Cognito provides concise video lessons covering KS3 and GCSE science and maths, with a quiz feature to test knowledge after each topic. An AI tutor takes a different approach: instead of explaining first, it guides students to the answer through questions. Both have real value, but they address different gaps.
What is Cognito?
Cognito is a UK-based revision platform offering short video lessons — typically three to eight minutes each — in GCSE science (biology, chemistry, and physics) and GCSE maths. The videos are concise, focused on specific topics, and paired with quizzes that test knowledge immediately after each lesson. The platform also offers downloadable revision notes and a spaced-repetition quiz engine that returns students to topics they found difficult.
Cognito is widely used by GCSE students in England and has built a large following through its YouTube channel, where many of its science videos are available free of charge. A premium subscription unlocks the full quiz engine, spaced-repetition features, and downloadable materials.
What Cognito does well:
- Short, focused video lessons that explain GCSE science and maths topics concisely
- Immediate quizzes after each video reinforce learning through retrieval practice
- Spaced repetition brings students back to difficult topics at appropriate intervals
- Many videos are free on YouTube; full platform available via subscription
- Covers the major GCSE science specifications (biology, chemistry, physics)
- Works well for students who learn effectively through watching and listening
What Cognito does not do:
- Respond to a student's specific wrong answer with a tailored explanation
- Identify why a student keeps getting a particular type of question wrong
- Cover subjects beyond science and maths
- Engage in dialogue or adapt explanations to a student's individual confusion
What does an AI tutor do differently?
Cognito teaches through clear explanation; an AI tutor teaches through questioning. These are genuinely different pedagogical approaches, and they suit different moments in the learning process.
Consider a student preparing for a GCSE biology assessment on cell division. They watch the Cognito video on mitosis, follow the explanation, and feel they understand it. They take the quiz, get three out of five correct, and find out that two answers were wrong. Cognito shows them the correct answer and the video is available to rewatch. But the student does not know whether they misunderstood the purpose of mitosis, confused it with meiosis at a specific step, or simply misread the question.
An AI tutor can intervene at exactly this point: "You said mitosis produces two daughter cells, each with the same DNA as the parent. That is correct. But you got the next question wrong. Can you tell me what you think happens to chromosome number during mitosis?" This question reveals whether the error was a detail (number of chromosomes) or a deeper conceptual gap (understanding why DNA must replicate exactly for mitosis to work).
What an AI tutor adds:
- Dialogue that surfaces the specific misconception behind a wrong answer
- Socratic questions that build understanding of why scientific processes work the way they do
- Multi-subject support: biology, chemistry, physics, maths, English, history, geography
- Free-form question-answering: "I don't understand why enzymes denature" gets a tailored, conversational response
- Guides students to answers through questioning rather than presenting answers directly
Where Cognito is stronger:
- Concise, high-quality video explanations across the full GCSE science and maths curriculum
- Spaced-repetition quiz engine for efficient knowledge retention
- Many videos free on YouTube
- Well-suited to visual and auditory learners
- Good for consolidating topics a student broadly understands
Side-by-side comparison
| Criterion | Cognito | AI tutor (e.g. aitutors.me) |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | Free on YouTube; premium subscription available | £14/month |
| Teaching method | Video explanation + retrieval quiz | Socratic dialogue |
| Subjects | Science and maths (GCSE focus) | Full KS3 curriculum |
| Feedback on errors | Shows correct answer; option to rewatch video | Dialogue to identify the specific misconception |
| Adapts to the student | Spaced repetition adjusts quiz timing; explanations do not adapt | Full adaptation to the student's own reasoning |
| Best for | Efficient video-based revision; spaced practice | Building conceptual understanding through dialogue |
The honest case for Cognito
For GCSE science revision, Cognito is one of the best free video resources available to UK students. The videos are well-paced and well-scripted, covering the key concepts without overloading students with unnecessary detail. The combination of short explanation plus immediate quiz aligns with retrieval practice — one of the highest-impact revision strategies identified by the EEF.
For students who learn effectively from video instruction and need to cover a wide range of GCSE science topics efficiently, Cognito can meaningfully reduce revision time without reducing quality. Its accessibility on YouTube means students can use it without any subscription.
Where an AI tutor fills the gap
Cognito's videos explain concepts as they are, assuming the student's understanding is a blank slate. What they cannot do is meet a student who already has a partial (and partially incorrect) understanding of a concept and work from there.
A student who has a misconception about, say, how the nervous system transmits signals will watch a Cognito video and filter the new information through their existing (wrong) model. They may not even notice that their model conflicts with what the video says. An AI tutor's questioning approach makes the existing model explicit — "Before I explain it, can you tell me how you currently think the signal travels?" — which gives the tutor a starting point to correct and build from.
Frequently asked questions
Does Cognito cover KS3 as well as GCSE science?
Cognito is primarily focused on GCSE content. Its science videos cover the GCSE biology, chemistry, and physics specifications, and its maths content covers the GCSE maths curriculum. KS3 students approaching GCSE content can find the videos useful, particularly in Year 9, but the platform is not specifically structured for Years 7 and 8. Younger KS3 students may find the GCSE-level explanations assume more prior knowledge than they have.
Is Cognito or Seneca Learning better for GCSE science?
Both are useful and serve overlapping purposes. Cognito's strength is its video explanations — concise, well-structured, and good for visual learners. Seneca Learning's strength is its spaced-repetition quiz engine and its breadth of subjects beyond science. For students who find they learn well from videos, Cognito is often the stronger choice for science specifically. For students who prefer active testing to passive watching, Seneca may be more effective. Many GCSE students use both.
My child uses Cognito but keeps failing science quizzes. What should I try?
If a student watches Cognito videos repeatedly and still fails quizzes, the problem is usually not the quality of the explanation but a persistent misconception that the explanation does not address. This is a situation where an AI tutor's conversational approach is more likely to help than more video-watching. Starting with "Can you tell me what you think you already understand about this topic?" often reveals the misunderstanding that needs addressing first.
What subjects does Cognito cover?
Cognito covers GCSE biology, chemistry, physics, and maths. It does not currently cover English, history, geography, or other humanities subjects. Students looking for video revision across a wider subject range may find BBC Bitesize or Seneca Learning more comprehensive for non-science subjects.
For Socratic science tutoring that builds understanding rather than just presenting it — visit aitutors.me.