Question how does the pH of water rise as temperature rises, at 25C the pH is 7, as the reaction is endothermic, when you heat it up there is a net forward reactions, ok I get that much, so the textbook describes how pH lowers, but then in its questions it says the pH is neutral and there is no pH change as the OH- will equal the H3O+...!? I'm so confused 
Are you talking pure water? There's an equation called the Van't Hoff equation which VCAA unfortunately don't teach.
It goes like this.
 )
Now from memory the enthalpy change for the reaction of H+ and OH- is -55 kJ/mol
So plug in

and your value for

into the equation. Now you have a relationship between

and temperature. As the water remains neutral, square root the equilibrium constant to work out the numerical value of concentration in M of H+. Take log and you're done.
If anyone has checkpoints 2011 then I'm referring to questions 2 and 14.
Q2) Nitrogen and Hydrogen gas forming ammonia, exothermic. N2 + 3H2 <-> 2NH3 Which would not cause the rate of the forward reaction to increase? A) Increasing the temperature B) Increasing the pressure C) Adding a suitable catalyst D) Adding an inert gas. Answer is D.
Q14) CO + 2H2 <-> CH3OH, exothermic using catalyst. Which would give a maximum yield of methanol?
A) Increase the temperature B) Lower the pressure C) Use a more effective catalyst D) Condense methanol and recycle gases. Answer is D.
For Q2) Wouldn't increasing the temperature cause a net backward reaction to cool the system down? How would that cause the rate of the forward reaction to increase???
Q14) I totally understand this one, even though it's very similar to the previous one. Here increasing temperature would reduce the yield of methanol as the system wants to partially oppose this change by cooling it down. How come the same logic isn't applicable to Q2? 
May have been said before, but increasing temperature always increases reaction rate (don't look up negative activation energy on Wiki...please). Therefore increasing the temperature increases the forward rate, just increases the back rate even more. The proof is slightly messy.
Don't get confused about equilibrium shifts and reaction rates. Equilibrium shifts mean that one reaction increases MORE than the other one, but it says nothing about whether both of them increase at the same time. Here's an example. If you and I are pulling on a piece of rope and we're both initially pulling with 100 N, the rope isn't going to move, i.e. equilibrium. Doesn't mean there's no force, just no net force. However, if you then pull with 300 N while I only pull with 200 N, the rope will move towards you. Equilibrium has been broken in your favour, but it doesn't mean that I wasn't pulling harder. Now replace forces with reaction rate and pulling the rope with chemical reactions.