The 5-Minute Habit That Saves a Grade: Decoding Command Words
In Edexcel IGCSE Human Biology, candidates lose the most marks not from lack of revision, but from misinterpreting command words. There is a strict functional difference between 'Describe' and 'Explain'. When asked to 'describe' a trend in a graph, you must state exactly what is happening (e.g., 'the blood alcohol level peaks at 1 hour and then decreases steadily to zero at 5.5 hours'). You do not need to say why it happens. However, when asked to 'explain', you must provide a scientific reason using biological theory (e.g., 'alcohol is absorbed into the blood via the stomach and later carried to the liver where it is broken down and detoxified by enzymes'). Top scorers spend the first 5 minutes of the exam underlining every command word to ensure they match their answers to the exact marking criteria.
Where the Marks Really Hide: The Secret 10% Math and Unit Conversions
At least 10% of the marks in both Paper 1 and Paper 2 are purely mathematical. This includes calculating magnification, cardiac output, or energy transfer. To secure these easy marks, you must cultivate two crucial habits:
- Show every intermediate step: If you make a final arithmetic slip but show your formula and steps, the examiner can award Error Carried Forward (ECF) marks. If you only write a wrong final number, you get 0 marks.
- Double-check unit conversions: This is where high-fliers pull ahead. You must be comfortable converting between units. For instance, in magnification questions, convert millimeters to micrometers by multiplying by 1000 before dividing by the actual size (\(M = I / A\)). In cardiac output tasks, always remember that \(1 \text{ dm}^3 = 1000 \text{ cm}^3\). Failing to convert cardiac output from \(\text{dm}^3\) to \(\text{cm}^3\) can cost you up to 2 marks on a single question.
Mastering the Diagram: No More 'Sketchy' Freehand Mistakes
When drawing cells, reflex arcs, or Visking tubing experimental setups, students often turn in quick, sketchy, freehand doodles. Examiners demand precision. Always use a sharp HB or B pencil and a clean ruler. Your lines must be single, continuous, and clear (no double lines or overlapping gaps). When labeling parts of the eye or joints, ensure your pointer line touches the target organ or tissue precisely. For example, when labeling a motor neurone, ensure the pointer line for the myelin sheath terminates directly on the sheath, not in the gaps between nodes. Also, keep your labels horizontal and never cross your pointer lines.
The High-Scorer's Toolkit: Structuring 4- to 6-Mark Answers
Extended-response questions (such as describing the inhalation process or explaining how the kidney regulates water levels) require a structured, sequential approach. Top performers use bullet points rather than dense paragraphs. For example, when outlining inhalation, your structure should be sequential:
- External intercostal muscles contract, causing the ribs to move up and out.
- The diaphragm muscles contract, causing the diaphragm to flatten.
- This increases the volume of the thorax.
- Consequently, the pressure inside the thorax decreases below atmospheric pressure.
- Air is forced/drawn into the lungs down a pressure gradient.
By structuring your answers chronologically, you ensure you hit every marking point on the examiner's rubric.
What Top Scorers Do Differently: The CORMS Framework
In Paper 1 and Paper 2, you will encounter 6-mark experimental design tasks. High-scoring students automatically frame their answers around the CORMS protocol to guarantee they tick every box:
- C (Change): What is your independent variable? State its range and how you will manipulate it (e.g., 'use five different concentrations of pepsin solution: 1%, 2%, 3%, 4%, and 5%').
- O (Organism): What biological material will you use, and how will you keep it consistent (e.g., 'use potato cylinders cut from the same parent potato to ensure identical tissue type').
- R (Repeat): Explicitly state that you will carry out at least three repeat trials at each condition to calculate a reliable mean and identify anomalies.
- M (Measure): Define your dependent variable. State what you are measuring, how you will measure it, and over what time frame (e.g., 'measure the time taken for the black photographic film to become completely clear in seconds using a digital stopwatch').
- S (Standardise): Identify at least two control variables that must be kept constant to ensure a fair test, along with how you will keep them constant (e.g., 'use a thermostatically controlled water bath to maintain a constant temperature of 37°C, and use a buffer to keep the pH at pH 2').