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Internal Assessment · Writing

Introduction

Criterion A · 6 marks · ~500 words

What is the Introduction?

The introduction sets the foundation for your entire research proposal. It must establish a clear, focused aim, situate the investigation within a real-world context, and demonstrate engagement with existing psychological research. Examiners use the introduction to judge whether your proposal is purposeful, well-grounded, and relevant to the population you intend to study.

The introduction should be approximately 500 words. Every element must be explicitly linked back to your aim and population of interest.

Required Elements

1. A clearly stated and sharply focused aim

The aim must be relevant to the stated real-life problem and focused on the impact on the population of interest. Avoid vague aims such as "the effects of stress" — sharpen to a measurable focus such as "the impact of exam stress on memory recall in adolescents aged 16–18 in a secondary school setting."

2. A real-life problem described in detail, with its impact on the population of interest explained

The IA is an opportunity to investigate an area of genuine interest. Examples of suitable topics include sleep and mental health, body image and self-esteem, or stress and memory. You must explain why this problem matters for your specific population — for example, "exam stress is a major concern in school well-being policies and has been shown to impair academic performance." The impact must be addressed, not merely mentioned.

3. Findings and key conclusions of two pieces of relevant research, clearly explained

Include a brief literature review covering the findings and key conclusions (abstracts) of two pieces of relevant research. No procedural details are required unless directly relevant to your proposal (e.g., if you plan to use a similar sample). Read broadly around psychological investigations relevant to your real-life problem before selecting the two studies. Both studies must be explicitly linked to your investigation — not just mentioned in passing.

IB Marking Scheme — Criterion A: Introduction

MarksLevel Descriptor
0The work does not reach a standard described by the descriptors below.
1–2
  • The aim or research question is stated but not clearly expressed or is too broad.
  • The real-life problem is stated.
  • The findings and conclusions of two pieces of research are not clearly stated and are not made relevant to the investigation, or only one piece of research is included.
3–4
  • The aim or research question is clearly stated but only partially focused.
  • The real-life problem is described, but the impact on the population of interest is not addressed.
  • Relevant findings and conclusions of two pieces of research are described and linked to the investigation or only one is explained and linked to the investigation.
5–6
  • The aim or research question is clearly stated and focused.
  • The real-life problem is described and the impact on the population of interest is explained.
  • Relevant findings and conclusions of two pieces of research are explained and linked to the investigation.

Tips for Scoring 5–6

Sharpen your aim: Avoid vague aims ("effects of stress"). Sharpen to a measurable focus — "impact of exam stress on memory recall in adolescents aged 16–18."

Show why the problem matters: Explain why the problem is significant for your chosen population — e.g., "exam stress is a major concern in school well-being policies."

Select directly relevant studies: Choose studies that connect directly to your proposal, not just tangentially related research. Both studies must be explicitly linked to your investigation.

Explain, don't just describe: At the 5–6 level, you must explain the findings and their relevance — not just state or describe them.

Connections to IB Psychology Concepts

The introduction naturally engages several of the six key IB Psychology concepts. Being aware of these connections can strengthen your writing:

Perspective

You will explore a real-life problem through a biological, cognitive, or sociocultural lens, using psychological theories, models, and research to guide your proposal.

Causality

Your research question implicitly addresses the type of relationship you are investigating — correlational, causal, or descriptive.

Change

The introduction should hint at how your research could create change — addressing the needs of your population or informing future research and policy.

Responsibility

Choosing a topic that is ethically appropriate and relevant to a real-world population reflects your responsibility as a researcher.