Algebra is using letters to represent unknown or changing numbers. KS3 lays the foundations for everything that comes after — get these five skills solid by end of Year 9 and GCSE algebra becomes manageable. This is the map.
The five foundational skills
| # | Skill | Year typically introduced |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Using letters for unknowns + substitution | 7 |
| 2 | Simplifying expressions (collecting like terms) | 7 |
| 3 | Expanding brackets | 7–8 |
| 4 | Factorising | 8 |
| 5 | Solving linear equations | 7–9 |
Every GCSE algebra topic — quadratics, simultaneous equations, inequalities, graphs — builds on these. Master them in KS3 and Year 10 starts easy.
1. Using letters and substitution
A letter (like x, y, a) stands for a number. The number can be:
- Unknown (in an equation, you solve to find it)
- Variable (in a formula, it changes with the problem)
Substitution example
If y = 3x + 2, find y when x = 4:
y = 3(4) + 2
y = 12 + 2
y = 14
The brackets around (4) aren't strictly needed but they make multiplication explicit. Useful habit.
2. Simplifying expressions
Combine like terms — terms with the same letter and same power.
2x + 5 + 3x − 2 = 5x + 3
Why? 2x + 3x = 5x (like terms). 5 − 2 = 3 (like terms, constants). The x term and the constant don't combine.
Less obvious case
3a + 2b − a + 5b = 2a + 7b
3a − a = 2a. 2b + 5b = 7b. The a terms don't combine with b terms.
Watch the signs
4x − 7 − 2x + 3 = 2x − 4
4x − 2x = 2x. −7 + 3 = −4.
See mastering negative numbers for sign rules.
3. Expanding brackets
The distributive property: multiply outside by each inside term.
3(x + 4) = 3x + 12
2(2y − 5) = 4y − 10
-3(x − 1) = -3x + 3 (watch the double negative)
Full guide: Expanding brackets in KS3.
4. Factorising (the reverse of expanding)
Start with 3x + 12. Notice both terms share a factor of 3. Pull it out:
3x + 12 = 3(x + 4)
Process
- Find the highest common factor (HCF) of the terms
- Divide each term by the HCF
- Write as HCF × bracket of remaining terms
More examples
6a + 9 = 3(2a + 3) (HCF is 3)
4x − 8 = 4(x − 2) (HCF is 4)
5xy + 10x = 5x(y + 2) (HCF is 5x — both terms share x)
Verify
Always check by expanding: does 3(2a + 3) = 6a + 9? Yes ✓.
5. Solving linear equations
Find the value of x that makes both sides equal. Do the same to both sides until x is alone.
3x + 5 = 14
3x = 9 (subtract 5 from both sides)
x = 3 (divide by 3)
Full guide: Solving linear equations in KS3.
How these five connect
A typical KS3 algebra problem chains them:
"Solve
2(x + 3) = 14"
- Expand the bracket:
2x + 6 = 14 - Subtract 6 from both sides:
2x = 8 - Divide by 2:
x = 4
Three of the five skills in three lines. The whole point of mastering each individually is so you can chain them fluently.
Notation conventions
3xmeans3 × x(multiplication is implied)x²meansx × x(x squared)2x²means2 × x × x(NOT(2x)² = 4x²)(x + 3)²means(x + 3) × (x + 3)(NOTx² + 9!)
The squaring trap (line 4 above) catches many KS3 students. Always expand the bracket first.
Common KS3 algebra mistakes
| Mistake | Wrong | Right |
|---|---|---|
| Partial expansion | 3(x + 4) = 3x + 4 |
3x + 12 |
| Sign error in expansion | −2(x − 3) = −2x − 6 |
−2x + 6 |
| Squaring a sum | (x + 3)² = x² + 9 |
(x + 3)² = x² + 6x + 9 |
| Forgetting both sides | 3x = 15 → x = 15 |
x = 5 |
| Like-term confusion | 2x + 3 = 5x |
2x + 3 (can't combine) |
See 5 maths mistakes Year 8 students make for fixes.
How Professor Pi teaches this
Algebra is the topic where Pi's 4-level hint ladder shines. Each foundational skill has a hint set keyed to common misconceptions. Pi never reveals the next step until you've engaged with the current one.
FAQ
What algebra is taught in KS3?
Using letters for unknowns, substitution, simplifying expressions, expanding and factorising brackets, solving linear equations, sequences, intro to graphs.
What's the difference between an expression and an equation?
An expression has no = (3x + 5). An equation has = and can be solved (3x + 5 = 14 → x = 3).
What does it mean to simplify?
Combine like terms. 2x + 5 + 3x − 2 = 5x + 3.
Related reading
Pedagogy from Professor Pi at aitutors.me. Updated 20 May 2026.