Cambridge IGCSE · Exam Tips

Biology (0610) Exam Tips

Comprehensive expert study guide and exam tips package for Cambridge IGCSE Biology (0610), grounded in the 2023-2025 exam reports and official marking schemes.

4 min readUpdated: 21 Jun 2026

Exam at a Glance

Papers
3
Total Marks
160
Time Limit
3h
Question Types
3
PaperDurationMarksQuestionsWeightingQuestion Types
Paper 2 (Multiple Choice, Extended)45min40
Paper 4 (Theory, Extended)1h 15min80
Paper 6 (Alternative to Practical)1h40
Grade Scale
A*ABCDEFGU
Calculator Policy

A silent scientific calculator may be used on papers where calculators are permitted (some papers are non-calculator). It must not be graphical or programmable and must hold no stored information.

  • AO1: Knowledge with understanding (50%)
  • AO2: Handling information and problem-solving (30%)
  • AO3: Experimental skills and investigations (20%)

Built from real past papers and marking schemes (2023–2025).

Tips & Strategies

The 1-Minute Rule: Mastering Time Across Three Fronts

Managing your time effectively is the foundation of exam success. In Paper 1 and Paper 2 (Multiple Choice), you have 45 minutes to answer 40 questions. This translates to roughly one minute per question, leaving 5 minutes at the end to check your answer sheet. Never spend more than 90 seconds on a single multiple-choice question; if you are stuck, circle the question number and move on. In Paper 3 and Paper 4 (Theory), you have 75 minutes to secure 80 marks. This is a tight pace of less than one minute per mark. Do not waste precious time writing long, conversational introductions. Jump directly into your scientific arguments to maximize your marks. For Paper 5 (Practical Test) and Paper 6 (Alternative to Practical), pacing is equally vital: budget at least 15 minutes for the 6-mark planning question, 10 minutes for your biological drawing, and 10 minutes for calculations, leaving the remaining time for shorter observation and data-analysis questions.

Command Word Anatomy: Where "Describe" Meets "Explain"

Vague descriptions are one of the most common ways candidates lose easy marks. You must read the command words with absolute precision:

  • "State": Requires a direct, single-word or short-phrase answer (e.g., stating the genus name as Lactobacillus or the hormone as testosterone).
  • "Describe": Requires you to state what happens or what you see. For a graph, this means quoting specific data points with their units and calculating differences.
  • "Explain": Requires you to state why or how a process occurs. If a question asks you to "describe and explain" a trend, you must do both. Stating that transpiration rate increases as temperature increases is a description; explaining that higher temperatures increase the kinetic energy of water molecules, leading to faster evaporation and diffusion, is the explanation.

Precision Over Prose: The Secret Language of Top Scorers

Top scorers do not write long paragraphs; they write precise, term-dense sentences. When explaining enzyme-catalyzed or receptor-based processes, always use the word 'shape' to describe complementarity. Do not just say "the substrate fits the enzyme"; instead, write: "the substrate has a shape complementary to the active site of the enzyme." Never use the colloquial terms "killed" or "died" for enzymes when discussing high temperatures or extreme pH; instead, write that the active site has been denatured. In homeostatic mechanisms, do not confuse the hormone glucagon with the storage carbohydrate glycogen. When discussing eutrophication, you must explicitly mention that the bacteria/decomposers consume dissolved oxygen through aerobic respiration, causing the suffocation of fish, rather than simply stating that "algae block the oxygen."

The No-Shading Zone: Earning Every Mark on Papers 5 and 6

Biological drawings are tests of scientific observation, not artistic talent. To secure full marks on Paper 5 or Paper 6 drawing questions, you must follow these strict criteria:

  • Use a sharp HB pencil to draw single, clear, continuous, and unshaded lines. Never use sketchy strokes or double-ruled outlines.
  • Your drawing must be large, occupying more than half of the available space provided on the page.
  • Draw exact proportions of the specimen. If the specimen has five limbs (like a starfish) or a distinct tear-shaped white patch (like a penguin's head), represent them accurately.
  • Do not apply stippling, artistic shading, or coloring to any part of your diagram.
  • When drawing cells, represent cell walls with double outlines to show their thickness, and never draw chloroplasts in animal cells or root hair cells.

The Math of Biology: Conversions, Ratios, and the Magic Triangle

Up to 10% of the marks across your papers involve mathematical skills. Many students lose marks simply due to careless arithmetic, early rounding, or unit errors:

  • Magnification Formula: Use the triangle \( M = \frac{I}{A} \), where \( M \) is magnification, \( I \) is image size (measured on the paper), and \( A \) is actual size. Always measure the line (e.g., line AB) in millimeters (mm), and convert it if the formula requires micrometers (\(\mu\text{m}\)). To convert millimeters to micrometers, multiply by 1000. To convert micrometers to millimeters, divide by 1000.
  • Percentage Change Calculation: Use the formula: \( \text{Percentage Change} = \frac{\text{Change}}{\text{Original Value}} \times 100 \). If the value decreased, remember to include the negative sign (e.g., -61.8%) or explicitly state it is a "percentage decrease."
  • Significant Figures: Always round your final answers to the number of significant figures requested in the prompt (commonly 2 or 3 sig figs, or to the nearest whole number). Show all intermediate calculation steps to secure error-carried-forward (ECF) marks.

Calculator Programmes

Table mode for roots & turning points

Scientific calculator (e.g. Casio fx-991 series)

Purpose: Tabulate \(y\) across a range of \(x\) to locate sign changes (roots) and approximate maxima/minima.

When to use it: Solving or sketching a function when you want to find where its graph crosses or turns.

Steps
Enter the function in TABLE mode, set the start, end and step, then read where the sign of \(y\) changes or where it peaks.

Exam note: Allowed on papers where a calculator is permitted; use a silent scientific calculator with no stored content and show your method.

Statistics mode (mean, SD & regression)

Scientific calculator (e.g. Casio fx-991 series)

Purpose: Read the mean \(\bar{x}\) and standard deviation directly, and the gradient/intercept (and \(r\)) of a linear regression for bivariate data.

When to use it: Any data-handling, statistics, or required-practical analysis question.

Steps
Enter the data in STAT mode (1-VAR or A+BX), then recall \(\bar{x}\), \(\sigma\) or the regression coefficients.

Exam note: Allowed on papers where a calculator is permitted; use a silent scientific calculator with no stored content and show your method.

Carry exact values with Ans & memory

Scientific calculator (e.g. Casio fx-991 series)

Purpose: Keep full-precision intermediate values to avoid rounding errors.

When to use it: Multi-step calculations where premature rounding loses the final accuracy mark.

Steps
Use Ans, STO/RCL or the M+ memory to reuse the unrounded result of each step; round only the final answer.

Exam note: Allowed on papers where a calculator is permitted; use a silent scientific calculator with no stored content and show your method.

Equation solver — to CHECK your working

Scientific calculator (e.g. Casio fx-991 series)

Purpose: Use the built-in EQN/SOLVE mode to verify roots of quadratics or simultaneous equations you have already solved by algebra.

When to use it: As a check only, after solving by hand.

Steps
Enter the coefficients in EQN mode (or use SOLVE) and confirm they match your worked solution.

Exam note: Allowed on papers where a calculator is permitted; use a silent scientific calculator with no stored content and show your method.

Common Mistakes

  1. 1highMarks at stake: 2Enzymes

    Stating that high temperatures or extreme pH levels 'kill' enzymes.

    How to avoid it: State that high temperatures or extreme pH levels 'denature' enzymes or affect their 'active site shape'.
  2. 2highMarks at stake: 1Transpiration

    Describing the movement of water during transpiration as 'water' diffusing through air spaces.

    How to avoid it: Specify that 'water vapour' (not liquid water) diffuses from the surface of mesophyll cells through the air spaces and out of the stomata.
  3. 3highMarks at stake: 1Homeostasis

    Confusing the hormone 'glucagon' with the storage carbohydrate 'glycogen' during homeostasis explanations.

    How to avoid it: Remember the rule: when glucose is GONE, you need glucaGON (the hormone). Glycogen is the polysaccharide stored in the liver.
  4. 4highMarks at stake: 2Size of specimens

    Applying sketching lines, stippling, or shading to biological drawings in Paper 5 & 6.

    How to avoid it: Draw single, clean, continuous outlines with a sharp HB pencil. Do not shade or stipple any part of the specimen.
  5. 5mediumMarks at stake: 1Size of specimens

    Writing raw units (like 'mm' or '°C') directly inside the data fields of a results table.

    How to avoid it: Keep units strictly within the column and row headers of your results table (e.g., 'Temperature / °C' or 'Time / s'), leaving table body cells as raw numbers.
  6. 6mediumMarks at stake: 1Size of specimens

    Failing to include a negative sign when calculating percentage decreases.

    How to avoid it: Always insert a negative sign (-) in front of your final value if calculating a percentage decrease (e.g., -61.8%), or clearly state the term 'percentage decrease'.
  7. 7highMarks at stake: 3Size of specimens

    Multiplying by 1000 instead of dividing by 1000 when converting micrometer measurements to millimeters for magnification equations.

    How to avoid it: To convert micrometers to millimeters, divide the value by 1000. Ensure both image size and actual size are converted to identical units before division.
  8. 8highMarks at stake: 2Pollution

    Omitting the role of bacteria and decomposers when describing eutrophication.

    How to avoid it: State that bacteria feed on the dead producers and multiply rapidly, consuming dissolved oxygen through aerobic respiration, which suffocates the fish.
  9. 9mediumMarks at stake: 2Heart

    Misidentifying the anatomical left and right sides of the heart on cardiorespiratory diagrams.

    How to avoid it: Remember that anatomical diagrams are drawn from the perspective of the patient facing you. The right ventricle is on the left side of the paper, and the left ventricle is on the right.
  10. 10mediumMarks at stake: 1Aerobic respiration

    Writing 'air' instead of 'oxygen' when describing the requirements of aerobic respiration.

    How to avoid it: Always use the specific gas name 'oxygen' rather than the general term 'air' in respiration equations and descriptions.

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