The required syllabus content for Unit 3, in order. Each card is one lesson-sized checkpoint.
Whilst we integrate Tools and Inquiry throughout the course, we have selected a few areas to focus in more
Lesson 3-4 of Unit 3.
Lesson 5 of Unit 3.
Lesson 6 of Unit 3.
Lesson 7-8 of Unit 3.
Each lesson card below mirrors the original teacher deck — syllabus refs, content, worked examples and practice questions in order.
Precision is the closeness of agreement between repeated measurements of the same quantity under the same conditions. Accuracy is how close a measurement is to the true (literature) value. The two are independent — you can have one without the other.
Analogue instruments (burette, pipette, measuring cylinder, ruler, gas syringe): if no uncertainty is quoted on the equipment, take half the smallest scale division. Example: a measuring cylinder with 2 cm³ divisions, measuring 60 cm³ → quote 60 ± 1 cm³.
Digital instruments (top-pan balance, voltmeter, drop counter, colourimeter): uncertainty = ± the smallest displayed digit. Example: balance reads 100.00 g → quote 100.00 ± 0.01 g.
+ or −: add the absolute uncertainties.
× or ÷: add the percentage uncertainties.
Power xn: multiply the percentage uncertainty by n.
Rounding rule: quote the final uncertainty to 1 s.f. if > 2% of the value, 2 s.f. otherwise. Do not round intermediate calculations.
Random errors are unpredictable fluctuations about the true value. Reduce by repeating measurements and averaging concordant results.
Systematic errors bias every result in the same direction. Repetition does not reduce them — only redesigning the method does. Common causes:
% error tells you how accurate you were (vs literature). % uncertainty tells you how precise you were (vs your equipment). Both should be calculated and compared in an IA evaluation.
Scientific writing prioritises reproducibility, precision and clarity. Methods should be detailed enough that another chemist could repeat your experiment and get the same result.
A journal article writes the methodology as a single dense paragraph. For the IB IA you should break it into numbered steps with sub-headings, so a marker can follow the procedure visually. Same words, different layout.
A good graph turns raw numbers into a relationship at a glance. Six things every graph must have:
Directly proportional: straight line through origin. y = kx.
Linear (offset): straight line not through origin. y = mx + c.
Inversely proportional: y = k/x. Plot y vs 1/x to linearise.
Draw two reasonable extreme lines through the error bars — the steepest and shallowest that still pass through them. The gradient is the best-fit line value; the uncertainty in the gradient = half the difference between the extreme gradients.
The IA (Internal Assessment) is a 10-hour, 24-mark investigation worth 20% of your final IB chemistry grade. It is student-designed, student-executed and student-analysed. The five marking criteria:
| Criterion | What it covers | Marks |
|---|---|---|
| Research design | Clear, focused RQ. Justified method. Identified variables. | 6 |
| Data analysis | Processed data; propagated uncertainties; well-presented graphs. | 6 |
| Conclusion | Justified by data. Compared to literature. % error. | 6 |
| Evaluation | Honest discussion of method weaknesses and realistic improvements. | 6 |
Total: 24 marks over typically a 6-12 page report.
If you can't define one of these in a sentence, that's where to revise next. Click any term for its definition.