Internal Assessment
During the second year of the IB Biology HL class, students have the opportunity to research, design, perform, and write up their own investigation. This project is known as an internal assessment (IA). Students will spend 10 hours doing this investigation which will provide 20% of the overall assessment for the IB biology score (the IB score, not the class grade).
There is a large variety and range of possible investigations; each student must complete an investigation that is unique and adequately different from those of other students in the course. Students can choose from:
The Internal Assessment is assessed (that means ‘graded’) using very strict IB criteria. All IB science teachers world-wide must use the same criteria and apply them in the same way—quite a challenge!! To ensure that everyone is following the rules and applying the criteria correctly, schools must send samples of graded student lab reports to IB for monitoring. If a teacher is being too hard or too soft, that teacher’s marks which were awarded to students will be adjusted accordingly.
The IB Biology Internal Assessment is graded using five IB Internal Assessment Criteria. A maximum score of 24 points* is possible, awarded for the following five criteria:
*The points for the I.A. criteria are IB marks, not class grade book points. The class grade for the final I.A. report is determined in a similar fashion to the way raw tests and quiz scores are adjusted in IB Biology II.
You can view the scoring rubric to read the levels of performance and indicators per level. The IB assessment models use mark-bands and advises teachers to use a "best-fit" approach in deciding the appropriate mark for a particular criterion. You can view annotated samples of Internal Assessments here.
At SHS, the students complete the Internal Assessment during the first semester of the second year of IB Biology. The IA project is is broken into discrete "chunks" so that students are not overwhelmed by the magnitude of the project and so that there is ample time for asking questions, getting feedback and completing the experiments. Under no circumstances should a student be procrastinating on this project or surprised by an upcoming deadline. Here's the timeline for the 2019-2020 school year:
Week of September 5, 2023
Intro to the Internal Assessment
Problem question selection
Week of September 11, 2023
Proposed problem question due
first come, first serve – since students can’t have the same problem question as others
Week of September 18, 2023
Teacher approval for problem question
Intro to background research task
Week of September 25, 2023
Background research due
Intro to methodology proposal
Week of October 16, 2023
Methodology proposals due
Week of October 23, 2023
Teacher approval of methodology
Intro to data collection expectations
Data collection plan due
Week of November 06, 2023
Review common feedback related to data collection
Formatted raw data and data collection photos due
Review requirements for 50% draft
Week of November 13, 2023
Review common feedback related to introduction and methods
50% draft due
Intro to descriptive data analysis
Week of November 20, 2023
Review common feedback related to data analysis
Descriptive data analysis due
Intro to data presentation
Week of November 27, 2023
Review common feedback related to data presentation
Data presentation draft due
Intro to inferential data analysis
Week of December 4, 2023
Review common feedback related to inferential analysis
Inferential analysis due
Intro to conclusion and evaluation
Week of December 11, 2023
Review common feedback related to the conclusion and evaluation
Conclusion and evaluation draft due
Compiling the final paper
Review IA scoring rubric
Peer and parent evaluation of strengths and improvements
Week of January 8, 2023
Self assessment against the IB rubric due
Peer and parent evaluations due
Week of January 16, 2023
Final paper submission
Declaration
What follows are links to the documents used in our class to help development of the final paper. Please note that each "button" links to the assignment completed by the student. These assignments are completed roughly 1 week apart from each other, with no class time dedicated to their completion (meaning, this work happens outside of class time).
1. TOPIC SELECTION
Helpful resources for topic selection:
2. PROBLEM QUESTION SELECTION
Helpful resource for problem question selection:
3. BACKGROUND RESEARCH
Helpful resources for background research:
4. METHODOLOGY PROPOSAL
5. HYPOTHESIS WRITING GUIDE
6. DATA COLLECTION GUIDE
Helpful resource for data collection:
7. INTRODUCTION AND METHODS WRITING GUIDE
Helpful resource for introduction and methods:
8. DATA ANALYSIS PLAN
Helpful resources for data analysis:
9. DATA PRESENTATION PLAN
Helpful resources for data presentation:
10. EVALUATION WRITING GUIDE
Helpful resource for evaluation writing:
11. COMPILING AND SELF EVALUATION
Nothing is submitted to the teacher for step 11.
12. PEER AND PARENT FEEDBACK
13. ELECTRONIC SUBMISSION DIRECTIONS
In addition to electronic submission, the teacher may also request a printed copy of the final IA report.
14. COVER SHEET AND DECLARATION
A note to teachers and students about the IA:
Everything in steps 1-14 above is scored for completion, roughly 5-10 class lab points per task. Something small like writing a problem question is worth 5 points, something bigger like the draft of the introduction would be worth 10 points. The teacher will read and approve every problem question - once it is's approved it is added to the list (which everyone can see) and if it's not approved (because it's too simple, too complex, not ethical, or lame...) then the student will be asked to try again. A student cannot move on to the next step in the process until they complete the previous step. Once a problem question has been approved, a student can't change it without discussion with the teacher.
Common feedback is shared with all students but I, as the teacher, actually only spot check the details of a few of the students work. For example, if I get 120 draft introductions turned in, I will randomly read 10 in detail - and anonymously share the feedback from those 10 with all 120 students. Then, for the next section I will repeat with another (different) random 10 students. I do this because there is absolutely NO WAY to read 120 students "in process" IA work. Additionally, the IA is an ASSESSMENT and so per IB guidelines I can't be providing specific feedback to individual students. Students can absolutely talk to me, ask questions, get help.... but it has to be on their initiative not mine.
During the second year of the IB Biology HL class, students have the opportunity to research, design, perform, and write up their own investigation. This project is known as an internal assessment (IA). Students will spend 10 hours doing this investigation which will provide 20% of the overall assessment for the IB biology score (the IB score, not the class grade).
There is a large variety and range of possible investigations; each student must complete an investigation that is unique and adequately different from those of other students in the course. Students can choose from:
- Traditional hands-on experimental work, if necessary following strict ethical guidelines for both human and animal subjects
- Database investigations in which students use a database to obtain data to process and analyse the information for the investigation.
- Computer simulations in which students process and present the data in such a way that something new is revealed.
The Internal Assessment is assessed (that means ‘graded’) using very strict IB criteria. All IB science teachers world-wide must use the same criteria and apply them in the same way—quite a challenge!! To ensure that everyone is following the rules and applying the criteria correctly, schools must send samples of graded student lab reports to IB for monitoring. If a teacher is being too hard or too soft, that teacher’s marks which were awarded to students will be adjusted accordingly.
The IB Biology Internal Assessment is graded using five IB Internal Assessment Criteria. A maximum score of 24 points* is possible, awarded for the following five criteria:
- Personal Engagement (up to 2 points)
- Exploration (up to 6 points)
- Analysis (up to 6 points)
- Evaluation (up to 6 points)
- Communication (up to 4 points)
*The points for the I.A. criteria are IB marks, not class grade book points. The class grade for the final I.A. report is determined in a similar fashion to the way raw tests and quiz scores are adjusted in IB Biology II.
You can view the scoring rubric to read the levels of performance and indicators per level. The IB assessment models use mark-bands and advises teachers to use a "best-fit" approach in deciding the appropriate mark for a particular criterion. You can view annotated samples of Internal Assessments here.
At SHS, the students complete the Internal Assessment during the first semester of the second year of IB Biology. The IA project is is broken into discrete "chunks" so that students are not overwhelmed by the magnitude of the project and so that there is ample time for asking questions, getting feedback and completing the experiments. Under no circumstances should a student be procrastinating on this project or surprised by an upcoming deadline. Here's the timeline for the 2019-2020 school year:
Week of September 5, 2023
Intro to the Internal Assessment
Problem question selection
Week of September 11, 2023
Proposed problem question due
first come, first serve – since students can’t have the same problem question as others
Week of September 18, 2023
Teacher approval for problem question
Intro to background research task
Week of September 25, 2023
Background research due
Intro to methodology proposal
Week of October 16, 2023
Methodology proposals due
Week of October 23, 2023
Teacher approval of methodology
Intro to data collection expectations
Data collection plan due
Week of November 06, 2023
Review common feedback related to data collection
Formatted raw data and data collection photos due
Review requirements for 50% draft
Week of November 13, 2023
Review common feedback related to introduction and methods
50% draft due
Intro to descriptive data analysis
Week of November 20, 2023
Review common feedback related to data analysis
Descriptive data analysis due
Intro to data presentation
Week of November 27, 2023
Review common feedback related to data presentation
Data presentation draft due
Intro to inferential data analysis
Week of December 4, 2023
Review common feedback related to inferential analysis
Inferential analysis due
Intro to conclusion and evaluation
Week of December 11, 2023
Review common feedback related to the conclusion and evaluation
Conclusion and evaluation draft due
Compiling the final paper
Review IA scoring rubric
Peer and parent evaluation of strengths and improvements
Week of January 8, 2023
Self assessment against the IB rubric due
Peer and parent evaluations due
Week of January 16, 2023
Final paper submission
Declaration
What follows are links to the documents used in our class to help development of the final paper. Please note that each "button" links to the assignment completed by the student. These assignments are completed roughly 1 week apart from each other, with no class time dedicated to their completion (meaning, this work happens outside of class time).
1. TOPIC SELECTION
Helpful resources for topic selection:
- IB biology syllabus
- list of available equipment
- animal experimentation policy
- sample informed consent form
- biological databases
- possible simulations
2. PROBLEM QUESTION SELECTION
Helpful resource for problem question selection:
- List of approved problem questions (2016-2017)
- List of approved problem questions (2018-2019)
- List of approved problem question (2019-2020)
3. BACKGROUND RESEARCH
Helpful resources for background research:
- Directory of Open Access Journals
- Google Scholar
- InfoMine
- Infotopia
- Medscape Reference
- National Science Digital Library
- Public Library of Science
- Science Direct
- Wiley Online Library
- OAIster
- WorldCat
- MLA documentation style
- Easy Bib citation generator
4. METHODOLOGY PROPOSAL
5. HYPOTHESIS WRITING GUIDE
6. DATA COLLECTION GUIDE
Helpful resource for data collection:
7. INTRODUCTION AND METHODS WRITING GUIDE
Helpful resource for introduction and methods:
8. DATA ANALYSIS PLAN
Helpful resources for data analysis:
9. DATA PRESENTATION PLAN
Helpful resources for data presentation:
- How to format data tables
- Types of graphs and graph formatting
- Adding and interpreting error bars
- Feedback on data presentation drafts
10. EVALUATION WRITING GUIDE
Helpful resource for evaluation writing:
11. COMPILING AND SELF EVALUATION
Nothing is submitted to the teacher for step 11.
12. PEER AND PARENT FEEDBACK
13. ELECTRONIC SUBMISSION DIRECTIONS
In addition to electronic submission, the teacher may also request a printed copy of the final IA report.
14. COVER SHEET AND DECLARATION
A note to teachers and students about the IA:
Everything in steps 1-14 above is scored for completion, roughly 5-10 class lab points per task. Something small like writing a problem question is worth 5 points, something bigger like the draft of the introduction would be worth 10 points. The teacher will read and approve every problem question - once it is's approved it is added to the list (which everyone can see) and if it's not approved (because it's too simple, too complex, not ethical, or lame...) then the student will be asked to try again. A student cannot move on to the next step in the process until they complete the previous step. Once a problem question has been approved, a student can't change it without discussion with the teacher.
Common feedback is shared with all students but I, as the teacher, actually only spot check the details of a few of the students work. For example, if I get 120 draft introductions turned in, I will randomly read 10 in detail - and anonymously share the feedback from those 10 with all 120 students. Then, for the next section I will repeat with another (different) random 10 students. I do this because there is absolutely NO WAY to read 120 students "in process" IA work. Additionally, the IA is an ASSESSMENT and so per IB guidelines I can't be providing specific feedback to individual students. Students can absolutely talk to me, ask questions, get help.... but it has to be on their initiative not mine.