Ib Mathematics Internal Assessment Student Handout: Ellen Thompson Updated May 2020
Ib Mathematics Internal Assessment Student Handout: Ellen Thompson Updated May 2020
INTERNAL ASSESSMENT
STUDENT HANDOUT
Ellen Thompson
Updated May 2020
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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THE EXPLORATION!
What: A written paper that explores the math behind a personal interest of your choice
Why:
To develop your personal insight into the nature of mathematics and to develop your
ability to ask their own questions about mathematics
To provide opportunities for you to complete a piece of mathematical work over an
extended period of time
To enable you to experience the satisfaction of applying mathematical processes
independently
To provide you with the opportunity to experience for themselves the beauty, power
and usefulness of mathematics
To encourage you to discover, use and appreciate the power of technology as a
mathematical tool
To enable you to develop the qualities of patience and persistence, and to reflect on the
significance of you work
To provide opportunities for you to show, with confidence, how you have developed
mathematically.
Specifics:
12-20(ish) pages
Written in 12pt double spaced font.
Should take around ~10 hours outside of class time. This includes research, writing a
draft, editing, etc.
All sources must be cited in a bibliography. If you are not sure how to do this, ask the
librarian!
Not a regurgitation of facts or a historical essay.
The target audience is your peers. Not expected to be a formal dissertation using
ostentatious vocabulary.
Use of some sort of mathematical technology or software is strongly encouraged
You are not expected to use any mathematics outside the level of this course.
20% of your IB mark
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How:
In class, we will:
- Write an aim/rationale
- Submit aim/rationale/etc for feedback & approval
- Find resources and write a draft
- Complete a checklist to make sure nothing is missing in your draft
- Annotate your draft
- Submit your annotated draft for feedback
- Edit your draft and produce a final copy
Notes:
After Miss Lorimer has approved your topic & question, you may not switch
topics without discussing it first.
No draft will be accepted late.
A “draft” means that it is a completed version, ready for feedback.
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DUE DATES & EVALUATION
IB Evaluation
PRESENTATION 4 marks
REFLECTION 3 marks
20 marks
School Evaluation
Submitting Topic/Aim/Rationale Y1 T3 10 marks
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IB MATHEMATICS EXPLORATION CRITERIA
A: PRESENTATION
Coherence: logically developed, easy to follow, meets the aim, how well different parts link to each
other
Well organized: intro, aim, conclusion. Relevant graphs/tables/diagrams in the appropriate place in the
work. Appendices are used for large data sets, additional graphs/diagrams/tables.
Concise: no irrelevant or unnecessary calculations, graphs or descriptions
“Woah” a gap in communication
Must have explicit aim
Appropriate and correct citations (Graphs/pictures/tables etc need to be cited in text)
Everything links back to the aim
Repetitive calculations are not condoned
0 The exploration does not reach the standard described by the descriptors below.
B: MATHEMATICAL COMMUNICATION
0 The exploration does not reach the standard described by the descriptors below.
1 The exploration contains some relevant mathematical communication which is partially appropriate.
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C: PERSONAL ENGAGEMENT
The extent to which the students engages with the topic by exploring math and making it their own
“Can you hear the student’s voice?”
NOT a measure of effort
Must be evident in the student’s work
Some examples
- thinking independently or creatively
- exploring topic from different perspectives
- making and testing predictions
Significant: authentic PE on a few occasions. Evident that the PE drives the exploration forward and
helps the reader to better understand the writer’s intentions
Outstanding: authentic PE on numerous occasions. Evident that the PE drives the exploration forward
and helps the reader to better understand the writer’s intentions. Student has developed and
demonstrated a complete understanding of the topic.
Looking forward (as opposed to D: Reflection which is looking backwards)
Asking and answering questions: “I wonder if… What would happen if…”
Create mathematical models for real-world situations
Consider historical and global perspectives
Explore unfamiliar mathematics (This needs to be stated by the student in the exploration.)
Designing their own surveys and/or collecting their own data
Addressing personal interest (If this is the only form of PE max 1)
0 The exploration does not reach the standard described by the descriptors below.
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D: REFLECTION
0 The exploration does not reach the standard described by the descriptors below.
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E: USE OF MATHEMATICS – SL
0 The exploration does not reach the standard described by the descriptors below.
3 Relevant mathematics commensurate with the level of the course is used. Limited understanding is
demonstrated
4 Relevant mathematics commensurate with the level of the course is used. The mathematics explored
is partially correct. Some knowledge and understanding are demonstrated.
5 Relevant mathematics commensurate with the level of the course is used. The mathematics explored
is mostly correct. Good knowledge and understanding are demonstrated.
6 Relevant mathematics commensurate with the level of the course is used. The mathematics explored
is correct. Thorough knowledge and understanding are demonstrated.
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E: USE OF MATHEMATICS – HL
Precise: error free and uses an appropriate level of accuracy at all times
Sophistication: HL topics or SL topics used beyond what is expected from an SL student.
Rigour: clarity of logic and language when making mathematical argument and calculations.
Mathematical claims must be justified or proven.
0 The exploration does not reach the standard described by the descriptors below.
2 Some relevant mathematics commensurate with the level of the course is used. The mathematics
explored is partially correct. Some knowledge and understanding are demonstrated.
3 Relevant mathematics commensurate with the level of the course is used. The mathematics explored
is correct. Some knowledge and understanding are demonstrated.
4 Relevant mathematics commensurate with the level of the course is used. The mathematics explored
is correct. Good knowledge and understanding are demonstrated.
5 Relevant mathematics commensurate with the level of the course is used. The mathematics explored
is correct and demonstrates sophistication or rigour. Thorough knowledge and understanding are
demonstrated.
6 Relevant mathematics commensurate with the level of the course is used. The mathematics explored
is precise and demonstrates sophistication and rigour. Thorough knowledge and understanding are
demonstrated.
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A list of “NO” topics
The Birthday Problem
The Monty Hall Problem
The handshake Problem
Fractals
Golden Ratio
Any stats study involving sleep (where you are not
collecting precise data using an e-watch or other device)
Poker or other familiar casino games
Any stats topic where one of your axes is neither a random
or continuous variable (ex: favourite ice cream; genre of
music, etc)
Any topic where most of the work is google-able
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SUBMITTING YOUR TOPIC
You must submit your answers to the following questions electronically as a PDF.
FirstnameLastname_Math IA_Topic_May2021
Ex: EllenThompson_MathIA_Topic_May2021
Be specific.
4) What are some things that you may have to research in order to answer your aim?
5) What are the definitions you will need to define for people not familiar with this topic?
6) What are some possible visual representations (graphs, tables, diagrams,…) that you might
want to have?
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7) How will you show personal engagement? TIPS FOR WRITING A GOOD MATH
EXPLORATION!
Do not identify yourself, the school, the teacher, etc anywhere on your paper. Your
name should only appear in the file name.
You must have a cover page with the title of your exploration and the number of pages.
Introduction should be written in future tense and the conclusion in the past.
Start with a brief introduction that explains your topic. Then state your aim and
rationale. Be explicit: My aim is…. My rationale is…
While doing your research, keep a record of each website you visited and include the
date you access the site.
If using a survey, think about how many people you are selecting and how you are
selecting them. Stick to non-subjective questions.
Ex: “How much sleep do you get in a night?” is not a good mathematical
question as no one gets the same amount every night and how does one know
exactly when they fell asleep.
Ex: “What is your favourite type of music?” will not get you numerical results.
Any diagrams/graphs/pictures that you did not create must be cited directly
underneath.
Do not split a table over 2 pages. If it is more than one page long, find a way to
condense it or put part of it in an appendix.
For graphs you create, axes must include labels and units.
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Use proper math notation. No computer notation (*, ^, x, etc). In Word: Insert
Equation
If you need to round any decimal, you must justify your chosen degree of accuracy (how
many Sig Figs places are relevant for your context). Explicitly discuss in your exploration
why you chose the degree you did and why this is appropriate for your context.
For example, while a difference of one tenth may not matter if you are talking
about speed of a locomotive, it could matter if you are talking about the amount
of milligrams of morphine administered to a patient.
Ask and answer personal questions (“I wonder if…, What if…)?. Make conjectures (an
opinion or theory without sufficient evidence or proof) and compare once you have
some data.
Reflect throughout not just in the conclusion. Every time you calculate a value, explain
what it means in context.
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Discuss the implications of your results. Are they what you expected? What do they
mean? Why are they important? How do they affect your life?...
Discuss your results in the context of your topic, not just in general terms.
Ex:
Your conclusion should focus on the “answer” to your aim and the math involved.
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EXPLORATION CHECKLIST
Complete this checklist when you think you are finished
your draft but before you do your annotation.
⎕ Does the entire paper focus on the aim and avoid irrelevance?
⎕ Does each new part of your exploration begin with some words to connect it to the previous
part?
⎕ Did you cite all graphs, tables and diagrams directly underneath?
⎕ Did you cite all references in your bibliography and acknowledge direct quotes appropriately?
⎕ Did you use appropriate mathematical language and representation? (No computer notation *,
^, etc)
⎕ Did you justify your chosen degree of accuracy in relation to your topic?
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Use of mathematics
⎕ Is your math at an SL/HL level?
⎕ Have you shown that you understand the math you used? Simply doing math does not show
you understand it.
⎕ If you are doing regression, have you calculated it by hand as well as using technology?
⎕ If you are doing a line of best fit, have you first verified that the data is indeed linear?
Reflection
⎕ Did you ask questions, make conjectures and investigate mathematical ideas?
⎕ Did you discuss the implications of your results? (What do they mean? Why are they
important?...)
⎕ Did you consider the significance of your paper? (How can the rest of mankind use your
findings?)
⎕ Did you make links between your topic and different fields and/or areas of mathematics?
Personal engagement
⎕ Did you ask and answer personal questions (“I wonder if…, What if…)?
⎕ Did you address why you think your topic is interesting or why it appealed to you?
⎕ Did you present mathematical ideas in your own way (as opposed to copy someone else’
theory)?
⎕ Did you consider the historical and global perspectives of your topic?
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ANNOTATING YOUR DRAFT
Using the comment function in Word (or other programs), identify the items below in your
exploration.
You must submit your annotated draft electronically as a PDF.
FirstnameLastname_Math IA_Annotateddraft_May2021
Ex: EllenThompson_MathIA_Annotateddraft_May2021
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APPENDIX A: LINKS TO USEFUL IB DOCUMENTS
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APPENDIX B: MATH TECHOLOGY RESOURCES
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