Current teacher with 26 Years Of Experience of Teaching Just A-Level Biology. In-depth Knowledge Of OCR A, AQA. Edexcel, Pre-U and IB HIgher.
This article contains key vocabulary, a strategy for how to approach questions for success, a multichoice quiz with answers, and a big pack of past paper exam questions
The single best exam tip for graphs and tables exam questions is to start by looking at the graph or chart itself. DO NOT LOOK AT THE QUESTIONS FIRST! This single thing will help you avoid the most common mistakes that students make.
But you also need to know what you’re doing. Which means you’ll need to be confident with these terms:
1. Look at the graph or chart first!
Too many students look at the question first, get confused or panicky about what it is asking, and form preconceptions about what data they need. This then means they are then unable to look at the data clearly, and miss the information they actually need. Looking at the graph or chart first both makes the data easier to understand, and makes it easier to work out what the question is asking.
Trust me, this is a major factor in student success. If you only take away one thing from this article, always look at the graph or chart first.
2. Don’t panic if it’s about something totally unfamiliar
Students can get very thrown if the question is about an organism or molecule that they have never heard of before (the exam boards do this a lot). This sudden panic makes it hard to think clearly.
Remember - if you have covered all the course material, even if the question is about something weird and new then all the information you need will be in the data. The things that look scary are just surface details. If the question was “Fred gave James two apples, how many apples does James have” you wouldn’t need to know who these people were to answer the question.
But don’t just dive in to the details of the data …
3. Understand the format
Don’t waste time looking at the actual dots or numbers until you understand how the data has been presented. Check every aspect methodically. It’s too easy to make assumptions based on previous graph/table formats you have seen - this one might be different!
4. Look at the data
Now you understand its context, look at the actual dots or lines or numbers. Check:
Now think about what it all actually means:
5. Ok - NOW look at the actual questions
Try to see past the detail. How does this data/question relate to things you have studied?
Your working memory can easily get overloaded with details, making it hard to think. If the examiners have introduced a new organism, its name won’t be important. What might be important is the environment in which it lives, or its interactions with other organisms. You know what data you have, and what the questions are, so pick out what actually matters here. Is this a question about enyme reaction rates? Or about surface area to volume ratio?
This is why it’s useful to look at the data first - you will be able to look at it with a clear eye, making it easier to pick out how it’s relevant to the material you have studied.
6. Give the required information
Avoid the common mistakes that lose students marks:
Got all that? Ok! Here are some questions for you to practice.
And remember - don’t read the questions until after you have made sense of the graph or chart.
This article was written by Dr Jenny Shipway with guidance and editing from Tom. Tom has over 26 years experience specialising in A level Biology teaching and tuition, and has helped many students achieve top grades in the subject.