IB DP · Exam Tips

Design technology Exam Tips

Master the official IB Design Technology rubrics by understanding the exact differences between waste mitigation strategies, avoiding colloquial terms, and applying the strict ID+Dev formula to secure full marks on short-answer and essay questions alike.

4 min readUpdated: Jun 21, 2026

Exam at a Glance

Papers
2
Total Marks
80
Time Limit
2h 15min
Question Types
3
PaperDurationMarksQuestionsWeightingQuestion Types
Paper 1 (SL)45min3030Multiple Choice
Paper 2 (HL/SL Core)1h 30min5011Data-Based / Case-Study Short Answer, Structured Essay
Grade Scale
1234567
Calculator Policy

A graphic display calculator (GDC) from the IB-approved list is required for most Mathematics and Sciences papers and must be set to examination mode. Note that some papers do not permit a calculator (for example Mathematics Paper 1 and the multiple-choice Sciences Paper 1).

  • AO1: AO1: Demonstrate knowledge and understanding (25%)
  • AO2: AO2: Apply knowledge and understanding (35%)
  • AO3: AO3: Analyze and evaluate (40%)

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

Tips & Strategies

The Two-Point Outline: Where Half Your Marks Slip Away

In IB Design Technology, command words are not suggestions; they are exact grading rubrics. One of the most common places students drop easy marks is in 2-mark Outline questions. Many candidates write a single, accurate sentence that identifies a factor and stop there, earning only 1 out of 2 marks. To secure full marks, you must use the ID + Dev (Identify + Develop) formula. Your first sentence must state a clear, syllabus-aligned point. Your second sentence must explicitly develop this point by explaining its cause, mechanism, or direct consequence. For example, if asked to outline how a product meets Datschefski's cyclic principle, don't just state that it is recyclable. First, identify that the product uses 100% recyclable or biological materials designed for a closed continuous loop. Second, develop this by explaining that this prevents components from entering landfills and allows them to be reprocessed back into the production cycle, thereby minimizing environmental throughput.

The Triad Trap: How to Master the 9-Mark Extended Response

The high-tariff 9-mark questions in Paper 2 Section B are the ultimate test of your structured thinking. Historically, examiners report that thousands of candidates lose easy marks because of structural imbalance. When a question asks you to explain how a design considers three specific aspects—such as materials, pollution, and energy—the marking scheme strictly divides the marks into equal tiers. If you write three pages of brilliant analysis on materials and pollution but completely ignore the energy phase, your mark is instantly capped. Top scorers avoid this trap by using the Syllabus Subheading Strategy. Before writing a single word of your essay, draw three clear, physical sub-headings corresponding exactly to the three prompted phases. This guarantees you distribute your detail evenly. Ensure you use specific technical vocabulary in each section, such as structural stress simulations for modeling, or the distinction between biological and technical nutrients in cradle-to-cradle designs.

Decoupling vs. Dematerialization: Speaking the Language of the Markscheme

The IB Design Technology markscheme is famously unforgiving when it comes to colloquial language. Using terms like 'environmentally friendly', 'helps the Earth', 'cheap', or 'good value' will result in zero marks. Instead, you must deploy the exact terminology of the syllabus. Confusing decoupling with dematerialization is a classic error. Decoupling refers specifically to the macroeconomic separation of economic growth from negative environmental impacts, meaning a company can expand its business without a proportional increase in resource consumption. Dematerialization, on the other hand, is the physical reduction of material and energy throughput for a specific product function. Similarly, do not use loose terms when describing material properties. Stating that an alloy is 'stronger' or 'better' is insufficient. You must specify whether it has higher tensile strength, compressive strength, toughness, or corrosion resistance, and explain how the introduction of foreign atoms distorts the crystal lattice to prevent dislocation under physical stress.

The 45-Minute Sprint: Dominate Paper 1 Without Second-Guessing

With 30 multiple-choice questions in just 45 minutes, Paper 1 allows exactly 90 seconds per question. Time management is critical, but the real mark-killers are multi-statement Roman numeral questions (e.g., statements I, II, and III). Students often make hasty, emotional selections after scanning only the first option. The secret strategy used by 7-level students is Systematic Statement Elimination. Read each Roman numeral statement as an independent True/False question, physically marking a check or an 'X' next to it on the exam booklet before looking at the choices (A, B, C, D). Furthermore, pay close attention to the specific definitions of sustainable and manufacturing practices. For example, memorize the precise boundaries of waste mitigation: reconditioning is restoring a product to its original, 'as-new' state; re-engineering is redesigning components for improved performance; and recycling is breaking down materials back to raw states. Confusing these processes in the case-study section of Paper 1 is the most common cause of lost points.

The Usability Illusion: What Top Scorers Do Differently

Another classic misconception is treating prototype testing and usability testing as identical. They are fundamentally different. Prototype testing is engineering-centric: it uses physical models or finite element analysis (FEA) to evaluate physical durability, mechanical tolerances, and structural stress. Usability testing is user-centric: it requires representative users to interact with a product in real-world scenarios or usability laboratories to evaluate effectiveness, efficiency, and cognitive satisfaction. When analyzing user-centred design (UCD), top scorers explicitly list the multidisciplinary team members involved—such as ergonomists, anthropologists, and interface designers—and explain how they gather physiological and psychological human factors data. By demonstrating this clear division between the mechanical properties of a product and the ergonomic interactions of the user, you signal to the examiner that you possess a mature, professional grasp of the design cycle.

Calculator Programs

Graph: zeros, intersections & turning points

Graphical calculator / GDC (exam mode)

Purpose: Plot a function to read its roots (zeros), points of intersection, and maxima/minima.

When to use it: Checking solutions, sketching, or solving where an analytic method is hard.

Steps
Graph the function(s) and use the built-in zero, intersect and maximum/minimum tools.

Exam note: Use a GDC from the IB-approved list in examination mode. Some papers do not permit a calculator. Always show your reasoning.

Numerical equation solver

Graphical calculator / GDC (exam mode)

Purpose: Solve an equation or find a variable numerically when an algebraic route is long or implicit.

When to use it: Iterative or implicit equations, or to confirm an algebraic solution.

Steps
Use the equation/zero solver, entering the equation and a sensible starting estimate.

Exam note: Use a GDC from the IB-approved list in examination mode. Some papers do not permit a calculator. Always show your reasoning.

Numerical integration & differentiation

Graphical calculator / GDC (exam mode)

Purpose: Evaluate a definite integral \(\int_a^b f(x)\,dx\) or a gradient \(f'(x)\) at a point.

When to use it: Checking calculus answers, or where only a numerical value is needed.

Steps
Use the GDC's numeric integral / derivative function with the limits or the point.

Exam note: Use a GDC from the IB-approved list in examination mode. Some papers do not permit a calculator. Always show your reasoning.

Statistics & probability distributions

Graphical calculator / GDC (exam mode)

Purpose: 1-var/2-var statistics, linear regression, and cumulative binomial / normal / Poisson probabilities without tables.

When to use it: Statistics questions and hypothesis tests.

Steps
Enter data in the statistics editor, or use the distribution menu (binomial cdf, normal cdf, …).

Exam note: Use a GDC from the IB-approved list in examination mode. Some papers do not permit a calculator. Always show your reasoning.

Common Mistakes

  1. 1highMarks at stake: 2Resource management and sustainable production

    Confusing the waste mitigation strategies of reconditioning and re-engineering.

    How to avoid it: Remember that reconditioning restores an old product to look and perform as new without major design changes, whereas re-engineering involves redesigning components or workflows to improve or alter the product's performance.
  2. 2highMarks at stake: 3Sustainability

    Using vague, colloquial terms like 'environmentally friendly' or 'raising awareness' instead of syllabus-defined keywords.

    How to avoid it: Deploy precise syllabus terms such as 'dematerialization', 'decoupling', 'cradle-to-cradle loop', or 'reducing material throughput'. Vague phrasing is explicitly blocked by markschemes.
  3. 3mediumMarks at stake: 1Innovation and design

    Failing to write a descriptive second sentence in 2-mark 'Outline' command-word questions.

    How to avoid it: Apply the 'ID + Dev' rule: use your first sentence to clearly state or identify the factor, and your second sentence to explain the mechanism, cause-and-effect relationship, or consequence.
  4. 4highMarks at stake: 4Modelling

    Writing unbalanced answers for the 9-mark extended response questions in Paper 2 Section B.

    How to avoid it: Structure your essay into three distinct, balanced parts under clear sub-headings matching the three prompts (e.g., Materials, Pollution, and Energy) to avoid being capped at low mark bands.
  5. 5mediumMarks at stake: 2Commercial production

    Confusing Quality Assurance (QA) with Quality Control (QC).

    How to avoid it: Define QA as a proactive, process-oriented system focused on designing stable workflows to prevent defects, and QC as a reactive, product-oriented system focused on detecting defects through testing.
  6. 6mediumMarks at stake: 2Raw material to final product

    Confusing physical properties (such as mass and density) with mechanical properties (such as toughness and hardness) during material selection analysis.

    How to avoid it: Remember physical properties describe the material's basic physical state under no load (density, mass, electrical resistivity), whereas mechanical properties describe how the material behaves under applied physical forces (toughness, hardness, tensile/compressive strength).

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