What Actually Fits for MYP Biology (From My Planner)

I plan IB · MYP biology on Sunday evenings with a cup of tea and my planner open to the next inquiry question. For Years 3–5 I rotate through Cells, Human Systems, Genetics, and Ecology, but the pathway pieces don’t change: a clear statement of inquiry, the right global context, and assessment mapped to Criteria A–D. The internet is full of “on-topic” worksheets that hit facts about osmosis or food webs but skip command terms or don’t point anywhere near Criteria B or D. That’s what burns time midweek.

Over the last few years I’ve built a habit: I start with the MYP spine, then layer resources only if they fit the assessment language. I’ll sketch the SOI, the related concepts (like Systems and Relationships), the ATL focus, and only then hunt for tasks. I don’t need anything flashy—just clear, editable pieces I can tune. ClassPods sits in the background for me as a place to corral lesson packs and keep my checks consistent, but the non‑negotiables are still mine: alignment, vocabulary, and honest formative feedback that points to the rubrics my students will actually meet.

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Where MYP biology actually lives in the Sciences

Last Wednesday with my MYP Year 4 group, a tidy “cell structure” slideshow looked fine… until I tried to anchor it to our statement of inquiry on “Systems maintain stability through exchange.” No global context, no related concepts, no link to Criterion D. That’s the common fit issue: many biology resources are topic-right but pathway-wrong.

In MYP, Biology sits inside Sciences with inquiry questions (factual, conceptual, debatable), command terms that drive rigor, and tasks balanced across Criteria A–D. A perfect mitosis diagram is useless if students never “Explain” or “Evaluate” as the rubrics expect. Same for labs: a clever diffusion demo without variable control or reflection isn’t hitting B or C.

So my sanity check starts with the SOI and global context (often Scientific and technical innovation for Cells), then related concepts (Systems, Change), then assessment slots. If a resource doesn’t help me build toward those, I park it. If you want to see what other science teachers are sharing, you can skim community science packs in the library and note which ones speak MYP from the start.

Quick tests I run for MYP alignment (60-second audit)

Monday after lunch, my Year 5 class mixed up “Explain” and “Evaluate” on a genetics task. That reminded me why I never trust a neat-looking worksheet. I run a short audit before anything hits desks, and I’ll sometimes paste a draft into ClassPods just to sanity-check verbs and task framing.

My checks are simple:

  • Command terms match the target bands: Describe/Explain for mid-bands, Evaluate/Justify/Discuss to stretch.
  • Criteria coverage is explicit: A for concepts, B for design, C for processing/evaluating, D for impacts. If I can’t pencil a criterion letter on the task, it’s not ready.
  • Inquiry questions are present and varied: at least one conceptual (“How do systems maintain homeostasis?”) and one debatable (“Should we use CRISPR in crops?”).
  • Data handling is real: numbers to analyze, not just pretty pictures.

If you want to generate a draft aligned to these checks and then edit it, you can spin up a starter lesson pack using this demo and stress-test the verbs against your rubrics.

A 70‑minute cells lesson that lands (Y4)

Tuesday 10:40, Week 2 of our Cells unit with Year 4, I ran the following. It’s built around osmosis with potato cores—unfancy, but it nails the criteria. I drafted the skeleton in ClassPods and then swapped in our exact SOI and ATL focus.

  • Objective (3 min): Students will Explain osmosis using particle movement and Evaluate method reliability (A i–ii, C i–iii).
  • Starter (8 min): Two images: turgid vs. plasmolyzed cells. Factual Q: “What’s different?” Conceptual Q: “How does water know where to go?” Quick think-pair-share; collect verbs on the board.
  • Main task (35 min): Potato core osmosis lab. Students design concentrations (B i–ii), control variables, measure mass change. Midway mini-lesson on calculating percentage change and sources of error (C i–ii). Worked example on the board: sample data set with one outlier—students decide whether to keep or discard with justification.
  • Formative check (12 min): Exit slip: one “Explain” and one “Evaluate” prompt tied to their data. I mark with a fast A/C grid and hand two sentence stems.
  • Plenary (12 min): Debatable Q for D: “Should sports drinks be hypotonic or hypertonic?” Students argue using evidence from their results.

If you like the flow and want a editable version with the stems and grid, you can duplicate my pack and tweak it after signing in.

Copy-and-adapt: Lab report rubric tuned to MYP Biology

Friday’s practicals spill into Monday unless my expectations are crystal. Here’s the rubric skeleton I paste under every report brief so students aim at MYP science Criteria B/C/D without me re-explaining. Tweak the context (osmosis, enzymes, photosynthesis) and you’re set.

  • Criterion B: Inquiring and designing
    1–2: Question is vague; method lists steps without variables.
    3–4: Testable question; basic control of one variable; limited range.
    5–6: Clear, focused question; controls key variables (e.g., temperature, concentration); appropriate range and repeats.
    7–8: Method anticipates error; justified ranges; risk/safety noted.
  • Criterion C: Processing and evaluating
    1–2: Raw data only; conclusions are descriptive.
    3–4: Organized table; simple graph; conclusion restates trend; mentions one limitation.
    5–6: Correct units/uncertainty; appropriate graph; conclusion explains trend with particle model; evaluates method with evidence.
    7–8: Anomalies treated; error analysis quantified; improvements justified by data.
  • Criterion D: Reflecting on impacts of science
    1–2: One impact named.
    3–4: Local context considered; limited sources.
    5–6: Social/environmental impact analyzed with sources.
    7–8: Balanced evaluation including ethics; well-cited perspectives.

If you want to drop this straight into a planning doc and generate a matching task sheet, I keep a copy ready to adapt in my planner.

Mixed-language tweaks, pacing, and extending to homework

Thursday double with my bilingual Year 3s, we hit diffusion and half the class defaulted to home-language explanations. I’m fine with that, as long as we land the MYP verbs in English by the end. I pre-teach a tiny glossary (diffuse, gradient, membrane) with sentence frames: “Water will move from ___ to ___ because ___.” ClassPods helps me keep the frames consistent across tasks so families see the same wording at home.

For pacing, I timebox labs (design 10, test 20, analyze 10) and keep a visible criteria tracker: today we’re on B and C. Strugglers get a worked example; finishers extend to D with an ethics angle—microplastics across food webs is a solid hook.

Homework becomes retrieval, not busywork: two command-term questions (A) and one critique (C). By week’s end, I stage a short dual-language quiz where definitions can be in the strongest language but explanations must use the MYP verb in English. If you’d like a ready-made revision set built from your lesson text, you can generate a quick pack from the same notes and trim it to your class.

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Biology for IB · MYP on ClassPods.

Open the right workflow, build a first draft fast, and keep the review step inside the same flow.

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