℚ is the set of numbers that can be written as fractions (ratios of integers). Since a number such as 7 can be written as 7/1, all integers are rational numbers.

Exams: 5 / 16Marks: 0.28%Questions: 7

5.1.4 Irrational numbers

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.1.4.1
View

Be familiar with the concept of an irrational number.

An irrational number is one that cannot be written as a fraction, for example √2.

Exams: 8 / 16Marks: 0.47%Questions: 8

5.1.5 Real numbers

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.1.5.1
View

Be familiar with the concept of a real number and the set ℝ of real numbers, which includes the natural numbers, the rational numbers, and the irrational numbers.

ℝ is the set of all 'possible real world quantities'.

Exams: 6 / 16Marks: 0.28%Questions: 6

5.1.6 Ordinal numbers

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.1.6.1
View

Be familiar with the concept of ordinal numbers and their use to describe the numerical positions of objects.

When objects are placed in order, ordinal numbers are used to tell their position. For example, if we have a well-ordered set S = {'a', 'b', 'c', 'd'}, then 'a' is the 1st object, 'b' the 2nd, and so on.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.21%Questions: 2

5.1.7 Counting and measurement

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.1.7.1
View

Be familiar with the use of natural numbers for counting.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.14%Questions: 2
5.1.7.2
View

Be familiar with the use of real numbers for measurement.

Exams: 3 / 16Marks: 0.21%Questions: 3

5.2 Number bases

5.2.1 Number base

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.2.1.1
View

Be familiar with the concept of a number base, in particular:

  • decimal (base 10)
  • binary (base 2)
  • hexadecimal (base 16)

Students should be familiar with expressing a number's base using a subscript as follows:

  • Base 10: Number10, eg 6710
  • Base 2: Number2, eg 100110112
  • Base 16: Number16, eg AE16
Exams: 0 / 16Marks: 0.00%Questions: 0
5.2.1.2
View

Convert between decimal, binary and hexadecimal number bases.

Exams: 9 / 16Marks: 0.86%Questions: 11
5.2.1.3
View

Be familiar with, and able to use, hexadecimal as a shorthand for binary and to understand why it is used in this way.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.29%Questions: 4

5.3 Units of information

5.3.1 Bits and bytes

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.3.1.1
View

Know that the bit is the fundamental unit of information.

A bit is either 0 or 1.

Exams: 0 / 16Marks: 0.00%Questions: 0
5.3.1.2
View

Know that a byte is a group of 8 bits.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.07%Questions: 2
5.3.1.3
View

Know that 2n different values can be represented with n bits.

For example, 3 bits can be configured in 23 = 8 different ways: 000, 001, 010, 011, 100, 101, 110, 111.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.18%Questions: 4

5.3.2 Units

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.3.2.1
View

Know the names, symbols and corresponding powers of 10 for the decimal prefixes:

  • kilo, k - 103
  • mega, M - 106
  • giga, G - 109
  • tera, T - 1012
Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.11%Questions: 2
5.3.2.2
View

Know the names, symbols and corresponding powers of 2 for the binary prefixes:

  • kibi, Ki - 210
  • mebi, Mi - 220
  • gibi, Gi - 230
  • tebi, Ti - 240
Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.04%Questions: 1
5.3.2.3
View

Know that quantities of bytes can be described using binary prefixes representing powers of 2 or using decimal prefixes representing powers of 10, eg one kibibyte is written as 1KiB = 210 B and one kilobyte is written as 1 kB = 103 B.

Historically the terms kilobyte, megabyte, etc have often been used when kibibyte, mebibyte, etc are meant.

Exams: 3 / 16Marks: 0.18%Questions: 3

5.4 Binary number system

5.4.1 Unsigned binary

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.4.1.1
View

Know the difference between unsigned binary and signed binary.

Students are expected to be able to convert between unsigned binary and decimal and vice versa.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.07%Questions: 2
5.4.1.2
View

Know that in unsigned binary the minimum and maximum values for a given number of bits, n, are 0 and 2n - 1 respectively.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.14%Questions: 1

5.4.2 Unsigned binary arithmetic

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.4.2.1
View

Be able to add two unsigned binary integers.

Exams: 5 / 16Marks: 0.43%Questions: 5
5.4.2.2
View

Be able to multiply two unsigned binary integers.

Exams: 3 / 16Marks: 0.43%Questions: 3

5.4.3 Signed binary using two's complement

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.4.3.1
View

Know that signed binary can be used to represent negative integers and that one possible coding scheme is two's complement.

This is the only representation of negative integers that will be examined. Students are expected to be able to convert between signed binary and decimal and vice versa.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.07%Questions: 1
5.4.3.2
View

Know how to represent negative and positive integers in two's complement.

Exams: 0 / 16Marks: 0.00%Questions: 0
5.4.3.3
View

Know how to perform subtraction using two's complement.

Exams: 5 / 16Marks: 0.64%Questions: 5
5.4.3.4
View

Know how to calculate the range of a given number of bits, n.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.14%Questions: 2

5.4.4 Numbers with a fractional part

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.4.4.1
View

Know how numbers with a fractional part can be represented in fixed point form in binary in a given number of bits.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.07%Questions: 1
5.4.4.2
View

Be able to convert decimal to fixed point binary of a given number of bits.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.14%Questions: 1
5.4.4.3
View

Be able to convert fixed point binary to decimal of a given number of bits.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.57%Questions: 4

5.5 Information coding systems

5.5.1 Character form of a decimal digit

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.5.1.1
View

Differentiate between the character code representation of a decimal digit and its pure binary representation.

Exams: 3 / 16Marks: 0.21%Questions: 3

5.5.2 ASCII and Unicode

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.5.2.1
View

Describe ASCII and Unicode coding systems for coding character data.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.07%Questions: 1
5.5.2.2
View

Explain why Unicode was introduced.

Exams: 3 / 16Marks: 0.43%Questions: 3

5.5.3 Error checking and correction

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.5.3.1
View

Describe and explain the use of parity bits.

Exams: 8 / 16Marks: 0.89%Questions: 9
5.5.3.2
View

Describe and explain the use of majority voting.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.57%Questions: 4
5.5.3.3
View

Describe and explain the use of check digits.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.14%Questions: 1
5.5.3.4
View

Evaluate the use of parity bits, majority voting and check digits

Exams: 5 / 16Marks: 0.57%Questions: 5

5.6 Representing images, sound and other data

5.6.1 Bit patterns, images, sound and other data

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.6.1.1
View

Describe how bit patterns may represent other forms of data, including graphics and sound.

Exams: 0 / 16Marks: 0.00%Questions: 0

5.6.2 Analogue and digital

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.6.2.1
View

Understand the difference between analogue and digital:

  • data
  • signals
Exams: 3 / 16Marks: 0.43%Questions: 3

5.6.3 Analogue/digital conversion

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.6.3.1
View

Describe the principles of operation of an analogue to digital converter (ADC).

Exams: 5 / 16Marks: 0.86%Questions: 5
5.6.3.2
View

Describe the principles of operation of a digital to analogue converter (DAC).

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.07%Questions: 1

5.6.4 Bitmapped graphics

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.6.4.1
View

Explain how bitmaps are represented.

Exams: 0 / 16Marks: 0.00%Questions: 0
5.6.4.2
View

Explain resolution.

Resolution is expressed as number of dots per inch where a dot is a pixel.

Exams: 0 / 16Marks: 0.00%Questions: 0
5.6.4.3
View

Know that colour depth is the number of bits stored for each pixel.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.14%Questions: 2
5.6.4.4
View

Know that the size of an image in pixels is width of image in pixels × height of image in pixels.

The size of an image is also alternatively sometimes described as the resolution of an image.

Exams: 0 / 16Marks: 0.00%Questions: 0
5.6.4.5
View

Calculate storage requirements for bitmapped images and be aware that bitmap image files may also contain metadata.

Ignoring metadata, storage requirements = size in pixels x colour depth where size in pixels is width in pixels x height in pixels.

Exams: 8 / 16Marks: 1.36%Questions: 9
5.6.4.6
View

Be familiar with typical metadata.

eg width, height, colour depth.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.07%Questions: 1

5.6.5 Digital representation of sound

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.6.5.1
View

Describe the digital representation of sound.

Exams: 0 / 16Marks: 0.00%Questions: 0
5.6.5.2
View

Understand sample resolution and its effect on the quality of audio recordings.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.43%Questions: 5
5.6.5.3
View

Understand sampling rate and its effect on the quality of audio recordings.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.14%Questions: 2
5.6.5.4
View

Know Nyquist's theorem.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.43%Questions: 4
5.6.5.5
View

Calculate sound sample sizes in bytes.

Exams: 8 / 16Marks: 1.43%Questions: 8

5.6.6 Musical Instrument Digital Interface (MIDI)

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.6.6.1
View

Describe the purpose of MIDI and the use of event messages in MIDI.

Exams: 3 / 16Marks: 0.43%Questions: 3
5.6.6.2
View

Describe the advantages of using MIDI files for representing music.

Exams: 5 / 16Marks: 0.71%Questions: 5

5.6.7 Data compression

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.6.7.1
View

Know why images and sound files are often compressed and that other files, such as text files, can also be compressed.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.07%Questions: 1
5.6.7.2
View

Understand the difference between lossless and lossy compression and explain the advantages and disadvantages of each.

Exams: 5 / 16Marks: 0.86%Questions: 5
5.6.7.3
View

Explain the principles behind run length encoding (RLE) for lossless compression.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.79%Questions: 6
5.6.7.4
View

Explain the principles behind dictionary-based methods for lossless compression.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.43%Questions: 3

5.6.8 Encryption

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
5.6.8.1
View

Understand what is meant by encryption and be able to define it.

Caesar and Vernam ciphers are at opposite extremes. One offers perfect security, the other doesn't. Between these two types are ciphers that are computationally secure – see below. Students will be assessed on the two types. Ciphers other than Caesar may be used to assess students' understanding of the principles involved. These will be explained and be similar in terms of computational complexity.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.07%Questions: 1
5.6.8.2
View

Be familiar with the term cipher.

Exams: 0 / 16Marks: 0.00%Questions: 0
5.6.8.3
View

Be familiar with the term plaintext.

Exams: 0 / 16Marks: 0.00%Questions: 0
5.6.8.4
View

Be familiar with the term ciphertext.

Exams: 0 / 16Marks: 0.00%Questions: 0
5.6.8.5
View

Be familiar with Caesar cipher and be able to apply it to encrypt a plaintext message and decrypt a ciphertext.

Exams: 6 / 16Marks: 0.64%Questions: 6
5.6.8.6
View

Be able to explain why Caesar cipher is easily cracked.

Exams: 3 / 16Marks: 0.36%Questions: 4
5.6.8.7
View

Be familiar with Vernam cipher or one-time pad and be able to apply it to encrypt a plaintext message and decrypt a ciphertext.

Since the key k is chosen uniformly at random, the ciphertext c is also distributed uniformly. The key k must be used once only. The key k is known as a one-time pad.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.75%Questions: 4
5.6.8.8
View

Explain why Vernam cipher is considered as a cypher with perfect security.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.43%Questions: 4
5.6.8.9
View

Compare Vernam cipher with ciphers that depend on computational security.

Vernam cipher is the only one to have been mathematically proved to be completely secure. The worth of all other ciphers ever devised is based on computational security. In theory, every cryptographic algorithm except for Vernam cipher can be broken, given enough ciphertext and time.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.07%Questions: 1

6 Fundamentals of computer systems

6.1 Hardware and software

6.1.1 Relationship between hardware and software

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
6.1.1.1
View

Define the term hardware.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.07%Questions: 1
6.1.1.2
View

Define the term software.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.14%Questions: 2
6.1.1.3
View

Understand the relationship between hardware and software.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.07%Questions: 1

6.1.2 Classification of software

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
6.1.2.1
View

Explain what is meant by system software.

Exams: 3 / 16Marks: 0.21%Questions: 3
6.1.2.2
View

Explain what is meant by application software.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.14%Questions: 2
6.1.2.3
View

Understand the need for, and attributes of, different types of software.

Exams: 0 / 16Marks: 0.00%Questions: 0

6.1.3 System software

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
6.1.3.1
View

Know that system software includes operating systems (OSs), utility programs, libraries and translators (compiler, assembler, interpreter).

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.43%Questions: 4
6.1.3.2
View

Understand the need for, and functions of operating systems (OSs).

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.07%Questions: 1
6.1.3.3
View

Understand the need for, and functions of utility programs.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.21%Questions: 2
6.1.3.4
View

Understand the need for, and functions of libraries.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.14%Questions: 1
6.1.3.5
View

Understand the need for, and functions of translators (compiler, assembler, interpreter).

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.29%Questions: 1

6.1.4 Role of an operating system (OS)

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
6.1.4.1
View

Understand that a role of the operating system is to hide the complexities of the hardware.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.14%Questions: 2
6.1.4.2
View

Know that the OS handles resource management, managing hardware to allocate processors, memories and I/O devices among competing processes.

Exams: 5 / 16Marks: 0.50%Questions: 5

6.2 Classification of programming languages

6.2.1 Classification of programming languages

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
6.2.1.1
View

Show awareness of the development of types of programming languages and their classification into low- and high-level languages.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.07%Questions: 1
6.2.1.2
View

Know that low-level languages are considered to be:

  • machine-code
  • assembly language
Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.07%Questions: 1
6.2.1.3
View

Know that high-level languages include imperative high-level language.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.14%Questions: 2
6.2.1.4
View

Describe machine-code language and assembly language.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.21%Questions: 2
6.2.1.5
View

Understand the advantages and disadvantages of machine-code and assembly language programming compared with high-level language programming.

Exams: 6 / 16Marks: 1.50%Questions: 6
6.2.1.6
View

Explain the term 'imperative high-level language' and its relationship to low-level languages.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.14%Questions: 1

6.3 Types of program translator

6.3.1 Types of program translator

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
6.3.1.1
View

Understand the role of assemblers.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.07%Questions: 1
6.3.1.2
View

Understand the role of compilers.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.07%Questions: 1
6.3.1.3
View

Understand the role of interpreters.

Exams: 0 / 16Marks: 0.00%Questions: 0
6.3.1.4
View

Explain the differences between compilation and interpretation. Describe situations in which each would be appropriate.

Exams: 3 / 16Marks: 0.71%Questions: 3
6.3.1.5
View

Explain why an intermediate language such as bytecode is produced as the final output by some compilers and how it is subsequently used.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.43%Questions: 4
6.3.1.6
View

Understand the difference between source and object (executable) code.

Exams: 0 / 16Marks: 0.00%Questions: 0

6.4 Logic gates

6.4.1 Logic gates

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
6.4.1.1
View

Construct truth tables for the NOT logic gate.

Students should know and be able to use ANSI/IEEE standard 91-1984 Distinctive shape logic gate symbols for these logic gates.

Exams: 0 / 16Marks: 0.00%Questions: 0
6.4.1.2
View

Construct truth tables for the AND logic gate.

Exams: 0 / 16Marks: 0.00%Questions: 0
6.4.1.3
View

Construct truth tables for the OR logic gate.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.06%Questions: 2
6.4.1.4
View

Construct truth tables for the XOR logic gate.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.24%Questions: 4
6.4.1.5
View

Construct truth tables for the NAND logic gate.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.25%Questions: 4
6.4.1.6
View

Construct truth tables for the NOR logic gate.

Exams: 3 / 16Marks: 0.17%Questions: 3
6.4.1.7
View

Be familiar with drawing and interpreting logic gate circuit diagrams involving one or more of the above gates.

Exams: 6 / 16Marks: 1.14%Questions: 7
6.4.1.8
View

Complete a truth table for a given logic gate circuit.

Exams: 10 / 16Marks: 1.86%Questions: 10
6.4.1.9
View

Write a Boolean expression for a given logic gate circuit.

Exams: 5 / 16Marks: 0.79%Questions: 5
6.4.1.10
View

Draw an equivalent logic gate circuit for a given Boolean expression.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.93%Questions: 4

6.5 Boolean algebra

6.5.1 Using Boolean algebra

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
6.5.1.1
View

Be familiar with the use of Boolean identities and De Morgan's laws to manipulate and simplify Boolean expressions.

Exams: 15 / 16Marks: 4.71%Questions: 20

7 Fundamentals of computer organisation and architecture

7.1 Internal hardware components of a computer

7.1.1 Internal hardware components of a computer

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
7.1.1.1
View

Have an understanding and knowledge of the basic internal components of a computer system.

Although exam questions about specific machines will not be asked, it might be useful to base this section on the machines used at the centre.

Exams: 0 / 16Marks: 0.00%Questions: 0
7.1.1.2
View

Understand the role of the processor.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.03%Questions: 1
7.1.1.3
View

Understand the role of main memory.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.17%Questions: 2
7.1.1.4
View

Understand the role of the address bus.

Exams: 5 / 16Marks: 0.41%Questions: 6
7.1.1.5
View

Understand the role of the data bus.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.30%Questions: 4
7.1.1.6
View

Understand the role of the control bus.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.17%Questions: 2
7.1.1.7
View

Understand the role of I/O controllers.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.17%Questions: 2
7.1.1.8
View

Be able to explain the difference between von Neumann and Harvard architectures and describe where each is typically used.

Embedded systems such as digital signal processing (DSP) systems use Harvard architecture processors extensively. Von Neumann architecture is used extensively in general purpose computing systems.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.64%Questions: 5
7.1.1.9
View

Understand the concept of addressable memory.

Exams: 0 / 16Marks: 0.00%Questions: 0

7.2 The stored program concept

7.2.1 The meaning of the stored program concept

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
7.2.1.1
View

Be able to describe the stored program concept: machine code instructions stored in main memory are fetched and executed serially by a processor that performs arithmetic and logical operations.

Exams: 5 / 16Marks: 0.57%Questions: 5

7.3 Structure and role of the processor and its components

7.3.1 The processor and its components

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
7.3.1.1
View

Explain the role and operation of the arithmetic logic unit.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.07%Questions: 1
7.3.1.2
View

Explain the role and operation of the control unit.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.21%Questions: 1
7.3.1.3
View

Explain the role and operation of the clock.

Exams: 0 / 16Marks: 0.00%Questions: 0
7.3.1.4
View

Explain the role and operation of general-purpose registers.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.14%Questions: 2
7.3.1.5
View

Explain the role and operation of the program counter.

Exams: 0 / 16Marks: 0.00%Questions: 0
7.3.1.6
View

Explain the role and operation of the current instruction register.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.05%Questions: 1
7.3.1.7
View

Explain the role and operation of the memory address register.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.04%Questions: 1
7.3.1.8
View

Explain the role and operation of the memory buffer register.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.08%Questions: 2
7.3.1.9
View

Explain the role and operation of the status register.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.14%Questions: 1

7.3.2 The Fetch-Execute cycle and the role of registers within it

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
7.3.2.1
View

Explain how the Fetch-Execute cycle is used to execute machine code programs, including the stages in the cycle (fetch, decode, execute) and details of registers used.

Exams: 7 / 16Marks: 2.10%Questions: 8

7.3.3 The processor instruction set

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
7.3.3.1
View

Understand the term 'processor instruction set' and know that an instruction set is processor specific.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.29%Questions: 2
7.3.3.2
View

Know that instructions consist of an opcode and one or more operands (value, memory address or register).

A simple model will be used in which the addressing mode will be incorporated into the bits allocated to the opcode so the latter defines both the basic machine operation and the addressing mode. Students will not be expected to define opcode, only interpret opcodes in the given context of a question.

For example, 4 bits have been allocated to the opcode (3 bits for basic machine operation, eg ADD, and 1 bit for the addressing mode). 4 bits have been allocated to the operand, making the instruction, opcode + operand, 8 bits in length. In this example, 16 different opcodes are possible (24 = 16).

OpcodeOperand
Basic Machine OperationAddressing Mode
00100101
Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.39%Questions: 4

7.3.4 Addressing modes

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
7.3.4.1
View

Understand and apply immediate addressing.

Immediate addressing: the operand is the datum.

Exams: 3 / 16Marks: 0.18%Questions: 3
7.3.4.2
View

Understand and apply direct addressing.

Direct addressing: the operand is the address of the datum. Address to be interpreted as meaning either main memory or register.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.11%Questions: 2

7.3.5 Machine-code/assembly language operations

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
7.3.5.1
View

Understand and apply the basic machine-code operations of:

  • load
  • add
  • subtract
  • store
  • branching (conditional and unconditional)
  • compare
  • logical bitwise operators (AND, OR, NOT, XOR)
  • logical
  • shift right
  • shift left
  • halt

Use the basic machine-code operations above when machine-code instructions are expressed in mnemonic form—assembly language, using immediate and direct addressing.

Exams: 16 / 16Marks: 6.54%Questions: 28

7.3.6 Factors affecting processor performance

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
7.3.6.1
View

Explain the effect on processor performance of multiple cores.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.19%Questions: 2
7.3.6.2
View

Explain the effect on processor performance of cache memory.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.57%Questions: 4
7.3.6.3
View

Explain the effect on processor performance of clock speed.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.42%Questions: 4
7.3.6.4
View

Explain the effect on processor performance of word length.

Exams: 3 / 16Marks: 0.28%Questions: 3
7.3.6.5
View

Explain the effect on processor performance of address bus width.

Exams: 3 / 16Marks: 0.35%Questions: 3
7.3.6.6
View

Explain the effect on processor performance of data bus width.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.35%Questions: 4

7.4 External hardware devices

7.4.1 Input and output devices

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
7.4.1.1
View

Know the main characteristics, purpose and suitability of barcode readers and understand their principles of operation.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.29%Questions: 2
7.4.1.2
View

Know the main characteristics, purpose and suitability of digital cameras and understand their principles of operation.

Exams: 3 / 16Marks: 0.68%Questions: 3
7.4.1.3
View

Know the main characteristics, purpose and suitability of laser printers and understand their principles of operation.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.96%Questions: 3
7.4.1.4
View

Know the main characteristics, purpose and suitability of RFID and understand their principles of operation.

Exams: 5 / 16Marks: 1.71%Questions: 7

7.4.2 Secondary storage devices

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
7.4.2.1
View

Explain the need for secondary storage within a computer system.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.14%Questions: 1
7.4.2.2
View

Know the main characteristics, purposes, suitability and understand the principles of operation of the hard disk.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.86%Questions: 1
7.4.2.3
View

Know the main characteristics, purposes, suitability and understand the principles of operation of the optical disk.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.50%Questions: 2
7.4.2.4
View

Know the main characteristics, purposes, suitability and understand the principles of operation of the solid-state disk (SSD).

SSD = NAND flash memory + a controller that manages pages, and blocks and complexities of writing. Based on floating gate transistors that trap and store charge. A block, made up of many pages, cannot overwrite pages; a page has to be erased before it can be written to but technology requires the whole block to be erased. Lower latency and faster transfer speeds than a magnetic disk drive.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.93%Questions: 4
7.4.2.5
View

Compare the capacity and speed of access of various media and make a judgement about their suitability for different applications.

Exams: 5 / 16Marks: 0.79%Questions: 5

8 Consequences of uses of computing

8.1 Individual (moral), social (ethical), legal and cultural issues and opportunities

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
8.1.1
View

Show awareness of current individual (moral), social (ethical), legal and cultural opportunities and risks of computing.

Understand that:

  • developments in computer science and digital technologies have dramatically altered the shape of communications and information flows in societies, enabling massive transformations in the capacity to:
    • monitor behaviour
    • amass and analyse personal information
    • distribute, publish, communicate and disseminate personal information
  • computer scientists and software engineers therefore have power, as well as the responsibilities that go with it, in the algorithms that they devise and the code that they deploy.
  • software and their algorithms embed moral and cultural values.
  • the issue of scale, for software the whole world over, creates potential for individual computer scientists and software engineers to produce great good, but with it comes the ability to cause great harm.

Be able to discuss the challenges facing legislators in the digital age.

Teachers may wish to employ two very powerful techniques, hypotheticals and case studies, to engage students in the issues.

Hypotheticals allow students to isolate quickly important ethical principles in an artificially simplified context. For example, a teacher might ask students to explain and defend how, as a Google project manager, they would evaluate a proposal to bring Google's Street View technology to a remote African village. What questions should be asked? Who should be consulted? What benefits, risks and safeguards considered? What are the trade-offs?

Case studies allow students to confront the tricky interplay between the sometimes competing ethical values and principles relevant in real world settings. For example, the Google Street View case might be used to tease out the ethical conflicts between individual and cultural expectations, the principle of informed consent, Street View's value as a service, its potential impact on human perceptions and behaviours, and its commercial value to Google and its shareholders.

There are many resources available on the Internet to support teaching of this topic.

Exams: 12 / 16Marks: 5.42%Questions: 12

9 Fundamentals of communication and networking

9.1 Communication

9.1.1 Communication methods

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
9.1.1.1
View

Define serial transmission methods.

Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.07%Questions: 1
9.1.1.2
View

Define parallel transmission methods.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.21%Questions: 2
9.1.1.3
View

Discuss the advantages of serial over parallel transmission.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.79%Questions: 4
9.1.1.4
View

Define and compare synchronous and asynchronous data transmission.

Exams: 3 / 16Marks: 0.43%Questions: 4
9.1.1.5
View

Describe the purpose of start and stop bits in asynchronous data transmission.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.39%Questions: 5

9.1.2 Communication basics

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
9.1.2.1
View

Define baud rate.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.14%Questions: 2
9.1.2.2
View

Define bit rate.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.14%Questions: 2
9.1.2.3
View

Define bandwidth.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.30%Questions: 4
9.1.2.4
View

Define latency.

Exams: 3 / 16Marks: 0.16%Questions: 3
9.1.2.5
View

Define protocol.

Exams: 3 / 16Marks: 0.29%Questions: 3
9.1.2.6
View

Differentiate between baud rate and bit rate.

Bit rate can be higher than baud rate if more than one bit is encoded in each signal change.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.23%Questions: 4
9.1.2.7
View

Understand the relationship between bit rate and bandwidth.

Bit rate is directly proportionate to bandwidth.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.23%Questions: 4

9.2 Networking

9.2.1 Network topology

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
9.2.1.1
View

Understand and explain the operation of a physical star topology.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.29%Questions: 2
9.2.1.2
View

Understand and explain the operation of a logical bus network topology.

A network physically wired in star topology can behave logically as a bus network by using a bus protocol and appropriate physical switching.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.36%Questions: 2
9.2.1.3
View

Differentiate between the physical star topology and the logical bus network topology.

Exams: 3 / 16Marks: 0.36%Questions: 3

9.2.2 Types of networking between hosts

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
9.2.2.1
View

Explain peer-to-peer networking and describe situations where it might be used.

In a peer-to-peer network, each computer has equal status.

Exams: 5 / 16Marks: 0.89%Questions: 6
9.2.2.2
View

Explain client-server networking and describe situations where it might be used.

In a client-server network, most computers are nominated as clients and one or more as servers. The clients request services from the servers, which provide these services, for example file server, email server.

Exams: 5 / 16Marks: 0.68%Questions: 5

9.2.3 Wireless networking

ReferenceContentAdditional informationQuestions
9.2.3.1
View

Explain the purpose of WiFi.

A wireless local area network that is based on international standards.

Used to enable devices to connect to a network wirelessly.

Exams: 2 / 16Marks: 0.28%Questions: 2
9.2.3.2
View

Be familiar with the components required for wireless networking.

  • Wireless network adapter
  • Wireless access point
Exams: 1 / 16Marks: 0.07%Questions: 1
9.2.3.3
View

Be familiar with the purpose of Service Set Identifier (SSID).

Exams: 3 / 16Marks: 0.29%Questions: 3
9.2.3.4
View

Be familiar with how wireless networks are secured using WPA (Wifi Protected Access)/WPA2.

Exams: 4 / 16Marks: 0.43%Questions: 4
9.2.3.5
View

Be familiar with how wireless networks are secured by disabling SSID (Service Set Identifier) broadcasting.

Exams: 6 / 16Marks: 0.65%Questions: 6
9.2.3.6
View

Be familiar with how wireless networks are secured using a MAC (Media Access Control) address allow list.

Exams: 6 / 16Marks: 0.79%Questions: 6
9.2.3.7
View

Explain the wireless protocol Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision Avoidance (CSMA/CA) with and without Request to Send/Clear to Send (RTS/CTS).

Exams: 3 / 16Marks: 1.14%Questions: 3

No flashcards added yet.

AS-Level2024June9.1open3 marks

RFID tags can be read by an RFID reader.

Describe how data is read from an RFID tag.

The RFID reader emits radio waves;

(The antenna in the RFID tag allows) the radio waves to induce sufficient power in the tag to enable/power the tag // triggers an active tag;

Data is stored on the chip/memory of the tag;

In response the tag emits radio waves to transmit the data on the tag to the RFID reader;

A. Frequency or signal for radio waves

Note: Accept references to data, instead of radio waves, if it is made clear somewhere in the response that radio waves/signals/frequencies are being used.

AS-Level2024June9.2open2 marks

An RFID tag can be active or passive. A passive tag must be moved within a few centimetres of an RFID reader to be read. An active tag will have its own power source, which allows it to be read from a greater distance.

It is decided that RFID tags will be used in passports to store personal information.

Explain why passive tags are likely to be a more appropriate choice than active tags for use in passports.

  • Passive tags are smaller // are more convenient for users to carry;
  • (As passive tags can only be read when close to the reader) it is less of a security risk // it is more difficult to intercept/steal the data from the passport;
  • Using passive tags is likely to be cheaper than using active tags (especially at a national scale);
  • In passive tags there is no need to replace/charge battery // in active tags battery may not last as long as the passport is valid;

Accept points made as disadvantages of active tags or as advantages of passive tags

AS-Level2023June14open3 marks

A company needs to keep a file server in a secure room. The file server will need to be accessible for routine maintenance and in emergencies. All company staff carry an ID card but not all staff should be allowed into the secure room.

The company has replaced the keypad controlling an electronic door lock on the room with an RFID reader and replaced all staff ID cards with ones containing an RFID tag to control access.

State three characteristics of RFID technology and explain why each of these makes it a suitable choice in this scenario.

Marks are for AO2 (Analyse):

- RFID tags are small/lightweight, making them easy to carry/integrate with Staff ID cards;

- RFID tags are cheap, making it more affordable to provide them to as many staff members as necessary;

- RFID tags are durable, making them more reliable over time / in emergency situations;

- RFID tags do not require their own power sources, making them more reliable / lower maintenance;

- RFID tags can be read quickly, making it suitable for access in emergency situations;

- RFID tag has storage, which could be used to store access credentials // no need to remember a keypad code // different staff could be given different access levels;

- RFID permits contactless access, allowing access where staff do not wish to touch a communal access control mechanism;

MAX 3

If no other marks awarded allow 1 mark for at least 2 reasons why RFID is used in this scenario, or at least 2 characteristics of RFID (with no reference to the scenario).

AS-Level2016June8.1open6 marks

Three input devices that could be used at each checkpoint to capture data automatically as competitors pass by are:

  • barcode reader
  • digital camera
  • RFID reader

The race organisers decide to use RFID readers. Evaluate the suitability of all three devices and explain why RFID is the most appropriate choice.

LevelDescriptionMark Range
3A detailed summary of the suitability / non-suitability has been given, indicating a comprehensive understanding of all three devices/technologies. The answer is well structured and a line of reasoning has been followed to produce a coherent, relevant, substantiated and logically structured response. A well-reasoned conclusion has been included featuring at least two reasons for RFID being most suitable for 5 marks and three reasons for RFID being most suitable for 6 marks.5-6
2Appropriate reasons, linked to the scenario in the question, have been given for the suitability / non-suitability of all three devices/technologies – though there may not be a reasoned conclusion and the reason(s) for RFID readers being suitable may be brief. The answer is satisfactorily structured.3-4
1A small number of reasons for the suitability / non-suitability of one or more of the devices have been given indicating some understanding of the input devices. However, there is no comparison and the understanding shown is not well-linked to the scenario described in the question.1-2
0No creditworthy material0

Indicative subject content

Digital camera
• Advantage: no tag/code that can be lost / damaged
• Disadvantage: difficulties with taking a clear picture eg caused by blocked line of sight due to other competitors
• Disadvantage: high data storage requirements for the number of photos that will be needed in a large event
• Disadvantage: face recognition may not work eg due to costumed runners
• Disadvantage: face recognition software not always reliable
• Disadvantage: with a lot of competitors a lot of operators/cameras might be needed

Barcode reader
• Advantage: barcodes are very cheap
• Advantage: often smaller and lighter than an RFID tag so less of a burden to competitors
• Disadvantage: barcode could be obscured (e.g. by clothing)
• Disadvantage: difficult to scan a code that is being moved around and is not on a flat surface
• Disadvantage: some codes might be missed if a large number of competitors pass a checkpoint at roughly the same time
• Disadvantage: with a lot of competitors a lot of operators/barcode readers might be needed
• Disadvantage: scanner needs to be quite close to code / runners may need to stop to have their barcode scanned
• Disadvantage: barcode more likely to be damaged than RFID tag – when it is damaged it is unreadable

RFID reader
• Advantage: RFID can be read faster than the other devices and competitors may be going past the checkpoint quickly
• Advantage: tags potentially reusable – saving money in future years of the event
• Advantage: no line-of-sight issues
• Advantage: no need for runner to stop at checkpoint
• Disadvantage: potential for RFID dead spots

Note: advantage/disadvantage for device must be an advantage/disadvantage compared to (at least) one of the other devices listed in the question for mark to be awarded.

A-Level2022June6open12 marks

Supermarkets often gather information about their customers and the purchases that they make. This information can be analysed by the supermarket and other companies for a range of purposes.

Some of the information is collected at the checkout, where the identity of the person is read from a loyalty or payment card using RFID (radio-frequency identification) and a barcode reader is used to identify the products being purchased.

By analysing the purchases that a shopper has made, it might be possible to identify such things as whether the shopper has children, is pregnant, or lives in a house with a garden. Other types of analysis might include the amount of money a customer spends, the times that they choose to shop at and the differences in shopping habits of different groups of shoppers.

Describe the principles of operation of the hardware used to collect the information and discuss some of the ethical and legal issues that might arise as a result of the capture and processing of this data.

In your answer you will be assessed on your ability to follow a line of reasoning to produce a coherent, relevant and structured response.

Level 4 (10–12 marks): A line of reasoning has been followed to produce a coherent, relevant, substantiated and logically structured response. The response covers all three areas indicated in the guidance below and there is sufficient detail to show that the student has a good level of understanding of at least two of these.

Level 3 (7–9 marks): A line of reasoning has been followed to produce a coherent, relevant, substantiated and logically structured response which shows a good level of understanding of at least one area indicated in the guidance below and a satisfactory understanding of at least one other area.

Level 2 (4–6 marks): A limited attempt has been made to follow a line of reasoning and the response has a mostly logical structure. Either a good level of understanding has been demonstrated of one area or some understanding had been demonstrated of at least two areas.

Level 1 (1–3 marks): A few relevant points have been made but there is no evidence that a line of reasoning has been followed. The points may only relate to one or two of the areas from the guidance. There is insufficient evidence of a good understanding of any of the three areas.

Area 1: How RFID works

  • RFID tag contains (transmission) circuitry and antenna
  • Memory on tag stores (customer) data
  • RFID reader (at till) transmits / sends signal // emits electric / electro-magnetic field
  • Signal activates / energises / induces current in RFID tag
  • RFID tag transmits / sends data by radio (wave)
  • RFID reader converts radio (wave) / signal back into (binary) data
  • RFID tag (on a card) is a passive device
  • RFID transmits over very short range

Area 2: How barcode works

(reflected light method)

  • A light source / laser is directed at bar code // bar code is illuminated
  • (Moving) mirror / prism moves light beam across bar code // user moves reader across bar code // user moves the bar code across the reader
  • Light reflected back
  • Black / white bands reflect different amounts of light // black reflects less light // white reflects more light
  • Light sensor / photodiode / CCD (measures amount of reflected light)
  • Light reflected converted into an electrical signal A. convert reflection to (binary) numbers / characters / ASCII

(CMOS/CCD/camera method)

  • Grid of (pixel) sensors // CMOS/CCD sensor
  • Each sensor measures light intensity of a point
  • Sensor outputs a voltage dependent upon light intensity
  • Voltages turned into binary data // voltages passed through Analogue-to-Digital Converter (ADC) // voltages turned into a digitised version of the image / barcode
  • Image processing software analyses image
  • This identifies black / white bands in barcode (which are turned into numbers)

Note: Students only need to describe one of the two methods for barcodes.

Area 3: Ethical and legal issues

(ethical)

  • Customers may believe that data about what they buy/spend is personal // invasion of privacy
  • Purchase of some items might be considered sensitive // some data might be considered to be sensitive (accept relevant examples)
  • Will people fully understand what will be done with the data, even if they are told it is being collected
  • Customers need to decide whether to allow the store to collect data about them (is it worth it for the return that they may get eg incentives / vouchers?) //do people feel forced to consent to benefit from offers
  • Can company be sufficiently confident that any other companies they share the data with will process the data legally / fairly/for the purposes that they said they would?
  • Risk of the supermarket carrying out actions that might reveal to other members of a shopper's household things that the supermarket has deduced that the householders don't know
  • Should ethical consideration be given to the products promoted to people using the data collected about them or is it okay to promote a product to anyone?
  • Are there some types of customers who should not be targeted with promotions at all // is it ethical to promote products to vulnerable customers?

(legal)

  • Naming a relevant law – GDPR, Data Protection Act
  • Need to inform customers of what will be done with data // consent required to collect data R. customer has not consented
  • Data must be kept securely
  • Need to consider what purposes data should be used for
  • Consideration of who should be able to access the data // there are rules about who the data can be shared with
  • Possible negative impact if data stolen or leaked // information could be misused
  • Limit on time-period that the data can be kept for
  • Need to ensure that collected data is accurate
  • Ensure data only transferred to countries it is legally allowed to go to // if transferred abroad, different laws may apply
  • The supermarket should let the customers see/edit data about them
  • Use of RFID might make data vulnerable to theft
A-Level2020June8.1openDiagram2 marks

Explain why the warehouse owners might prefer the individual products to be identified using RFID tags.

AO2 (analyse) 1 mark: A lot of individual products will need to be scanned simultaneously / when a lorry/delivery arrives/leaves;

AO1 (understanding) maximum 1 mark from this list:

  • the RFID tags could be read without removing products from their pallet;
  • RFID tags can be read from a (greater) distance (than barcodes);
  • no need for a person to scan tags // no need to manually scan tags;
  • RFID tags can be read at a faster rate;
  • RFID tags less easily damaged (than barcodes) // barcodes can become easily damaged and made unreadable;
  • don't have to spend time locating barcodes on items;

R. RFID tags can store more data (not relevant)

A-Level2020June8.3open6 marks

Describe how an RFID reader would read the ProductID and ItemID values from RFID tags as pallets are delivered and explain how this data could be used to update the database table that stores details of the products that the warehouse has in stock.

You should include in your description references to the type(s) of SQL statements (eg INSERT, SELECT, UPDATE) that could be used and their purpose, but you do not need to write any SQL code.

3 marks for AO1 (knowledge) – 3 marks:

  • RFID reader/scanner (at warehouse entrance) transmits/sends signal;
  • Signal activates/energises/induces current in RFID transponder/tag;
  • RFID transponder/tag transmits/sends data by radio(wave);

3 marks for AO2 (analyse) – Max 3 marks:

  • RFID signals processed into a format suitable for querying the database;
  • (SELECT) query used to check if there is already a record for the product/ProductID in the database // return of empty data set could be used to identify if the product is not in the table; NE. used to lookup record
  • UPDATE statement used to increase the QuantityInStock/stock level (by the number of items delivered) if the product is already in the database;
  • INSERT statement used to create new record for product if it is not already in the database; user will need to enter some details manually as these are not contained in the RFID tag.