AA Guide For 2021
AA Guide For 2021
AA Guide For 2021
The International Baccalaureate Organization (known as the IB) offers four high-quality
and challenging educational programmes for a worldwide community of schools, aiming
to create a better, more peaceful world. This publication is one of a range of materials
produced to support these programmes.
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in this publication and will be pleased to correct any errors or omissions at the earliest
opportunity.
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To this end the organization works with schools, governments and international organizations to develop
challenging programmes of international education and rigorous assessment.
These programmes encourage students across the world to become active, compassionate and lifelong
learners who understand that other people, with their differences, can also be right.
IB learner profile
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IB learner profile H E IB L E AR
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PROFILE
IB learner profile
The aim of all IB programmes is to develop internationally minded people who, recognizing their common
humanity and shared guardianship of the planet, help to create a better and more peaceful world.
As IB learners we strive to be:
We nurture our curiosity, developing skills for inquiry and We critically appreciate our own cultures and personal histories,
research. We know how to learn independently and with others. as well as the values and traditions of others. We seek and evaluate
We learn with enthusiasm and sustain our love of learning a range of points of view, and we are willing to grow from the
throughout life. experience.
We develop and use conceptual understanding, exploring We show empathy, compassion and respect. We have a
knowledge across a range of disciplines. We engage with issues commitment to service, and we act to make a positive difference
and ideas that have local and global significance. in the lives of others and in the world around us.
We use critical and creative thinking skills to analyse and take We approach uncertainty with forethought and determination;
responsible action on complex problems. We exercise initiative in we work independently and cooperatively to explore new ideas
making reasoned, ethical decisions. and innovative strategies. We are resourceful and resilient in the
face of challenges and change.
We express ourselves confidently and creatively in more than one
language and in many ways. We collaborate effectively, listening We understand the importance of balancing different aspects of
carefully to the perspectives of other individuals and groups. our lives—intellectual, physical, and emotional—to achieve
well-being for ourselves and others. We recognize our interde-
pendence with other people and with the world in which we live.
We act with integrity and honesty, with a strong sense of
fairness and justice, and with respect for the dignity and rights We thoughtfully consider the world and our own ideas and expe-
of people everywhere. We take responsibility for our actions rience. We work to understand our strengths and weaknesses in
and their consequences. order to support our learning and personal development.
The IB learner profile represents 10 attributes valued by IB World Schools. We believe these attributes, and others
like them, can help individuals and groups become responsible members of local, national and global communities.
Introduction 1
Purpose of this document 1
The Diploma Programme 2
Nature of Mathematics 6
Approaches to the teaching and learning of mathematics: analysis and approaches 13
Aims 20
Assessment objectives 21
Assessment objectives in practice 22
Syllabus 23
Syllabus outline 23
Prior learning topics 24
Syllabus content 26
Assessment 68
Assessment in the Diploma Programme 68
Assessment outline—SL 70
Assessment outline—HL 71
External assessment 72
Internal assessment 78
Appendices 87
Glossary of command terms 87
Notation list 89
This publication is intended to guide the planning, teaching and assessment of the subject in schools.
Subject teachers are the primary audience, although it is expected that teachers will use the guide to inform
students and parents about the subject.
This guide can be found on the subject page of the programme resource centre at resources.ibo.org, a
password-protected IB website designed to support IB teachers. It can also be purchased from the IB store
at store.ibo.org
Additional resources
Additional publications such as specimen papers and markschemes, teacher support materials, subject
reports and grade descriptors can also be found on the programme resource centre. Past examination
papers as well as markschemes can be purchased from the IB store.
Teachers are encouraged to check the programme resource centre for additional resources created or used
by other teachers. Teachers can provide details of useful resources, for example websites, books, videos,
journals or teaching ideas.
Acknowledgment
The IB wishes to thank the educators and associated schools for generously contributing time and
resources to the production of this guide.
The Diploma Programme is a rigorous pre-university course of study designed for students in the 16-19 age
range. It is a broad-based two-year course that aims to encourage students to be knowledgable and
inquiring, but also caring and compassionate. There is a strong emphasis on encouraging students to
develop intercultural understanding, open-mindedness, and the attitudes necessary for them to respect
and evaluate a range of points of view.
Figure 1
The Diploma Programme model
• promote both the aims of individual subjects (making them more than course aspirations) and linking
previously isolated knowledge (concurrency of learning)
• encourage students to develop an explicit variety of skills that will equip them to continue to be
actively engaged in learning after they leave school, and to help them not only obtain university
admission through better grades but also prepare for success during tertiary education and beyond
• enhance further the coherence and relevance of the students’ Diploma Programme experience
• allow schools to identify the distinctive nature of an IB Diploma Programme education, with its blend
of idealism and practicality.
The five approaches to learning (developing thinking skills, social skills, communication skills, self-
management skills and research skills) along with the six approaches to teaching (teaching that is inquiry-
based, conceptually-focused, contextualized, collaborative, differentiated and informed by assessment)
encompass the key values and principles that underpin IB pedagogy.
Academic honesty
Academic honesty in the Diploma Programme is a set of values and behaviours informed by the attributes
of the learner profile. In teaching, learning and assessment, academic honesty serves to promote personal
integrity, engender respect for the integrity of others and their work, and ensure that all students have an
equal opportunity to demonstrate the knowledge and skills they acquire during their studies.
All coursework—including work submitted for assessment—is to be authentic, based on the student’s
individual and original ideas with the ideas and work of others fully acknowledged. Assessment tasks that
require teachers to provide guidance to students or that require students to work collaboratively must be
completed in full compliance with the detailed guidelines provided by the IB for the relevant subjects.
For further information on academic honesty in the IB and the Diploma Programme, please consult the IB
publications Academic honesty in the IB educational context, Effective citing and referencing, The Diploma
Programme: From principles into practice and General regulations: Diploma Programme. Specific information
regarding academic honesty as it pertains to external and internal assessment components of this Diploma
Programme subject can be found in this guide.
choose a style that is appropriate for the subject concerned and the language in which candidates’ work is
written. Regardless of the reference style adopted by the school for a given subject, it is expected that the
minimum information given includes: name of author, date of publication, title of source, and page
numbers as applicable.
Candidates are expected to use a standard style and use it consistently so that credit is given to all sources
used, including sources that have been paraphrased or summarized. When writing text, candidates must
clearly distinguish between their words and those of others by the use of quotation marks (or other
method, such as indentation) followed by an appropriate citation that denotes an entry in the bibliography.
If an electronic source is cited, the date of access must be indicated. Candidates are not expected to show
faultless expertise in referencing, but are expected to demonstrate that all sources have been
acknowledged. Candidates must be advised that audio-visual material, text, graphs, images and/or data
published in print or in electronic sources that is not their own must also attribute the source. Again, an
appropriate style of referencing/citation must be used.
Nature of Mathematics
Introduction
Mathematics has been described as the study of structure, order and relation that has evolved from the
practices of counting, measuring and describing objects. Mathematics provides a unique language to
describe, explore and communicate the nature of the world we live in as well as being a constantly building
body of knowledge and truth in itself that is distinctive in its certainty. These two aspects of mathematics, a
discipline that is studied for its intrinsic pleasure and a means to explore and understand the world we live
in, are both separate yet closely linked.
Mathematics is driven by abstract concepts and generalization. This mathematics is drawn out of ideas, and
develops through linking these ideas and developing new ones. These mathematical ideas may have no
immediate practical application. Doing such mathematics is about digging deeper to increase
mathematical knowledge and truth. The new knowledge is presented in the form of theorems that have
been built from axioms and logical mathematical arguments and a theorem is only accepted as true when it
has been proven. The body of knowledge that makes up mathematics is not fixed; it has grown during
human history and is growing at an increasing rate.
The side of mathematics that is based on describing our world and solving practical problems is often
carried out in the context of another area of study. Mathematics is used in a diverse range of disciplines as
both a language and a tool to explore the universe; alongside this its applications include analyzing trends,
making predictions, quantifying risk, exploring relationships and interdependence.
While these two different facets of mathematics may seem separate, they are often deeply connected.
When mathematics is developed, history has taught us that a seemingly obscure, abstract mathematical
theorem or fact may in time be highly significant. On the other hand, much mathematics is developed in
response to the needs of other disciplines.
The two mathematics courses available to Diploma Programme (DP) students express both the differences
that exist in mathematics described above and the connections between them. These two courses might
approach mathematics from different perspectives, but they are connected by the same mathematical
body of knowledge, ways of thinking and approaches to problems. The differences in the courses may also
be related to the types of tools, for instance technology, that are used to solve abstract or practical
problems. The next section will describe in more detail the two available courses.
• their academic plans, in particular the subjects they wish to study in the future
• their choice of career.
Teachers are expected to assist with the selection process and to offer advice to students.
Figure 2
The mathematics model
The structure of IB DP mathematics courses, with two different routes to choose from, recognizes the two
different aspects of mathematics discussed in the introduction.
Mathematics: analysis and approaches is for students who enjoy developing their mathematics to become
fluent in the construction of mathematical arguments and develop strong skills in mathematical thinking.
They will also be fascinated by exploring real and abstract applications of these ideas, with and without
technology. Students who take Mathematics: analysis and approaches will be those who enjoy the thrill of
mathematical problem solving and generalization.
Mathematics: applications and interpretation is for students who are interested in developing their
mathematics for describing our world and solving practical problems. They will also be interested in
harnessing the power of technology alongside exploring mathematical models. Students who take
Mathematics: applications and interpretation will be those who enjoy mathematics best when seen in a
practical context.
Both subjects are offered at HL and SL. There are many elements common to both subjects although the
approaches may be different. Both subjects will prepare students with the mathematics needed for a range
of further educational courses corresponding to the two approaches to mathematics set out above.
from reality. Yet mathematics has also provided important knowledge about the world and the use of
mathematics in science and technology has been one of the driving forces for scientific advances.
Despite all its undoubted power for understanding and change, mathematics is in the end a puzzling
phenomenon. A fundamental question for all knowers is whether mathematical knowledge really exists
independently of our thinking about it. Is it there, “waiting to be discovered”, or is it a human creation?
Indeed, the philosophy of mathematics is an area of study in its own right.
Students’ attention should be drawn to questions relating theory of knowledge (TOK) and mathematics,
and they should also be encouraged to raise such questions themselves in both their mathematics and TOK
classes. Examples of issues relating to TOK are given in the “Connections” sections of the syllabus. Further
suggestions for making links to TOK can also be found in the mathematics section of the Theory of
knowledge guide.
awareness of how mathematics can be used to represent the truth enables students to reflect critically on
the information that societies are given or generate, and how this influences the allocation of resources or
the choices that people make. This systematic analysis and critical reflection when problem solving may be
inspiring springboards for CAS projects.
Students may also draw on their CAS experiences to enrich their involvement in mathematics both within
and outside the classroom, and mathematics teachers can assist students in making links between their
subjects and students’ CAS experiences where appropriate. Purposeful discussion about real CAS
experiences and projects will help students to make these links.
The challenge and enjoyment of CAS can often have a profound effect on mathematics students, who
might choose, for example, to engage with CAS in the following ways:
• plan, write and implement a “mathematics scavenger hunt” where younger students tour the school
answering interesting mathematics questions as part of their introduction to a new school
• as a CAS project students could plan and carry out a survey, create a database and analyse the results,
and make suggestions to resolve a problem in the students’ local area. This might be, for example,
surveying the availability of fresh fruit and vegetables within a community, preparing an action plan
with suggestions of how to increase availability or access, and presenting this to a local charity or
community group
• taking an element of world culture that interests students and designing a miniature Earth (if the
world were 100 people) to express the trend(s) numerically.
It is important to note that a CAS experience can be a single event or may be an extended series of events.
However, CAS experiences must be distinct from, and may not be included or used in, the student’s
Diploma course requirements.
Additional suggestions on the links between DP subjects and CAS can be found in the Creativity, activity,
service teacher support material.
Prior learning
It is expected that most students embarking on a DP mathematics course will have studied mathematics for
at least 10 years. There will be a great variety of topics studied, and differing approaches to teaching and
learning. Thus, students will have a wide variety of skills and knowledge when they start their mathematics
course. Most will have some background in arithmetic, algebra, geometry, trigonometry, probability and
statistics. Some will be familiar with an inquiry approach, and may have had an opportunity to complete an
extended piece of work in mathematics.
At the beginning of the syllabus section there is a list of topics that are considered to be prior learning for
the mathematics courses. It is recognized that this may contain topics that are unfamiliar to some students,
but it is anticipated that there may be other topics in the syllabus itself which these students have already
encountered. Teachers should be informed by their assessment of students’ prior learning to help plan their
teaching so that topics mentioned that are unfamiliar to their students can be incorporated.
subject groups. The fundamental concepts of MYP mathematics provide a very useful foundation for
students following DP mathematics courses.
The aims of the MYP mathematics courses align very closely with those of the DP mathematics courses. The
prior learning topics for the DP mathematics courses have been written in conjunction with the MYP
mathematics guide.
The MYP mathematics assessment objectives and criteria have been developed with both the internal and
external assessment requirements of the DP in mind. MYP mathematics students are required to practise
and develop their investigation skills, one of the MYP four assessment objectives, giving an important
foundation for the internal assessment component of the DP mathematics courses. The MYP assessment
objective of thinking critically also corresponds to the higher-order assessment objectives of
communication and interpretation, and of reasoning that are expected from a DP mathematics student.
MYP and DP mathematics courses emphasized the use of technology as a powerful tool for learning,
applying and communicating mathematics.
Where students in the MYP may select either standard or extended mathematics, at DP there are two
mathematics subjects both available at SL and HL. MYP students enrolled in extended mathematics
generally elect to take one of the HL mathematics courses in the DP. Students in MYP standard
mathematics should seek the recommendation of their teacher when deciding which SL or HL course they
are best suited to pursue.
Figure 3
The IB continuum pathways to DP courses in mathematics
Mathematics may be a beneficial choice for CP students considering careers in, for example, finance,
planning, healthcare systems or coding, tourism industries, the technology industry, social informatics, or
urban planning. Mathematics helps students to understand the value of systematic approaches, how to
analyse complex real-world contexts, how to communicate this concisely and precisely and understand the
implications of conclusions.
Mathematics encourages the development of strong written, verbal, and graphical communication skills;
critical and complex thinking; and moral and ethical considerations influenced by mathematics that will
assist students in preparing for the future global workplace. This in turn fosters the IB learner profile
attributes that are transferable to the entire CP, providing relevance and support for the student’s learning.
For the CP students, DP courses can be studied at SL or HL. Schools can explore opportunities to integrate
CP students with DP students.
Conceptual understanding
Concepts are broad, powerful, organizing ideas, the significance of which goes beyond particular origins,
subject matter or place in time. Concepts represent the vehicle for students’ inquiry into issues and ideas of
personal, local and global significance, providing the means by which they can explore the essence of
mathematics.
Concepts play an important role in mathematics, helping students and teachers to think with increasing
complexity as they organize and relate facts and topics. Students use conceptual understandings as they
solve problems, analyse issues and evaluate decisions that can have an impact on themselves, their
communities and the wider world.
In DP mathematics courses, conceptual understandings are key to promoting deep learning. The course
identifies twelve fundamental concepts which relate with varying emphasis to each of the five topics.
Teachers may identify and develop additional concepts to meet local circumstances and national or state
curriculum requirements. Teachers can use these concepts to develop connections throughout the
curriculum.
Each topic in this guide begins by stating the essential understandings of the topic and highlighting
relevant concepts fundamental to the topic. This is followed by suggested conceptual understandings
relevant to the content within the topic, although this list is not intended to be prescriptive or exhaustive.
The concepts
Concepts promote the development of a broad, balanced, conceptual and connected curriculum. They
represent big ideas that are relevant and facilitate connections within topics, across topics and also to other
subjects within the DP.
The twelve concepts identified below support conceptual understanding, can inform units of work and can
help to organize teaching and learning. Explanations of each of these concepts in a mathematical context
have also been provided.
Approximation This concept refers to a quantity or a representation which is nearly but not exactly
correct.
Change This concept refers to a variation in size, amount or behaviour.
Equivalence This concept refers to the state of being identically equal or interchangeable, applied
to statements, quantities or expressions.
Generalization This concept refers to a general statement made on the basis of specific examples.
Modelling This concept refers to the way in which mathematics can be used to represent the real
world.
Patterns This concept refers to the underlying order, regularity or predictability of the elements
of a mathematical system.
Quantity This concept refers to an amount or number.
Relationships This concept refers to the connection between quantities, properties or concepts;
these connections may be expressed as models, rules or statements. Relationships
provide opportunities for students to explore patterns in the world around them.
Representation This concept refers to using words, formulae, diagrams, tables, charts, graphs and
models to represent mathematical information.
Space This concept refers to the frame of geometrical dimensions describing an entity.
Systems This concept refers to groups of interrelated elements.
Validity This concept refers to using well-founded, logical mathematics to come to a true and
accurate conclusion or a reasonable interpretation of results.
Mathematical inquiry
Approaches to teaching and learning in the DP refer to deliberate strategies, skills and attitudes that
permeate the teaching and learning environment. These approaches and tools are intrinsically linked to the
IB learner profile, which encourages learning by experimentation, questioning and discovery.
In the IB classroom, students should regularly learn mathematics by being active participants in learning
activities. Teachers should therefore provide students with regular opportunities to learn through
mathematical inquiry, by making frequent use of strategies which stimulate students’ critical thinking and
problem-solving skills.
Figure 4
The cycle of mathematical inquiry
Mathematical modelling
Mathematical modelling is an important technique used in problem solving, to make sense of the real
world. It is often used to help us better understand a situation, to check the effects of change or to inform
decision-making. Engaging students in the mathematical modelling process provides them with such
opportunities. It is one of the most useful mathematical skills that students will need to be successful in
many non-mathematical as well as mathematical courses and careers.
The mathematical modelling process begins with consideration of a situation that exists in the real world
and is not usually artificially created. At this stage assumptions sometimes have to be made in order to
simplify the situation to allow modelling to take place. There is often a fine balance needed between the
simplicity and the accuracy of the model.
The first stage involves choosing or fitting a suitable mathematical representation to the context. This
representation is tested to evaluate whether or not it returns expected results. The testing stage allows the
results returned by the model to be reflected upon and adaptations to be made to the model if necessary.
Once a satisfactory model is established it can be applied or used to explain a situation, check the effects of
change or to inform decision-making.
The process of mathematical modelling requires critical reflection throughout the process.
More advice and guidance on the process of mathematical modelling is given in the teacher support
material . The cycle of mathematical modelling is illustrated below.
Figure 5
The cycle of mathematical modelling
Proof
Proof in mathematics is an essential element in developing critical thinking. Engaging students in the
process of proving a statement enables a deeper understanding of mathematical concepts. At standard
level students will be exposed to simple deductive proofs. In the additional higher level (AHL) content
students will also focus on proof by contradiction and proof by induction as well as using counterexamples
to show that a statement is not true.
The value of proving a statement is multifaceted as it helps students to develop the following skills:
• groupwork
• interpersonal skills
• reasoning
• research
• oral and written communication
• creative thinking
• organization.
Writing proofs enables students to appreciate proof techniques and mathematical thought processes.
Students will learn the vocabulary and layout for proving mathematical statements. When faced with a
mathematical statement, HL students will also be challenged to think about the best method to show that
the statement is true. Proofs encourage students to reflect on mathematical rigour, efficiency and the
elegance of showing that a statement is true.
Within the guide the term “informal” or “elementary” refers to approaches which do not require proof, can
be justified with examples and do not make formal use of axioms.
Use of technology
The use of technology is an integral part of DP mathematics courses. Developing an appreciation of how
developments in technology and mathematics have influenced each other is one of the aims of the courses
and using technology accurately, appropriately and efficiently both to explore new ideas and to solve
problems is one of the assessment objectives. Learning how to use different forms of technology is an
important skill in mathematics and time has been allowed in each topic of the syllabus and through the
“toolkit” in order to do this.
Technology is a powerful tool in mathematics and in recent years increased student and teacher access to
this technology has supported and advanced the teaching and learning of mathematics. Discerning use of
technology can make more mathematics accessible and motivating to a greater number of students.
Teachers can use technology to support and enhance student understanding in many ways including:
• to bring out teaching points
• to address misconceptions
• to aid visualization
• to enhance understanding of concepts that would otherwise be restricted by lengthy numerical
calculations or algebraic manipulation
• to support students in making conjectures and checking generalizations
• to explicitly make the links between different mathematical representations or approaches.
Students can also use technology to engage with the learning process in many ways including the
following:
• to develop and enhance their own personal conceptual understanding
• to search for patterns
• to test conjectures or generalizations
• to justify interpretations
The content of all five topics at the appropriate level must be taught, however not necessarily in the order
in which they appear in the guide. Teachers are expected to construct a course of study that addresses the
needs of their students and includes, where necessary, the topics noted in prior learning. Guidance on
structuring a course is given in the teacher support material.
Each topic has three sections:
Content: The column on the left contains details of the sub-topics to be covered.
Guidance, clarification and syllabus links: The column on the right contains more detailed information
on specific sub-topics listed in the content column. This clarifies the content for the examination and
highlights where sub-topics relate to other sub-topics within the syllabus.
Connections: Each topic also contains a short section that provides suggestions for further discussion,
including real-life examples and ideas for further investigation.
These suggestions are only a guide and are not exhaustive. A downloadable version of these sections is also
available, so that additional connections can be added to the ones already suggested by the IB. Potential
areas for connections include:
• Other contexts: Real-life examples
• Links to other subjects: Suggested connections to other subjects within the DP. Note that these are
correct for the current (2019) published versions of the guides
• Aim: Links to the aims of the course
• International-mindedness: Suggestions for discussions
• TOK: Suggestions for discussions
• Links to TSM: Links to the teacher support materials (TSM) in the “in practice” section of the website
• Link to specimen paper: Links to specific questions exemplifying how topics might be examined
• Use of technology: Suggestions as to how technology can be used in the classroom to enhance
understanding
• Links to websites: Suggested websites for use in teaching or learning activities
• Enrichment: Suggestions for further discussions that may reinforce understanding.
Time allocation
The recommended teaching time for HL courses is 240 hours and for SL courses is 150 hours. For
mathematics courses at both SL and HL, it is expected that 30 hours will be spent on developing inquiry,
modelling and investigation skills. This includes up to 15 hours for work on the internal assessment which is
called the exploration. The time allocations given in this guide are approximate, and are intended to
suggest how the remaining 210 hours for HL and 120 hours for SL allowed for the teaching of the syllabus
might be allocated. The exact time spent on each topic depends on a number of factors, including the
background knowledge and level of preparedness of each student. Teachers should therefore adjust these
timings to correspond to the needs of their students.
The Toolkit
Time has been allocated within the teaching hours for students to undertake the types of activities that
mathematicians in the real world undertake and to allow students time to develop the skill of thinking like a
mathematician–in other words providing students with a mathematical toolkit which will allow them to
approach any type of mathematical problem. Underpinning this are the six pedagogical approaches to
teaching and the five approaches to learning which support all IB programmes. This time gives students
opportunities in the classroom for undertaking an inquiry-based approach and focusing on conceptual
understanding of the content, developing their awareness of mathematics in local and global contexts,
gives them opportunities for teamwork and collaboration as well as time to reflect upon their own learning
of mathematics.
Students should be encouraged to actively identify skills that they might add to their personal mathematics
toolkit. Teachers are encouraged to make explicit where these skills might transfer across areas of
mathematics content and allow students to reflect upon where these skills transfer to other subjects the
student is studying.
The teacher support material (TSM) contains a section referred to as the “toolkit”. This section contains ideas
and resources that teachers can use with their students to encourage the development of mathematical
thinking skills. These resources have been developed by teachers for use in their own classrooms and are
not exhaustive.
Aims
Assessment objectives
Problem solving is central to learning mathematics and involves the acquisition of mathematical skills and
concepts in a wide range of situations, including non-routine, open-ended and real-world problems. Having
followed a DP mathematics course, students will be expected to demonstrate the following:
1. Knowledge and understanding: Recall, select and use their knowledge of mathematical facts,
concepts and techniques in a variety of familiar and unfamiliar contexts.
2. Problem solving: Recall, select and use their knowledge of mathematical skills, results and models in
both abstract and real-world contexts to solve problems.
3. Communication and interpretation: Transform common realistic contexts into mathematics;
comment on the context; sketch or draw mathematical diagrams, graphs or constructions both on
paper and using technology; record methods, solutions and conclusions using standardized notation;
use appropriate notation and terminology.
4. Technology: Use technology accurately, appropriately and efficiently both to explore new ideas and
to solve problems.
5. Reasoning: Construct mathematical arguments through use of precise statements, logical deduction
and inference and by the manipulation of mathematical expressions.
6. Inquiry approaches: Investigate unfamiliar situations, both abstract and from the real world,
involving organizing and analyzing information, making conjectures, drawing conclusions, and testing
their validity.
Syllabus outline
SL HL
Topic 1—Number and algebra 19 39
Topic 2—Functions 21 32
Topic 3— Geometry and trigonometry 25 51
Topic 4—Statistics and probability 27 33
Topic 5 —Calculus 28 55
The toolkit and the mathematical exploration 30 30
Investigative, problem-solving and modelling skills
development leading to an individual exploration. The
exploration is a piece of written work that involves
investigating an area of mathematics.
Total teaching hours 150 240
All topics are compulsory. Students must study all the sub-topics in each of the topics in the syllabus as
listed in this guide. Students are also required to be familiar with the topics listed as prior learning.
Prior to starting a DP mathematics course students have extensive previous mathematical experiences, but
these will vary. It is expected that mathematics students will be familiar with the following topics before
they take the examinations because questions assume knowledge of them. Teachers must therefore ensure
that any topics listed here that are unknown to their students at the start of the course are included at an
early stage. Teachers should also take into account the existing mathematical knowledge of their students
to design an appropriate course of study for mathematics. This table lists the knowledge, together with the
syllabus content, that is essential for successful completion of the mathematics course.
Functions
• Graphing linear and quadratic functions using technology
• Mappings of the elements of one set to another. Illustration by means of sets of ordered pairs, tables,
diagrams and graphs.
Calculus
distance
Speed =
time
Syllabus content
AHL
• Proof serves to validate mathematical formulae and the equivalence of identities.
• Representing partial fractions and complex numbers in different forms allows us to easily carry out
seemingly difficult calculations.
• The solution for systems of equations can be carried out by a variety of equivalent algebraic and
graphical methods.
SL content
Recommended teaching hours: 19
The aim of the SL content of the number and algebra topic is to introduce students to numerical concepts
and techniques which, combined with an introduction to arithmetic and geometric sequences and series,
can be used for financial and other applications. Students will also be introduced to the formal concept of
proof.
Sections SL1.1 to SL1.5 are content common to Mathematics: analysis and approaches and Mathematics:
applications and interpretation.
SL 1.1
Operations with numbers in the form a × 10k where Calculator or computer notation is not acceptable.
1 ≤ a < 10 and k is an integer. For example, 5.2E30 is not acceptable and should be
written as 5.2 × 1030.
Connections
Other contexts: Very large and very small numbers, for example astronomical distances, sub-atomic
particles in physics, global financial figures
Links to other subjects: Chemistry (Avogadro’s number); physics (order of magnitude); biology
(microscopic measurements); sciences group subjects (uncertainty and precision of measurement)
International-mindedness: The history of number from Sumerians and its development to the present
Arabic system
TOK: Do the names that we give things impact how we understand them? For instance, what is the impact
of the fact that some large numbers are named, such as the googol and the googolplex, while others are
represented in this form?
SL 1.2
Use of sigma notation for sums of arithmetic If technology is used in examinations, students will
sequences. be expected to identify the first term and the
common difference.
Applications. Examples include simple interest over a number of
years.
Analysis, interpretation and prediction where a Students will need to approximate common
model is not perfectly arithmetic in real life. differences.
Connections
International-mindedness: The chess legend (Sissa ibn Dahir); Aryabhatta is sometimes considered the
“father of algebra”–compare with alKhawarizmi; the use of several alphabets in mathematical notation (for
example the use of capital sigma for the sum).
TOK: Is all knowledge concerned with identification and use of patterns? Consider Fibonacci numbers and
connections with the golden ratio.
SL 1.3
Connections
Links to other subjects: Radioactive decay, nuclear physics, charging and discharging capacitors (physics).
TOK: How do mathematicians reconcile the fact that some conclusions seem to conflict with our intuitions?
Consider for instance that a finite area can be bounded by an infinite perimeter.
SL 1.4
Connections
Other contexts: Loans.
Links to other subjects: Loans and repayments (economics and business management).
Aim 8: Ethical perceptions of borrowing and lending money.
International-mindedness: Do all societies view investment and interest in the same way?
TOK: How have technological advances affected the nature and practice of mathematics? Consider the use
of financial packages for instance.
1 n
Enrichment: The concept of e can be introduced through continuous compounding, (1 + ) → e, as
n
n → ∞, however this will not be examined.
SL 1.5
Connections
Other contexts: Richter scale and decibel scale.
Links to other subjects: Calculation of pH and buffer solutions (chemistry)
TOK: Is mathematics invented or discovered? For instance, consider the number e or logarithms–did they
already exist before man defined them? (This topic is an opportunity for teachers to generate reflection on
“the nature of mathematics”).
SL 1.6
Connections
TOK: Is mathematical reasoning different from scientific reasoning, or reasoning in other Areas of
Knowledge?
SL 1.7
Connections
Links to other subjects: pH, buffer calculations and finding activation energy from experimental data
(chemistry).
TOK: How have seminal advances, such as the development of logarithms, changed the way in which
mathematicians understand the world and the nature of mathematics?
SL 1.8
Connections
TOK: Is it possible to know about things of which we can have no experience, such as infinity?
SL 1.9
Connections
Aim 8: Ethics in mathematics–Pascal’s triangle. Attributing the origin of a mathematical discovery to the
wrong mathematician.
International-mindedness: The properties of “Pascal’s triangle” have been known in a number of different
cultures long before Pascal. (for example the Chinese mathematician Yang Hui).
TOK: How have notable individuals shaped the development of mathematics as an area of knowledge?
Consider Pascal and “his” triangle.
AHL content
Recommended teaching hours: 20
The aim of the AHL content in the number and algebra topic is to extend and build upon the aims, concepts
and skills from the SL content. It introduces students to some important techniques for expansion,
simplification and solution of equations. Complex numbers are introduced and students will extend their
knowledge of formal proof to proof by mathematical induction, proof by contradiction and proof by
counterexample.
AHL 1.10
Connections
Other contexts: Finding approximations to 2
Aim 8: How many different tickets are possible in a lottery? What does this tell us about the ethics of selling
lottery tickets to those who do not understand the implications of these large numbers?
International-mindedness: The properties of “Pascal’s triangle” have been known in a number of different
cultures long before Pascal (for example the Chinese mathematician Yang Hui).
TOK: What counts as understanding in mathematics? Is it more than just getting the right answer?
AHL 1.11
Connections
AHL 1.12
Connections
Other contexts: Concepts in electrical engineering—impedance as a combination of resistance and
reactance, also apparent power as a combination of real and reactive powers. These combinations take the
form a + bi.
TOK: How does language shape knowledge? For example, do the words “imaginary” and “complex” make
the concepts more difficult than if they had different names?
AHL 1.13
Euler form:
z = reiθ
Sums, products and quotients in Cartesian, polar or
Euler forms and their geometric interpretation.
Connections
Other contexts: Concepts in electrical engineering–phase angle/shift, power factor and apparent power as
a complex quantity in polar form.
TOK: Why might it be said that eiπ + 1 = 0 is beautiful? What is the place of beauty and elegance in
mathematics? What about the place of creativity?
AHL 1.14
Connections
TOK: Could we ever reach a point where everything important in a mathematical sense is known? Reflect
on the creation of complex numbers before their applications were known.
Enrichment: Can De Moivre’s theorem be extended to all n?
AHL 1.15
Connections
Other contexts: The Four-colour theorem
International-mindedness: How did the Pythagoreans find out that 2 is irrational?
TOK: What is the role of the mathematical community in determining the validity of a mathematical proof?
Do proofs provide us with completely certain knowledge? What is the difference between the inductive
method in science and proof by induction in mathematics?
AHL 1.16
Connections
TOK: Mathematics, Sense, Perception and Reason: If we can find solutions in higher dimensions can we
reason that these spaces exist beyond our sense perception?
Topic 2: Functions
Concepts
Essential understandings
Models are depictions of real-life events using expressions, equations or graphs while a function is defined
as a relation or expression involving one or more variables. Creating different representations of functions
to model the relationships between variables, visually and symbolically as graphs, equations and tables
represents different ways to communicate mathematical ideas.
AHL
• Extending results from a specific case to a general form can allow us to apply them to a larger system.
• Patterns can be identified in behaviours which can give us insight into appropriate strategies to model
or solve them.
• The intersection of a system of equations may be represented graphically and algebraically and
represents the solution that satisfies the equations.
SL content
Recommended teaching hours: 21
The aim of the SL content in the functions topic is to introduce students to the important unifying theme of
a function in mathematics and to apply functional methods to a variety of mathematical situations.
Throughout this topic students should be given the opportunity to use technology, such as graphing
packages and graphing calculators to develop and apply their knowledge of functions, rather than using
elaborate analytic techniques.
On examination papers:
• questions may be set requiring the graphing of functions that do not explicitly appear on the syllabus
• the domain will be the largest possible domain for which a function is defined unless otherwise stated;
this will usually be the real numbers
Sections SL2.1 to SL2.4 are content common to both Mathematics: analysis and approaches and
Mathematics: applications and interpretation.
SL 2.1
Connections
Other contexts: Gradients of mountain roads, gradients of access ramps.
Links to other subjects: Exchange rates and price and income elasticity, demand and supply curves
(economics); graphical analysis in experimental work (sciences group subjects).
TOK: Descartes showed that geometric problems could be solved algebraically and vice versa. What does
this tell us about mathematical representation and mathematical knowledge?
SL 2.2
Connections
Other contexts: Temperature and currency conversions.
Links to other subjects: Currency conversions and cost functions (economics and business management);
projectile motion (physics).
Aim 8: What is the relationship between real-world problems and mathematical models?
SL 2.3
Connections
Links to other subjects: Sketching and interpreting graphs (sciences group subjects, geography,
economics).
TOK: Does studying the graph of a function contain the same level of mathematical rigour as studying the
function algebraically? What are the advantages and disadvantages of having different forms and symbolic
language in mathematics?
SL 2.4
Connections
Links to other subjects: Identification and interpretation of key features of graphs (sciences group
subjects, geography, economics); production possibilities curve model, market equilibrium (economics).
International-mindedness: Bourbaki group analytical approach versus the Mandlebrot visual approach.
Use of technology: Graphing technology with sliders to determine the effects of altering parameters and
variables.
SL 2.5
Connections
TOK: Do you think mathematics or logic should be classified as a language?
SL 2.6
The quadratic function f (x) = ax2 + bx + c: its A quadratic graph is also called a parabola.
graph, y -intercept (0, c). Axis of symmetry. Link to: transformations (SL 2.11).
The form f (x) = a(x − p)(x − q), x- Candidates are expected to be able to change from
intercepts (p, 0) and (q, 0). one form to another.
The form f (x) = a (x − h)2 + k, vertex (h, k).
Connections
Links to other subjects: Kinematics, projectile motion and simple harmonic motion (physics).
TOK: Are there fundamental differences between mathematics and other areas of knowledge? If so, are
these differences more than just methodological differences?
SL 2.7
The discriminant Δ = b2 − 4ac and the nature of the Example: For the equation 3kx2 + 2x + k = 0, find
roots, that is, two distinct real roots, two equal real the possible values of k, which will give two distinct
roots, no real roots. real roots, two equal real roots or no real roots.
Connections
Links to other subjects: Projectile motion and energy changes in simple harmonic motion (physics);
equilibrium equations (chemistry).
(a + b)2 − a2 − b2
International-mindedness: The Babylonian method of multiplication: ab = . Sulba Sutras
2
in ancient India and the Bakhshali Manuscript contained an algebraic formula for solving quadratic
equations.
TOK: What are the key concepts that provide the building blocks for mathematical knowledge?
Use of technology: Dynamic graphing software with a slider.
Enrichment: Deriving the quadratic formula by completing the square.
SL 2.8
Connections
International-mindedness: The development of functions, Rene Descartes (France), Gottfried Wilhelm
Leibniz (Germany) and Leonhard Euler (Switzerland).
TOK: What are the implications of accepting that mathematical knowledge changes over time?
SL 2.9
Connections
Links to other subjects: Radioactive decay, charging and discharging capacitors (physics); first order
reactions and activation energy (chemistry); growth curves (biology).
Aim 8: The phrase “exponential growth” is used popularly to describe a number of phenomena. Is ths a
misleading use of a mathematical term?
TOK: What role do “models” play in mathematics? Do they play a different role in mathematics compared to
their role in other areas of knowledge?
SL 2.10
Connections
Other contexts: Radioactive decay and population growth and decay, compound interest, projectile
motion, braking distances.
Links to other subjects: Radioactive decay (physics); modelling (sciences group subjects); production
possibilities curve model (economics).
TOK: What assumptions do mathematicians make when they apply mathematics to real-life situations?
SL 2.11
Reflections (in both axes): y = − f (x); y = f ( − x). Dynamic graphing packages could be used to
investigate these transformations.
Vertical stretch with scale factor p: y = p f (x).
1
Horizontal stretch with scale factor : y = f (qx).
q
Composite transformations. Example: Using y = x2 to sketch y = 3x2 + 2
Link to: composite functions (SL2.5).
Not required at SL: transformations of the form
f (ax + b).
Connections
Links to other subjects: Shift in supply and demand curves (Economics); induced emf and simple
harmonic motion (physics).
AHL content
Recommended teaching hours: 11
The aim of the AHL functions topic is to extend and build upon the aims, concepts and skills from the SL
content. It introduces students to useful techniques for finding and using roots of polynomials, graphing
and interpreting rational functions, additional ways to classify functions, solving inequations and solving
equations involving modulus notation.
HL students may be required to use technology to solve equations where there is no appropriate analytic
approach.
AHL 2.12
−an − 1
the sum is
an
( − 1)na0
the product is
an
Link to: complex roots of quadratic and polynomial
equations (AHL 1.14).
Connections
Links to other subjects: Modelling (sciences group subjects)
TOK: Is it an oversimplification to say that some areas of knowledge give us facts whereas other areas of
knowledge give us interpretations?
Enrichment: Viete’s theorem in full, “The equation that couldn’t be solved” quadratic formula reducing a
quadratic to a linear, Cardano and Bombelli.
AHL 2.13
Connections
International mindedness: Bourbaki group analytical approach versus Mandlebrot visual approach.
TOK: Does studying the graph of a function contain the same level of mathematical rigour as studying the
function algebraically? What are the advantages and disadvantages of having different forms and symbolic
language in mathematics?
AHL 2.14
Connections
International-mindedness: The notation for functions was developed by a number of different
mathematicians in the 17th and 18th centuries. How did the notation we use today become internationally
accepted?
TOK: If systems of notation and measurement are culturally and historically situated, does this mean
mathematics cannot be seen as independent of culture?
AHL 2.15
Connections
TOK: Are there differences in terms of value that different cultures ascribe to mathematics, or to the relative
value that they ascribe to different areas of knowledge?
AHL 2.16
Connections
International-mindedness: The Bourbaki group analytic approach versus Mandlebrot visual approach.
AHL
• Position and movement can be modelled in three-dimensional space using vectors.
• The relationships between algebraic, geometric and vector methods can help us to solve problems
and quantify those positions and movements.
SL content
Recommended teaching hours: 25
The aim of the SL content of the geometry and trigonometry topic is to introduce students to geometry in
three dimensions and to non right-angled trigonometry. Students will explore the circular functions and
use properties and identities to solve problems in abstract and real-life contexts.
Throughout this topic students should be given the opportunity to use technology such as graphing
packages, graphing calculators and dynamic geometry software to develop and apply their knowledge of
geometry and trigonometry.
On examination papers, radian measure should be assumed unless otherwise indicated.
Sections SL3.1 to SL3.3 are content common to both Mathematics: analysis and approaches and
Mathematics: applications and interpretation.
SL 3.1
Connections
Other contexts: Architecture and design.
Links to other subjects: Design technology; volumes of stars and inverse square law (physics).
TOK: What is an axiomatic system? Are axioms self evident to everybody?
SL 3.2
Connections
Other contexts: Triangulation, map-making.
Links to other subjects: Vectors (physics).
International-mindedness: Diagrams of Pythagoras’ theorem occur in early Chinese and Indian
manuscripts. The earliest references to trigonometry are in Indian mathematics; the use of triangulation to
find the curvature of the Earth in order to settle a dispute between England and France over Newton’s
gravity.
TOK: Is it ethical that Pythagoras gave his name to a theorem that may not have been his own creation?
What criteria might we use to make such a judgment?
SL 3.3
Connections
Other contexts: Triangulation, map-making, navigation and radio transmissions. Use of parallax for
navigation.
Links to other subjects: Vectors, scalars, forces and dynamics (physics); field studies (sciences group
subjects)
Aim 8: Who really invented Pythagoras’s theorem?
Aim 9: In how many ways can you prove Pythagoras’s theorem?
International-mindedness: The use of triangulation to find the curvature of the Earth in order to settle a
dispute between England and France over Newton’s gravity.
TOK: If the angles of a triangle can add up to less than 180°, 180° or more than 180°, what does this tell us
about the nature of mathematical knowledge?
SL 3.4
Connections
Links to other subjects: Diffraction patterns and circular motion (physics).
International-mindedness: Seki Takakazu calculating π to ten decimal places; Hipparchus, Menelaus and
Ptolemy; Why are there 360 degrees in a complete turn? Links to Babylonian mathematics.
TOK: Which is a better measure of angle: radian or degree? What criteria can/do/should mathematicians
use to make such decisions?
SL 3.5
Connections
International-mindedness: The first work to refer explicitly to the sine as a function of an angle is the
Aryabhatiya of Aryabhata (ca 510).
TOK: Trigonometry was developed by successive civilizations and cultures. To what extent is mathematical
knowledge embedded in particular traditions or bound to particular cultures? How have key events in the
history of mathematics shaped its current form and methods?
Enrichment: The proof of Pythagoras’ theorem in three dimensions.
SL 3.6
The Pythagorean identity cos2θ + sin2θ = 1. Simple geometrical diagrams and dynamic graphing
packages may be used to illustrate the double angle
Double angle identities for sine and cosine.
identities (and other trigonometric identities).
The relationship between trigonometric ratios. Examples:
Given sinθ, find possible values of tanθ, (without
finding θ).
3
Given cosx = and x is acute, find sin 2x, (without
4
finding x).
Connections
SL 3.7
Connections
Links to other subjects: Simple harmonic motion (physics).
TOK: Music can be expressed using mathematics. What does this tell us about the relationship between
music and mathematics?
SL 3.8
Connections
AHL content
Recommended teaching hours: 26
The aim of the AHL content in the geometry and trigonometry topic is to extend and build upon the aims,
concepts and skills from the SL content. It further explores the circular functions, introduces some
important trigonometric identities, and introduces vectors in two and three dimensions. This will facilitate
problem-solving involving points, lines and planes.
On examination papers radian measure should be assumed unless otherwise indicated.
AHL 3.9
Connections
International-mindedness: The origin of degrees in the mathematics of Mesopotamia and why we use
minutes and seconds for time; the origin of the word sine.
TOK: What is the relationship between concepts and facts? To what extent do the concepts that we use
shape the conclusions that we reach?
AHL 3.10
Connections
Other contexts: Triangulation used by GPSs (global positioning systems); concepts in electrical
engineering including generation of sinusoidal voltage.
AHL 3.11
tan(π − θ) = − tanθ
Connections
Links to other subjects: Simple harmonic motion graphs (physics)
TOK: Mathematics and knowledge claims: how can there be an infinite number of discrete solutions to an
equation?
AHL 3.12
Algebraic and geometric approaches to the Distance between points A and B is the magnitude
following: →
of AB
• the sum and difference of two vectors
• the zero vector 0, the vector −v
• multiplication by a scalar, kv, parallel vectors
Connections
Links to other subjects: Vectors, scalars, forces and dynamics (physics).
Aim 8: Vectors are used to solve many problems in position location. This can be used to save a lost sailor or
destroy a building with a laser-guided bomb.
TOK: Vectors are used to solve many problems in position location. This can be used to save a lost sailor or
destroy a building with a laser-guided bomb. To what extent does possession of knowledge carry with it an
ethical obligation?
AHL 3.13
Connections
Links to other subjects: Forces and dynamics (physics).
TOK: The nature of mathematics: why this definition of scalar product?
Enrichment: Proof of the cosine rule using the dot product.
AHL 3.14
Connections
Other contexts: Modelling linear motion in three dimensions; navigational devices, for example GPS.
TOK: Why might it be argued that one form of representation is superior to another? What criteria might a
mathematician use in making such an argument?
AHL 3.15
Connections
TOK: How can there be an infinite number of discrete solutions to an equation? What does this suggest
about the nature of mathematical knowledge and how it compares to knowledge in other disciplines?
AHL 3.16
Connections
Links to other subjects: Magnetic forces and fields (physics).
TOK: To what extent is certainty attainable in mathematics? Is certainty attainable, or desirable, in other
areas of knowledge?
AHL 3.17
Connections
AHL 3.18
Connections
TOK: Mathematics and the knower: are symbolic representations of three-dimensional objects easier to
deal with than visual representations? What does this tell us about our knowledge of mathematics in other
dimensions?
questioned to differentiate between the theoretical and the empirical/observed. Probability theory allows
us to make informed choices, to evaluate risk, and to make predictions about seemingly random events.
AHL
• Properties of probability density functions can be used to identify measure of central tendency such as
mean, mode and median.
• Probability methods such as Bayes theorem can be applied to real-world systems, such as medical
studies or economics, to inform decisions and to better understand outcomes.
SL content
Recommended teaching hours: 27
The aim of the SL content in the statistics and probability topic is to introduce students to the important
concepts, techniques and representations used in statistics and probability. Students should be given the
opportunity to approach this topic in a practical way, to understand why certain techniques are used and to
interpret the results. The use of technology such as simulations, spreadsheets, statistics software and
statistics apps can greatly enhance this topic.
It is expected that most of the calculations required will be carried out using technology, but explanations
of calculations by hand may enhance understanding. The emphasis is on understanding and interpreting
the results obtained, in context.
In examinations students should be familiar with how to use the statistics functionality of allowed
technology.
At SL the data set will be considered to be the population unless otherwise stated.
Sections SL4.1 to SL4.9 are content common to both Mathematics: analysis and approaches and
Mathematics: applications and interpretation.
SL 4.1
Connections
Links to other subjects: Descriptive statistics and random samples (biology, psychology, sports exercise
and health science, environmental systems and societies, geography, economics; business management);
research methodologies (psychology).
Aim 8: Misleading statistics; examples of problems caused by absence of representative samples, for
example Google flu predictor, US presidential elections in 1936, Literary Digest v George Gallup, Boston
“pot-hole” app.
International-mindedness: The Kinsey report–famous sampling techniques.
TOK: Why have mathematics and statistics sometimes been treated as separate subjects? How easy is it to
be misled by statistics? Is it ever justifiable to purposely use statistics to mislead others?
SL 4.2
Connections
Links to other subjects: Presentation of data (sciences, individuals and societies).
International-mindedness: Discussion of the different formulae for the same statistical measure (for
example, variance).
TOK: What is the difference between information and data? Does “data” mean the same thing in different
areas of knowledge?
SL 4.3
Connections
Other contexts: Comparing variation and spread in populations, human or natural, for example
agricultural crop data, social indicators, reliability and maintenance.
Links to other subjects: Descriptive statistics (sciences and individuals and societies); consumer price
index (economics).
International-mindedness: The benefits of sharing and analysing data from different countries; discussion
of the different formulae for variance.
TOK: Could mathematics make alternative, equally true, formulae? What does this tell us about
mathematical truths? Does the use of statistics lead to an over-emphasis on attributes that can be easily
measured over those that cannot?
SL 4.4
Connections
Other contexts: Linear regressions where correlation exists between two variables. Exploring cause and
dependence for categorical variables, for example, on what factors might political persuasion depend?
Links to other subjects: Curves of best fit, correlation and causation (sciences group subjects); scatter
graphs (geography).
Aim 8: The correlation between smoking and lung cancer was “discovered” using mathematics. Science
had to justify the cause.
TOK: Correlation and causation–can we have knowledge of cause and effect relationships given that we
can only observe correlation? What factors affect the reliability and validity of mathematical models in
describing real-life phenomena?
SL 4.5
Connections
Other contexts: Actuarial studies and the link between probability of life spans and insurance premiums,
government planning based on likely projected figures, Monte Carlo methods.
Links to other subjects: Theoretical genetics and Punnett squares (biology); the position of a particle
(physics).
Aim 8: The ethics of gambling.
International-mindedness: The St Petersburg paradox; Chebyshev and Pavlovsky (Russian).
TOK: To what extent are theoretical and experimental probabilities linked? What is the role of emotion in
our perception of risk, for example in business, medicine and travel safety?
Use of technology: Computer simulations may be useful to enhance this topic.
SL 4.6
Connections
Aim 8: The gambling issue: use of probability in casinos. Could or should mathematics help increase
incomes in gambling?
TOK: Can calculation of gambling probabilities be considered an ethical application of mathematics?
Should mathematicians be held responsible for unethical applications of their work?
SL 4.7
Connections
Other contexts: Games of chance.
Aim 8: Why has it been argued that theories based on the calculable probabilities found in casinos are
pernicious when applied to everyday life (for example, economics)?
TOK: What do we mean by a “fair” game? Is it fair that casinos should make a profit?
SL 4.8
Connections
Aim 8: Pascal’s triangle, attributing the origin of a mathematical discovery to the wrong mathematician.
International-mindedness: The so-called “Pascal’s triangle” was known to the Chinese mathematician
Yang Hui much earlier than Pascal.
TOK: What criteria can we use to decide between different models?
Enrichment: Hypothesis testing using the binomial distribution.
SL 4.9
Connections
Links to other subjects: Normally distributed real-life measurements and descriptive statistics (sciences
group subjects, psychology, environmental systems and societies)
Aim 8: Why might the misuse of the normal distribution lead to dangerous inferences and conclusions?
International-mindedness: De Moivre’s derivation of the normal distribution and Quetelet’s use of it to
describe l’homme moyen.
TOK: To what extent can we trust mathematical models such as the normal distribution? How can we know
what to include, and what to exclude, in a model?
SL 4.10
Connections
TOK: Is it possible to have knowledge of the future?
SL 4.11
Connections
Other contexts: Use of probability methods in medical studies to assess risk factors for certain diseases.
TOK: Given the interdisciplinary nature of many real-world applications of probability, is the division of
knowledge into discrete disciplines or areas of knowledge artificial and/or useful?
SL 4.12
Connections
Links to other subjects: The normal distribution (biology); descriptive statistics (psychology).
AHL content
Recommended teaching hours: 6
The aim of the AHL content in the statistics and probability topic is to extend and build upon the aims,
concepts and skills from the SL content. Students are introduced to further conditional probability theory in
the form of Bayes Theorem and properties of discrete and continuous random variables are further
explored.
AHL 4.13
Connections
Other contexts: Use of probability methods in medical studies to assess risk factors for certain diseases.
TOK: Does the applicability of knowledge vary across the different areas of knowledge? What would the
implications be if the value of all knowledge was measured solely in terms of its applicability?
AHL 4.14
∫
Continuous random variables and their probability ∞
0 ≤ f (x) ≤ 1, f (x)dx = 1 including piecewise
density functions. −∞
functions.
Mode and median of continuous random variables. For a continuous random variable, a value at which
the probability density function has a maximum
value is called a mode and for the median:
∫
m
1
f (x)dx = .
−∞ 2
Mean, variance and standard deviation of both Use of the notation E(X), E(X 2), Var(X),
discrete and continuous random variables.
where Var(X) = E(X 2) − [E(X)]2
and related formulae.
Use of E(X) for “fair” games.
The effect of linear transformations of X . E(aX + b) = aE(X) + b, Var(aX + b) = a2Var(X)
Connections
Other contexts: Other discrete distributions, for example Poisson, may be appropriate for IA/toolkit and
further investigation; expected value used in decision making in business, economics and life in general;
expected gain to insurance companies.
TOK: Is mathematics more or less useful than other areas of knowledge for solving problems?
Enrichment: Is there a relationship between the interquartile range and the standard deviation for a
normally distributed data set?
Topic 5: Calculus
Concepts
Essential understandings:
Calculus describes rates of change between two variables and the accumulation of limiting areas.
Understanding these rates of change and accumulations allow us to model, interpret and analyze real-
world problems and situations. Calculus helps us to understand the behaviour of functions and allows us to
interpret the features of their graphs.
AHL
• Some functions may be continuous everywhere but not differentiable everywhere.
• A finite number of terms of an infinite series can be a general approximation of a function over a
limited domain.
• Limits describe the output of a function as the input approaches a certain value and can represent
convergence and divergence.
• Examining limits of functions at a point can help determine continuity and differentiability at a point.
SL content
Recommended teaching hours: 28
The aim of the SL content in the calculus topic is to introduce students to the concepts and techniques of
differential and integral calculus and their applications.
Throughout this topic students should be given the opportunity to use technology such as graphing
packages and graphing calculators to develop and apply their knowledge of calculus.
Sections SL5.1 to SL5.5 are content common to both Mathematics: analysis and approaches and
Mathematics: applications and interpretation.
SL 5.1
Connections
Links to other subjects: Marginal cost, marginal revenue, marginal profit, market structures (economics);
kinematics, induced emf and simple harmonic motion (physics); interpreting the gradient of a curve
(chemistry)
Aim 8: The debate over whether Newton or Leibnitz discovered certain calculus concepts; how the Greeks’
distrust of zero meant that Archimedes’ work did not lead to calculus.
International-mindedness: Attempts by Indian mathematicians (500-1000 CE) to explain division by zero.
TOK: What value does the knowledge of limits have? Is infinitesimal behaviour applicable to real life? Is
intuition a valid way of knowing in mathematics?
Use of technology: Spreadsheets, dynamic graphing software and GDC should be used to explore ideas of
limits, numerically and graphically. Hypotheses can be formed and then tested using technology.
SL 5.2
Connections
SL 5.3
Connections
TOK: The seemingly abstract concept of calculus allows us to create mathematical models that permit
human feats such as getting a man on the Moon. What does this tell us about the links between
mathematical models and reality?
SL 5.4
Connections
Links to other subjects: Instantaneous velocity and optics, equipotential surfaces (physics); price elasticity
(economics).
TOK: In what ways has technology impacted how knowledge is produced and shared in mathematics?
Does technology simply allow us to arrange existing knowledge in new and different ways, or should this
arrangement itself be considered knowledge?
SL 5.5
∫
6
and the x -axis, where f (x) > 0. (3x2 + 4)dx.
2
Connections
Other contexts: Velocity-time graphs
Links to other subjects: Velocity-time and acceleration-time graphs (physics and sports exercise and
health science)
TOK: Is it possible for an area of knowledge to describe the world without transforming it?
SL 5.6
Connections
Links to other subjects: Uniform circular motion and induced emf (physics).
TOK: What is the role of convention in mathematics? Is this similar or different to the role of convention in
other areas of knowledge?
SL 5.7
Connections
Links to other subjects: Simple harmonic motion (physics).
SL 5.8
Connections
Other contexts: Profit, area, volume.
Links to other subjects: Velocity-time graphs, simple harmonic motion graphs and kinematics (physics);
allocative efficiency (economics).
TOK: When mathematicians and historians say that they have explained something, are they using the
word “explain” in the same way?
SL 5.9
∫
t2
Distance between t1 to t2 is given by |v(t)|dt.
t1
Connections
Links to other subjects: Kinematics (physics).
International-mindedness: Does the inclusion of kinematics as core mathematics reflect a particular
cultural heritage? Who decides what is mathematics?
TOK: Is mathematics independent of culture? To what extent are we people aware of the impact of culture
on what we they believe or know?
SL 5.10
SL 5.11
∫
Definite integrals, including analytical approach. b
g′(x)dx = g(b) − g(a).
a
Connections
International-mindedness: Accurate calculation of the volume of a cylinder by Chinese mathematician Liu
Hui; Ibn Al Haytham: first mathematician to calculate the integral of a function, in order to find the volume
of a paraboloid.
1
TOK: Consider f (x) = , 1 ≤ x ≤ ∞. An infinite area sweeps out a finite volume. Can this be reconciled
x
with our intuition? Do emotion and intuition have a role in mathematics?
Enrichment: Exploring numerical integration techniques such as Simpson’s rule or the trapezoidal rule.
AHL content
Recommended teaching hours: 27
The aim of the AHL content in the calculus topic is to extend and build upon the aims, concepts and skills
from the SL content. Further powerful techniques and useful applications of differential and integral
calculus are introduced.
AHL 5.12
Connections
Links to other subjects: Theory of the firm (economics).
International-mindedness: How the Greeks’ distrust of zero meant that Archimedes’ work did not lead to
the Calculus; investigate attempts by Indian mathematicians (500-1000AD) to explain division by zero.
TOK: Does the fact that Leibniz and Newton came across the Calculus at similar times support the
argument of Platonists over Constructivists?
Enrichment: Fundamental theorem of calculus.
AHL 5.13
Connections
AHL 5.14
Connections
Other contexts: Links between mathematical and physical models.
TOK: Euler was able to make important advances in mathematical analysis before calculus had been put on
a solid theoretical foundation by Cauchy and others. However, some work was not possible until after
Cauchy’s work. What does this suggest about the nature of progress and development in mathematics?
How might this be similar/different to the nature of progress and development in other areas of
knowledge?
AHL 5.15
Indefinite integrals of the derivatives of any of the Indefinite integral interpreted as a family of curves.
above functions.
The composites of any of these with a linear
Examples: ∫ x + 2x1 + 5 dx = 12 arctan (x +2 1) + C
2
function.
∫ sec (2x + 5)dx = 12 tan(2x + 5) + C
2
Connections
TOK: Can a mathematical statement be true before it has been proven?
AHL 5.16
∫ kg′(x) f (g(x))dx.
Link to: integration by substitution (SL5.10).
Integration by parts.
Examples: ∫ xsinxdx, ∫ lnxdx, ∫ arcsinxdx
Repeated integration by parts.
∫
Examples: x2exdx and ∫ e sinxdx.
x
Connections
AHL 5.17
Connections
Other contexts: Industrial design.
AHL 5.18
Connections
Other contexts: Newton’s law of cooling, population growth, carbon dating.
Links to other subjects: Decay curves (physics); first order reactions (chemistry)
TOK: Does personal experience play a role in the formation of knowledge claims in mathematics? Does it
play a different role in mathematics compared to other areas of knowledge?
AHL 5.19
Connections
International-mindedness: Comparison of the Bourbaki to the Kerala School.
TOK: Is there always a trade-off between accuracy and simplicity?
General
Assessment is an integral part of teaching and learning. The most important aim of assessment in the DP is
that it should support curricular goals and encourage appropriate student learning. Both external and
internal assessments are used in the DP. IB examiners mark work produced for external assessment, while
work produced for internal assessment is marked by teachers and externally moderated by the IB.
There are two types of assessment identified by the IB.
Formative assessment informs both teaching and learning. It is concerned with providing accurate and
helpful feedback to students and teachers on the kind of learning taking place and the nature of students’
strengths and weaknesses in order to help develop students’ understanding and capabilities. Formative
assessment can also help to improve teaching quality, as it can provide information to monitor progress
towards meeting the course aims and objectives.
Summative assessment gives an overview of previous learning and is concerned with measuring student
achievement.
The DP primarily focuses on summative assessment designed to record student achievement at, or towards
the end of, the course of study. However, many of the assessment instruments can also be used formatively
during the course of teaching and learning, and teachers are encouraged to do this. A comprehensive
assessment plan is viewed as being integral with teaching, learning and course organization. For further
information, see the IB Programme standards and practices document.
The approach to assessment used by the IB is criterion-related, not norm-referenced. This approach to
assessment judges students’ work by their performance in relation to identified levels of attainment, and
not in relation to the work of other students. For further information on assessment within the DP please
refer to the publication DP assessment: Principles and practice.
To support teachers in the planning, delivery and assessment of the DP courses, a variety of resources can
be found on the programme resource centre or purchased from the IB store (store.ibo.org). Additional
publications such as specimen papers and markschemes, teacher support materials, subject reports and
grade descriptors can also be found on the programme resource centre. Past examination papers as well as
markschemes can be purchased from the IB store.
Methods of assessment
The IB uses several methods to assess work produced by students.
Assessment criteria
Assessment criteria are used when the assessment task is open-ended. Each criterion concentrates on a
particular skill that students are expected to demonstrate. An assessment objective describes what
students should be able to do, and assessment criteria describe how well they should be able to do it. Using
assessment criteria allows discrimination between different answers and encourages a variety of responses.
Each criterion comprises a set of hierarchically-ordered level descriptors. Each level descriptor is worth one
or more marks. Each criterion is applied independently using a best-fit model. The maximum marks for each
criterion may differ according to the criterion’s importance. The marks awarded for each criterion are added
together to give the total mark for the piece of work.
Markbands
Markbands are a comprehensive statement of expected performance against which responses are judged.
They represent a single holistic criterion divided into level descriptors. Each level descriptor corresponds to
a range of marks to differentiate student performance. A best-fit approach is used to ascertain which
particular mark to use from the possible range for each level descriptor.
Analytic markschemes
Analytic markschemes are prepared for those examination questions that expect a particular kind of
response and/or a given final answer from students. They give detailed instructions to examiners on how to
break down the total mark for each question for different parts of the response.
Marking notes
For some assessment components marked using assessment criteria, marking notes are provided. Marking
notes give guidance on how to apply assessment criteria to the particular requirements of a question.
Assessment outline—SL
Section A
Compulsory short-response questions based on the syllabus.
Section B
Compulsory extended-response questions based on the syllabus.
Paper 2 (90 minutes) 40%
Technology required. (80 marks)
Section A
Compulsory short-response questions based on the syllabus.
Section B
Compulsory extended-response questions based on the syllabus
Internal assessment 20%
This component is internally assessed by the teacher and externally moderated by the IB at
the end of the course.
Mathematical exploration
Internal assessment in mathematics is an individual exploration. This is a piece of written
work that involves investigating an area of mathematics. (20 marks)
Assessment outline—HL
Section A
Compulsory short-response questions based on the syllabus.
Section B
Compulsory extended-response questions based on the syllabus.
Paper 2 (120 minutes) 30%
Technology required. (110 marks) 20%
Section A
Compulsory short-response questions based on the syllabus.
Section B
Compulsory extended-response questions based on the syllabus.
Paper 3 (60 minutes)
Technology required. (55 marks)
Two compulsory extended response problem-solving questions.
Internal assessment 20%
This component is internally assessed by the teacher and externally moderated by the IB at
the end of the course.
Mathematical exploration
Internal assessment in mathematics is an individual exploration. This is a piece of written
work that involves investigating an area of mathematics. (20 marks)
External assessment
General
Mark schemes are used to assess students in all papers. The mark schemes are specific to each examination.
Calculators
Paper 1
Students are not permitted access to any calculator. Questions will mainly involve analytic approaches to
solutions, rather than requiring the use of a GDC. The paper is not intended to require complicated
calculations, with the potential for careless errors. However, questions will include some arithmetical
manipulations when they are essential to the development of the question.
Paper 2
Students must have access to a graphic display calculator (GDC) at all times. However, not all questions will
necessarily require the use of the GDC. Regulations covering the types of GDC allowed are provided in
Diploma Programme Assessment procedures.
Formula booklet
Each student must have access to a clean copy of the formula booklet during the examination. It is the
responsibility of the school to download a copy from IBIS or the programme resource centre and to ensure
that there are sufficient copies available for all students.
Awarding of marks
Marks are awarded for method, accuracy, answers and reasoning, including interpretation.
In paper 1 and paper 2, full marks are not necessarily awarded for a correct answer with no working.
Answers must be supported by working and/or explanations (in the form of, for example diagrams, graphs
or calculations). Where an answer is incorrect, some marks may be given for correct method, provided this
is shown by written working. All students should therefore be advised to show their working.
Paper 1
Duration: 1 hour 30 minutes
Weighting: 40%
• This paper consists of section A, short-response questions, and section B, extended-response
questions.
Syllabus coverage
• Knowledge of all topics is required for this paper. However, not all topics are necessarily assessed in
every examination session.
Mark allocation
• This paper is worth 80 marks, representing 40% of the final mark.
• Questions of varying levels of difficulty and length are set. Therefore, individual questions may not
necessarily each be worth the same number of marks. The exact number of marks allocated to each
question is indicated at the start of the question.
Section A
• This section consists of compulsory short-response questions based on the whole syllabus. It is worth
approximately 40 marks.
• The intention of this section is to assess students across the breadth of the syllabus. However, it should
not be assumed that the separate topics are given equal emphasis.
Question type
• A small number of steps are needed to solve each question.
• Questions may be presented in the form of words, symbols, diagrams or tables, or combinations of
these.
Section B
• This section consists of a small number of compulsory extended-response questions based on the
whole syllabus. It is worth approximately 40 marks.
• Individual questions may require knowledge of more than one topic.
• The intention of this section is to assess students across the breadth of the syllabus in depth. The range
of syllabus topics tested in this section may be narrower than that tested in section A.
Question type
• Questions require extended responses involving sustained reasoning.
• Individual questions will develop a single theme.
• Questions may be presented in the form of words, symbols, diagrams or tables, or combinations of
these.
• Normally, each question reflects an incline of difficulty, from relatively easy tasks at the start of a
question to relatively difficult tasks at the end of a question. The emphasis is on sustained reasoning.
Paper 2
Duration: 1 hour 30 minutes
Weighting: 40%
• This paper consists of section A, short-response questions, and section B, extended-response
questions.
• A GDC is required for this paper, but not every question will necessarily require its use.
Syllabus coverage
• Knowledge of all topics is required for this paper. However, not all topics are necessarily assessed in
every examination session.
Mark allocation
• This paper is worth 80 marks, representing 40% of the final mark.
• Questions of varying levels of difficulty and length are set. Therefore, individual questions may not
necessarily each be worth the same number of marks. The exact number of marks allocated to each
question is indicated at the start of the question.
Section A
• This section consists of compulsory short-response questions based on the whole syllabus. It is worth
approximately 40 marks.
• The intention of this section is to assess students across the breadth of the syllabus. However, it should
not be assumed that the separate topics are given equal emphasis.
Question type
• A small number of steps are needed to solve each question.
• Questions may be presented in the form of words, symbols, diagrams or tables, or combinations of
these.
Section B
• This section consists of a small number of compulsory extended-response questions based on the
whole syllabus. It is worth approximately 40 marks.
• Individual questions may require knowledge of more than one topic.
• The intention of this section is to assess students across the breadth of the syllabus in depth. The range
of syllabus topics tested in this section may be narrower than that tested in section A.
Question type
• Questions require extended responses involving sustained reasoning.
• Individual questions will develop a single theme.
• Questions may be presented in the form of words, symbols, diagrams or tables, or combinations of
these.
• Normally, each question reflects an incline of difficulty, from relatively easy tasks at the start of a
question to relatively difficult tasks at the end of a question. The emphasis is on sustained reasoning.
General
Markschemes are used to assess students in all papers. The markschemes are specific to each examination.
Calculators
Paper 1
Students are not permitted access to any calculator. Questions will mainly involve analytic approaches to
solutions, rather than requiring the use of a GDC. The paper is not intended to require complicated
calculations, with the potential for careless errors. However, questions will include some arithmetical
manipulations when they are essential to the development of the question.
Paper 2
Students must have access to a GDC at all times. However, not all questions will necessarily require the use
of the GDC. Regulations covering the types of GDC allowed are provided in Diploma Programme Assessment
procedures.
Paper 3
Students must have access to a GDC at all times. However, not all question parts will necessarily require the
use of the GDC. Regulations covering the types of GDC allowed are provided in Diploma Programme
Assessment procedures.
Formula booklet
Each student must have access to a clean copy of the formula booklet during the examination. It is the
responsibility of the school to download a copy from IBIS or the Programme Resource Centre and to ensure
that there are sufficient copies available for all students.
Awarding of marks
Marks are awarded for method, accuracy, answers and reasoning, including interpretation.
In papers 1, 2 and 3, full marks are not necessarily awarded for a correct answer with no working. Answers
must be supported by working and/or explanations (in the form of, for example diagrams, graphs or
calculations). Where an answer is incorrect, some marks may be given for correct method, provided that
this is shown by written working. All students should therefore be advised to show their working.
Paper 1
Duration: 2 hours
Weighting: 30%
• This paper consists of section A, short-response questions, and section B, extended-response
questions.
• Students are not permitted access to any calculator on this paper.
Syllabus coverage
• Knowledge of all topics is required for this paper. However, not all topics are necessarily assessed in
every examination session.
Mark allocation
• This paper is worth 110 marks, representing 30% of the final mark.
• Questions of varying levels of difficulty and length are set. Therefore, individual questions may not
necessarily each be worth the same number of marks. The exact number of marks allocated to each
question is indicated at the start of the question.
Section A
• This section consists of compulsory short-response questions based on the whole syllabus. It is worth
approximately 55 marks.
• The intention of this section is to assess students across the breadth of the syllabus. However, it should
not be assumed that the separate topics are given equal emphasis.
Question type
• A small number of steps are needed to solve each question.
• Questions may be presented in the form of words, symbols, diagrams or tables, or combinations of
these.
Section B
This section consists of a small number of compulsory extended-response questions based on the whole
syllabus. It is worth approximately 55 marks.
Individual questions may require knowledge of more than one topic.
The intention of this section is to assess students across the breadth of the syllabus in depth. The range of
syllabus topics tested in this section may be narrower than that tested in section A.
Question type
• Questions require extended responses.
• Individual questions will develop a single theme.
• Questions may be presented in the form of words, symbols, diagrams or tables, or combinations of
these.
• Normally, each question reflects an incline of difficulty, from relatively easy tasks at the start of a
question to relatively difficult tasks at the end of a question. The emphasis is on sustained reasoning.
Paper 2
Duration: 2 hours
Weighting: 30%
• This paper consists of section A, short-response questions, and section B, extended-response
questions.
• A GDC is required for this paper, but not every question will necessarily require its use.
Syllabus coverage
• Knowledge of all topics is required for this paper. However, not all topics are necessarily assessed in
every examination session.
Mark allocation
• This paper is worth 110 marks, representing 30% of the final mark.
• Questions of varying levels of difficulty and length are set. Therefore, individual questions may not
necessarily each be worth the same number of marks. The exact number of marks allocated to each
question is indicated at the start of the question.
Section A
• This section consists of compulsory short-response questions based on the whole syllabus. It is worth
approximately 55 marks.
• The intention of this section is to assess students across the breadth of the syllabus. However, it should
not be assumed that the separate topics are given equal emphasis.
Question type
• A small number of steps are needed to solve each question.
• Questions may be presented in the form of words, symbols, diagrams or tables, or combinations of
these.
Section B
• This section consists of a small number of compulsory extended-response questions based on the
whole syllabus. It is worth approximately 55 marks.
• Individual questions may require knowledge of more than one topic.
• The intention of this section is to assess students across the breadth of the syllabus in depth. The range
of syllabus topics tested in this section may be narrower than that tested in section A.
Question type
• Questions require extended responses.
• Individual questions will develop a single theme.
• Questions may be presented in the form of words, symbols, diagrams or tables, or combinations of
these.
• Normally, each question reflects an incline of difficulty, from relatively easy tasks at the start of a
question to relatively difficult tasks at the end of a question. The emphasis is on sustained reasoning.
Paper 3
Duration: 1 hour
Weighting: 20%
• This paper consists of two compulsory extended-response problem-solving questions.
• A GDC is required for this paper, but not every question part will necessarily require its use.
Syllabus coverage
• Where possible, the first part of each question will be on syllabus content leading to the problem-
solving context. Therefore, knowledge of all syllabus topics is required for this paper.
Mark allocation
• This paper is worth 55 marks, representing 20% of the final mark.
• Questions may be unequal in terms of length and level of difficulty. Therefore, each question may not
be worth the same number of marks. The exact number of marks allocated to each question is
indicated at the start of each question.
Question type
• Questions require extended responses involving sustained reasoning.
• Individual questions will develop from a single theme where the emphasis is on problem solving
leading to a generalization or the interpretation of a context.
• Questions may be presented in the form of words, symbols, diagrams or tables, or combinations of
these.
• Normally, each question reflects an incline in difficulty, from relatively easy at the start of a question to
relatively difficult tasks at the end of the question. The emphasis is on problem solving.
Internal assessment
• the analysis of the work by a web-based plagiarism detection service such as www.turnitin.com.
The same piece of work cannot be submitted to meet the requirements of both the internal assessment and
the extended essay.
Time allocation
Internal assessment is an integral part of the mathematics courses, contributing 20% to the final assessment
in the SL and the HL courses. This weighting should be reflected in the time that is allocated to teaching the
knowledge, skills and understanding required to undertake the work, as well as the total time allocated to
carry out the work.
It is recommended that a total of approximately 10-15 hours of teaching time should be allocated to the
work. This should include:
• time for the teacher to explain to students the requirements of the exploration
• class time for students to work on the exploration and ask questions
• time for consultation between the teacher and each student
• time to review and monitor progress, and to check authenticity.
The exploration should be approximately 12-20 pages long with double line spacing, including diagrams
and graphs, but excluding the bibliography. However, it is the quality of the mathematical writing that is
important, not the length.
The teacher is expected to give appropriate guidance at all stages of the exploration by, for example,
directing students into more productive routes of inquiry, making suggestions for suitable sources of
information, and providing advice on the content and clarity of the exploration in the writing-up stage.
Teachers are responsible for indicating to students the existence of errors but should not explicitly correct
these errors. It must be emphasized that students are expected to consult the teacher throughout the
process.
All students should be familiar with the requirements of the exploration and the criteria by which it is
assessed. Students need to start planning their explorations as early as possible in the course. Deadlines
should be firmly established and adhered to. There should be a date for submission of the exploration topic
and a brief outline description, a date for the submission of the draft and, of course, a date for completion.
In developing their explorations, students should aim to make use of mathematics learned as part of the
course. The mathematics used should be commensurate with the level of the course–that is, it should be
similar to that suggested in the syllabus. It is not expected that students produce work that is outside the
syllabus–however, this will not be penalized.
Ethical guidelines should be adhered to throughout the planning and conducting of the exploration.
Further details are given in the Ethical practice in the Diploma Programme poster on the programme
resource centre.
Presentation
The following details should be stated on the cover page of the exploration:
• title of the exploration
• number of pages.
The references are not assessed. However, if they are not included in the final report it may be flagged in
terms of academic honesty.
marks in the level above. Teachers should award the lower marks if the student’s work demonstrates the
qualities described to a lesser extent; the work may be close to achieving marks in the level below.
Only whole numbers should be recorded; partial marks, (fractions or decimals) are not acceptable.
Teachers should not think in terms of a pass or fail boundary, but should concentrate on identifying the
appropriate descriptor for each assessment criterion.
The highest-level descriptors do not imply faultless performance but should be achievable by a student.
Teachers should not hesitate to use the extremes if they are appropriate descriptions of the work being
assessed.
A student who attains a high achievement level in relation to one criterion will not necessarily attain high
achievement levels in relation to the other criteria. Similarly, a student who attains a low achievement level
for one criterion will not necessarily attain low achievement levels for the other criteria. Teachers should not
assume that the overall assessment of the students will produce any particular distribution of marks.
It is recommended that the assessment criteria be made available to students.
Introduction
The internally-assessed component in this course is a mathematical exploration. This is a short report
written by the student based on a topic chosen by him or her, and it should focus on the mathematics of
that particular area. The emphasis is on mathematical communication (including formulae, diagrams,
graphs, tables and so on), with his or her own focus, with the teacher providing feedback via, for example,
discussion and interview. This will allow the students to develop areas of interest to them without a time
constraint as in an examination, and allow all students to experience a feeling of success.
The final report should be approximately 12-20 pages long with double line spacing. It can be either word
processed or handwritten. Students should be able to explain all stages of their work in such a way that
demonstrates clear understanding. While there is no requirement that students present their work in class,
it should be written in such a way that their peers would be able to follow it fairly easily. The report should
include a detailed bibliography, and sources need to be referenced in line with the IB academic honesty
policy. Direct quotes must be acknowledged.
• provide students with the opportunity to experience for themselves the beauty, power and usefulness
of mathematics
• encourage students, where appropriate, to discover, use and appreciate the power of technology as a
mathematical tool
• enable students to develop the qualities of patience and persistence, and to reflect on the significance
of their work
• provide opportunities for students to show, with confidence, how they have developed
mathematically.
Criterion A Presentation
Criterion B Mathematical communication
Criterion C Personal engagement
Criterion D Reflection
Criterion E Use of mathematics
Criterion A: Presentation
Achievement level Descriptor
0 The exploration does not reach the standard described by the descriptors below.
1 The exploration has some coherence or some organization.
2 The exploration has some coherence and shows some organization.
3 The exploration is coherent and well organized.
4 The exploration is coherent, well organized, and concise.
The “presentation” criterion assesses the organization and coherence of the exploration.
A coherent exploration is logically developed, easy to follow and meets its aim. This refers to the overall
structure or framework, including introduction, body, conclusion and how well the different parts link to
each other.
A well-organized exploration includes an introduction, describes the aim of the exploration and has a
conclusion. Relevant graphs, tables and diagrams should accompany the work in the appropriate place and
not be attached as appendices to the document. Appendices should be used to include information on
large data sets, additional graphs, diagrams and tables.
A concise exploration does not show irrelevant or unnecessary repetitive calculations, graphs or
descriptions.
The use of technology is not required but encouraged where appropriate. However, the use of analytic
approaches rather than technological ones does not necessarily mean lack of conciseness, and should not
be penalized. This does not mean that repetitive calculations are condoned.
The “mathematical communication” criterion assesses to what extent the student has:
• used appropriate mathematical language (notation, symbols, terminology). Calculator and
computer notation is acceptable only if it is software generated. Otherwise it is expected that students
use appropriate mathematical notation in their work
• defined key terms and variables, where required
• used multiple forms of mathematical representation, such as formulae, diagrams, tables, charts,
graphs and models, where appropriate
• used a deductive method and set out proofs logically where appropriate
Examples of level 1 can include graphs not being labelled, consistent use of computer notation with no
other forms of correct mathematical communication.
Level 4 can be achieved by using only one form of mathematical representation as long as this is
appropriate to the topic being explored. For level 4, any minor errors that do not impair clear
communication should not be penalizsed.
The “personal engagement” criterion assesses the extent to which the student engages with the topic by
exploring the mathematics and making it their own. It is not a measure of effort.
Personal engagement may be recognized in different ways. These include thinking independently or
creatively, presenting mathematical ideas in their own way, exploring the topic from different perspectives,
making and testing predictions. Further (but not exhaustive) examples of personal engagement at different
levels are given in the teacher support material (TSM).
There must be evidence of personal engagement demonstrated in the student’s work. It is not sufficient
that a teacher comments that a student was highly engaged.
Textbook style explorations or reproduction of readily available mathematics without the candidate’s own
perspective are unlikely to achieve the higher levels.
Significant: The student demonstrates authentic personal engagement in the exploration on a few
occasions and it is evident that these drive the exploration forward and help the reader to better
understand the writer’s intentions.
Outstanding: The student demonstrates authentic personal engagement in the exploration in numerous
instances and they are of a high quality. It is evident that these drive the exploration forward in a creative
way. It leaves the impression that the student has developed, through their approach, a complete
understanding of the context of the exploration topic and the reader better understands the writer’s
intentions.
Criterion D: Reflection
Achievement level Descriptor
0 The exploration does not reach the standard described by the descriptors below.
1 There is evidence of limited reflection.
2 There is evidence of meaningful reflection.
3 There is substantial evidence of critical reflection.
The “reflection” criterion assesses how the student reviews, analyses and evaluates the exploration.
Although reflection may be seen in the conclusion to the exploration, it may also be found throughout the
exploration.
Simply describing results represents limited reflection. Further consideration is required to achieve the
higher levels.
Some ways of showing meaningful reflection are: linking to the aims of the exploration, commenting on
what they have learned, considering some limitation or comparing different mathematical approaches.
Critical reflection is reflection that is crucial, deciding or deeply insightful. It will often develop the
exploration by addressing the mathematical results and their impact on the student’s understanding of the
topic. Some ways of showing critical reflection are: considering what next, discussing implications of results,
discussing strengths and weaknesses of approaches, and considering different perspectives.
Substantial evidence means that the critical reflection is present throughout the exploration. If it appears
at the end of the exploration it must be of high quality and demonstrate how it developed the exploration
in order to achieve a level 3.
Further (but not exhaustive) examples of reflection at different levels are given in the teacher support
material (TSM).
Achievement Descriptor
level
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.
The “Use of mathematics” SL criterion assesses to what extent students use mathematics that is relevant to
the exploration.
Relevant refers to mathematics that supports the development of the exploration towards the completion
of its aim. Overly complicated mathematics where simple mathematics would suffice is not relevant.
Students are expected to produce work that is commensurate with the level of the course, which means it
should not be completely based on mathematics listed in the prior learning. The mathematics explored
should either be part of the syllabus, or at a similar level.
A key word in the descriptor is demonstrated. The command term demonstrate means “to make clear by
reasoning or evidence, illustrating with examples or practical application”. Obtaining the correct answer is
not sufficient to demonstrate understanding (even some understanding) in order to achieve level 2 or
higher.
For knowledge and understanding to be thorough it must be demonstrated throughout.
The mathematics can be regarded as correct even if there are occasional minor errors as long as they do
not detract from the flow of the mathematics or lead to an unreasonable outcome.
Students are encouraged to use technology to obtain results where appropriate, but understanding must
be demonstrated in order for the student to achieve higher than level 1, for example merely substituting
values into a formula does not necessarily demonstrate understanding of the results.
The mathematics only needs to be what is required to support the development of the exploration. This
could be a few small elements of mathematics or even a single topic (or sub-topic) from the syllabus. It is
better to do a few things well than a lot of things not so well. If the mathematics used is relevant to the
topic being explored, commensurate with the level of the course and understood by the student, then it
can achieve a high level in this criterion.
Achievement Descriptor
level
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.
The “Use of mathematics” HL criterion assesses to what extent students use relevant mathematics in the
exploration.
Students are expected to produce work that is commensurate with the level of the course, which means it
should not be completely based on mathematics listed in the prior learning. The mathematics explored
should either be part of the syllabus, at a similar level or slightly beyond. However, mathematics of a level
slightly beyond the syllabus is not required to achieve the highest levels.
A key word in the descriptor is demonstrated. The command term demonstrate means to make clear by
reasoning or evidence, illustrating with examples or practical application. Obtaining the correct answer is
not sufficient to demonstrate understanding (even some understanding) in order to achieve level 2 or
higher.
For knowledge and understanding to be thorough it must be demonstrated throughout. Lines of
reasoning must be shown to justify steps in the mathematical development of the exploration.
Relevant refers to mathematics that supports the development of the exploration towards the completion
of its aim. Overly complicated mathematics where simple mathematics would suffice is not relevant.
The mathematics can be regarded as correct even if there are occasional minor errors as long as they do
not detract from the flow of the mathematics or lead to an unreasonable outcome. Precise mathematics is
error-free and uses an appropriate level of accuracy at all times.
Sophistication: To be considered as sophisticated the mathematics used should be commensurate with
the HL syllabus or, if contained in the SL syllabus, the mathematics has been used in a complex way that is
beyond what could reasonably be expected of an SL student. Sophistication in mathematics may include
understanding and using challenging mathematical concepts, looking at a problem from different
perspectives and seeing underlying structures to link different areas of mathematics.
Rigour involves clarity of logic and language when making mathematical arguments and calculations.
Mathematical claims relevant to the development of the exploration must be justified or proven.
Students are encouraged to use technology to obtain results where appropriate, but understanding must
be demonstrated in order for the student to achieve level 1 or higher, for example merely substituting
values into a formula does not necessarily demonstrate understanding of the results.
The mathematics only needs to be what is required to support the development of the exploration. This
could be a few small elements of mathematics or even a single topic (or sub-topic) from the syllabus. It is
better to do a few things well than a lot of things not so well. If the mathematics used is relevant to the
topic being explored, commensurate with the level of the course and understood by the student, then it
can achieve a high level in this criterion.
Notation list
There are various systems of notation in use, and the IB has chosen to adopt a system based on the
recommendations of the International Organization for Standardization (ISO). This notation is used in the
examination papers for this course without explanation. If forms of notation other than those listed in this
guide are used on a particular examination paper, they are defined within the question in which they
appear.
Because students are required to recognize, though not necessarily use, IB notation in examinations, it is
recommended that teachers introduce students to this notation at the earliest opportunity. Students are
not allowed access to information about this notation in the examinations.
Students must always use correct mathematical notation, not calculator notation.
SL and HL
ℕ the set of positive integers and zero, {0, 1, 2, 3, ...}
ℤ the set of integers, {0, ± 1, ± 2, ± 3, ...}
≡ identity
≈ is approximately equal to
> is greater than
≥ is greater than or equal to
< is less than
≤ is less than or equal to
≯ is not greater than
≮ is not less than
⇒ implies
⇔ implies and is implied by
un the nth term of a sequence or series
d the common difference of an arithmetic sequence
r the common ratio of a geometric sequence
Sn the sum of the first n terms of a sequence, u1 + u2 + ... + un
n! n(n − 1)(n − 2) . . . 3 × 2 × 1
nCr n!
r!(n − r)!
∆ the discriminant of a quadratic equation, Δ = b2 − 4ac
f (x) the image of x under the function f
∫
b the definite integral of y with respect to x between the limits
ydx
a x = a and x = b
σ2 population variance
P(X = x) the probability that the random variable X takes the value x
B(n, p) binomial distribution with parameters n and p
AHL only
ℂ the set of complex numbers, {a + bi | a , b ∈ ℝ}
i −1 where i2 = − 1
z a complex number
z* the complex conjugate of z
z the modulus of z
argz the argument of z
Rez the real part of z
Imz the imaginary part of z
cisθ cosθ + isinθ
n
Pr n!
(n − r)!
⇐ is implied by
[a, b] the closed interval a ≤ x ≤ b
]a, b[ the open interval a < x < b
f :A → B f is a function under which each element of a set A has an
image in set B.
lim f (x) the limit of f (x) as x tends to a
x→a