IB MYP Sciences Curriculum & Assessment Guide (Years 1 – 5)

The IB Middle Years Programme (MYP) Science curriculum nurtures curiosity, investigation, and analytical thinking. Students learn to explore scientific ideas through inquiry, experimentation, and real-world connections across biology, chemistry, physics, and environmental science. Over five years, learners evolve from exploring basic observations to conducting complex investigations that model how scientists work in the real world.

Structure of MYP Sciences
  • Years 1–3 (Foundation Sciences): Observation, measurement, introduction to biology, chemistry, and physics concepts.
  • Years 4–5 (Applied Sciences): Experimental design, evaluation, data processing, and interdisciplinary connections.
Assessment Criteria (A – D)
  • A: Knowing & Understanding
  • B: Inquiring & Designing
  • C: Processing & Evaluating
  • D: Reflecting on the Impacts of Science

Each criterion is assessed on an 8-point scale, giving a total of 32 per subject, later converted to a 1–7 grade.

Criterion A – Knowing & Understanding

Apply scientific knowledge and explain relationships between science and real-world issues.

Year Core Topics Students Should Be Able To … Preparation & Practice
MYP Year 1 / Year 7 / Grade 6 Properties of matter, states of matter, forces, simple energy forms, habitats Recall key terms, describe processes (melting, magnetism, food chains), classify materials Observe daily phenomena; use vocabulary flashcards; label diagrams
MYP Year 2 / Year 8 / Grade 7 Cells, energy transfer, mixtures & solutions, motion, simple machines Explain relationships using diagrams and data Use models (atom kits, pulleys); relate energy to daily life
MYP Year 3 / Year 9 / Grade 8 Human body systems, chemical reactions, sound & light, ecosystems Explain cause–effect using scientific language; identify variables Summarise textbook paragraphs into concept maps
MYP Year 4 / Year 10 / Grade 9 Atomic structure, genetics, ecology, Newton’s laws Analyse data; compare scientific models; link micro ↔ macro concepts Practise past short-answer questions and draw process flowcharts
MYP Year 5 / Year 11 / Grade 10 Waves, electricity, periodic table trends, evolution, energy systems Synthesise ideas across disciplines; construct scientific arguments Solve IB-style extended-response questions; justify reasoning
Criterion B – Inquiring & Designing

Plan and design scientific investigations to explore questions and test hypotheses.

Year Focus of Inquiry What Students Produce Practice Strategies
MYP Year 1 / Year 7 / Grade 6 Ask simple, testable questions (“Which melts faster?”) Step-by-step plan, labelled diagram Use simple household experiments (melting ice, seed growth)
MYP Year 2 / Year 8 / Grade 7 Identify independent/dependent variables; plan fair tests Hypothesis + variable table Predict outcomes before testing; discuss safety & fairness
MYP Year 3 / Year 9 / Grade 8 Design small investigations; select materials/equipment Complete lab report plan with control variables Use IB lab templates; focus on repeatability
MYP Year 4 / Year 10 / Grade 9 Design multivariable experiments; choose measurement tools Formal design report with graphs & justification Practise using data-loggers / spreadsheets
MYP Year 5 / Year 11 / Grade 10 Design independent investigations or simulations Full inquiry plan: rationale, hypothesis, risk assessment Mirror DP IA expectations: pilot tests, refine variables
Criterion C – Processing & Evaluating

Collect, process, present and analyse data to draw valid conclusions.

Year Skills Emphasised Evidence Required How to Prepare
MYP Year 1 / Year 7 / Grade 6 Record observations accurately (tables, drawings) Data table, labelled diagram Practise measuring with standard units
MYP Year 2 / Year 8 / Grade 7 Plot bar & line graphs, calculate averages Simple graph + conclusion Use Excel or graph paper regularly
MYP Year 3 / Year 9 / Grade 8 Identify anomalies, suggest reasons for error Graph with trend line + written evaluation Compare results with peers; discuss reliability
MYP Year 4 / Year 10 / Grade 9 Quantitative data analysis, gradients, uncertainty Processed data table with % error & conclusion Learn to show working and justify precision
MYP Year 5 / Year 11 / Grade 10 Evaluate validity & reliability; link data to theory Full analysis report with evaluation paragraph Study exemplar lab reports; highlight strengths & limitations
Criterion D – Reflecting on the Impacts of Science
Year Typical Themes What Students Should Discuss Activity Ideas
MYP Year 1 / Year 7 / Grade 6 How science helps everyday life (light, magnets, recycling) Identify benefits of simple technologies Create posters on “Science in My Home”
MYP Year 2 / Year 8 / Grade 7 Environmental changes, pollution, energy use Compare positive / negative effects Write short paragraphs with evidence
MYP Year 3 / Year 9 / Grade 8 Sustainable development, human impact Explain consequences and suggest actions Mini-debates: renewable vs non-renewable
MYP Year 4 / Year 10 / Grade 9 Biotechnology, resource management, climate change Evaluate perspectives and ethics Case-study discussions; opinion essays
MYP Year 5 / Year 11 / Grade 10 Genetic engineering, AI, nuclear energy, health tech Present reasoned judgment backed by science Research blog / presentation connecting science and society
Year-by-Year Overview by Discipline
Strand MYP Year 1 / Year 7 / Grade 6 MYP Year 2 / Year 8 / Grade 7 MYP Year 3 / Year 9 / Grade 8 MYP Year 4 / Year 10 / Grade 9 MYP Year 5 / Year 11 / Grade 10
Biology Living things, habitats Cells, body systems Ecology, classification Genetics, evolution basics DNA, inheritance, biotechnology
Chemistry Matter, mixtures Elements, compounds Acids, reactions Atomic models, bonding Stoichiometry, periodic trends
Physics Forces, motion, energy Simple machines, sound Light, electricity Motion equations, energy transfer Waves, electromagnetism
Earth & Space Seasons, weather Rock cycle, water Climate, resources Plate tectonics Space exploration, sustainability
Interdisciplinary Focus & ATL Skills
  • Thinking: Form hypotheses, analyse patterns, evaluate results.
  • Research: Gather reliable sources, design fair tests.
  • Communication: Use graphs, units, and formal structure in lab reports.
  • Self-Management: Time labs, keep accurate notes.
  • Social: Collaborate safely in investigations.

Encourage reflection after each unit: “What did my data show?” and “How is this connected to the real world?”

Preparation Timeline
Term Focus Student Tasks
Term 1 Review scientific method; basics of measurement Short investigations; vocabulary quizzes
Term 2 Design investigations; apply Criteria A & B Group experiments with formal plans
Term 3 Data analysis & evaluation (Criterion C) Graphing workshops; peer feedback
Term 4 Ethics & reflection (Criterion D); end-of-year assessment Research project or “Science & Society” essay
Parent Support Tips
  • Discuss science in everyday life — cooking, weather, energy, environment.
  • Help children label diagrams and summarise concepts visually.
  • Watch science documentaries together; encourage curiosity and questions.
  • Review lab report rubrics and feedback comments to track growth.