Master the IB Biology Higher Level exam on the 2023 syllabus. Longer papers, the HL extensions of every theme, command terms, marking criteria, Section B data skills, and the Scientific Investigation IA — everything you need to score top marks.
240 teaching hours • Paper 1 (Sections A + B) + Paper 2 • 1 internal assessment
Know exactly what each component tests at HL and how to maximise your marks.
What to expect:
Key Tips
Easy Marks
Watch Out
What to expect:
Key Tips
Easy Marks
Watch Out
What to expect:
Key Tips
Easy Marks
Watch Out
Command terms tell you exactly what the examiner expects. Filter by Assessment Objective (AO).
Match your answer depth to the marks available.
Example questions:
Count the marks and make that many separate points — examiners tick discrete marking points, so a single long sentence often scores less than three short, distinct ones.
Example questions:
Learn the command-term vocabulary for each topic — a vague description of the right idea usually misses the marking point that needs the precise term.
Example questions:
Always cite specific numbers from the figure — a description with no data quoted rarely earns the analysis mark.
Example questions:
Plan the spread of points before you write — markband answers reward range and clear links, so make sure every part of the question is addressed.
These concepts appear throughout Biology HL exams. Master them to score higher.
Every mark scheme is built around the command term. "Outline" wants the main points briefly, "explain" wants reasons with "because", and "discuss"/"evaluate" want a balanced judgement. Match the depth of your answer to the verb in the question.
Examiners tick discrete marking points. Look at the mark allocation, then make that many separate, correct biological points — short and distinct beats one long, rambling sentence.
Marks reward the exact term — "active transport", "denatured", "semi-conservative", "selective reabsorption". A paraphrase of the right idea often misses the marking point that needs the specific word.
In the data-based questions, describe the trend, then quote specific figures with units before explaining the biology. A description with no numbers rarely earns the analysis mark.
Diagram and annotation questions are reliable marks. Practise the key drawings (cell, neuron, nephron, heart, DNA) and place every label precisely — examiners need to see the label line touch the right structure.
Biology gives you no data or formula booklet. The handful of calculations you must know (magnification, percentage change, simple indices, the Hardy–Weinberg relationship at HL) have to be memorised, so drill them until they are automatic.
Learn from others' mistakes. These cost students marks every exam session.
Writing one long sentence for a 3-mark question
Count the marks and make that many separate, correct points. Examiners award discrete marking points, so break your answer into distinct statements.
Using vague language instead of the precise term
Replace "moves in" with "active transport", "breaks down" with "hydrolysis", "copies itself" with "semi-conservative replication". The marking point usually needs the exact biological word.
Describing data without quoting any figures
In Section B, lift specific numbers with units off the graph or table ("rose from 12 to 38 arbitrary units") before you explain the biology — the analysis mark needs the data.
Answering "explain" with only a description
An "explain" needs reasons, not just what happens. Add the cause-and-effect link — use "because" and "so that" to connect each step to the next.
Labelling a diagram carelessly
Draw label lines that clearly touch the correct structure, and add a function where the question asks you to annotate. A mislabelled or floating label loses the mark.
Ignoring the command term in extended responses
"Discuss" and "evaluate" need both sides and a judgement; "compare" needs matched points; "outline" stays brief. Re-read the verb before you start and structure the answer around it.
Confusing similar processes
Keep paired processes straight — transcription vs translation, mitosis vs meiosis, diffusion vs active transport. Learn the one or two features that distinguish each pair.
20% of final grade • ≤ 3,000 words
A single individual investigation (about 10 hours of work) in which you plan and carry out your own experiment on a biology research question, then write it up as a report. SL and HL students do exactly the same task, marked on the same four criteria out of 24.
Marking Criteria
Tips for Top Marks
Apply these exam skills with our Biology HL practice questions. Get instant AI feedback that shows exactly what scored marks and how to improve.