Igcse Practical Revision Guide
Igcse Practical Revision Guide
Introduction
In both papers, you may be asked to recall and/or describe practicals you
have covered within the course and which are summarised within this
document. When putting together practical-based questions, the examiners
will have assumed that you are familiar with the processes involved. These
are detailed in the back of your textbook in Appendix A on pages 247 254.
Generally, an investigation will be made up of 4 stages summarised as
follows:
Planning
You may be asked to describe an investigation in the exam. These questions
are usually worth 6
marks.
You must use CORMS to answer your question.
O Organism. You need to decide what organism you are going to study
and whether you are going to use more than one individual, of the same sex,
age, health etc.
S Same. State the variables that should kept the same. E.g. specified
concentrations, volumes, times, age, sex etc.
C- I would use different PHs 2, 4,6, 10, 12 and a control with water
O- I would use the same species of yeast at the same age (2 days)
R- I would repeat the experiment three times
M- I would measure the growth of yeast by collecting CO2 in a measuring
cylinder in ml for 10 minutes
OR I would count the bubbles produced by yeast for 10 minutes
OR I would count the number of yeast using a microscope.
S I would keep the temperature the same, the mass of yeast in grams, the
species and growth phase of yeast etc
Obtaining Evidence
Of most importance is that you can draw up a table of results:
Analysing
You should be able to describe what the results show e.g. describe to
a bind person what is happening in the graph, USE NUMNERS AND
UNITS
Now you must use your detailed biological knowledge to explain the
results. This may be a repeat what you wrote in your prediction.
If your actual results are different from your predicted results, you
should attempt to explain why.
Evaluation
Not all experiments work out as expected, and for good reasons.
Finally, you should be able to describe how you might extend this
investigation to provide additional relevant evidence.
Food
Glucose
Reagent
Heat with
Starch
Lipid
Test Positive
Brick Red
Test Negative
Stays Blue
Benedicts
Add Iodine
Shake with
Blue / Black
White cloudy
Orange / Brown
No emulsion
ethanol
layer on top
formed
Mauve / Lilac
Stays blue
Protein
water
Add Biuret
reagent
describe simple experiments on diffusion and osmosis using living and nonliving systems. (pp10&11) (pp126-128)
Diffusion
a.
Cubes of agar containing pH indicator
Cut up into different shapes / sizes
Put into dilute acid
Time taken to change colour noted
b.
Ammonium hydroxide gas (an alkali) travelling in a tube
Pieces of red litmus placed at set distances (10cm) along tube
Time taken for each piece of litmus to turn blue recorded
Comparing different concentrations of ammonium hydroxide
Osmosis (Linked to water potential)
a.
Visking tubing (dialysis tubing) tied at one end
Filled with sucrose solution
Other end attached to a capillary tube
The level of the sucrose can be noted before and after
Tubing has been placed in a beaker of water for about thirty minutes.
b.
Onion epidermis
Cut into squares and mounted on slides
In different concentrations of sucrose solution
Observing under a microscope
Shows the effects of osmosis turgor, plasmolysis, flaccidity.
c.
Red blood cells
Mounted on slides
In hypotonic, isotonic and hypertonic saline
Observing under a microscope
Shows the effects of osmosis bursting, shrinking.
Potato Chip Experiment
Potato slices/chips of fixed dimensions (cork borer)
Mass recorded before
Placed into solution of varying water potential (saline solution)
Left for 60 minutes
Dried
Massed again
Several chips done for each solution
% change in mass calculated
7
Means calculated
Graph drawn
Isotonic point determined
gas collecting in
tube
boiling tube
lamp
thermometer
water
inverted
funnel
water plant
put into very hot/boiling water for one minute (to destroy the cell
membranes so that chlorophyll molecules can pass through)
put into hot ethanol (to remove/dissolve the green chlorophyll)
8
put leaf into water (to rehydrate and soften leaf so that it can be spread
out)
put iodine solution onto the leaf blue-black colour will show the
presence of starch.
C h lo r o p h y ll
P la n t r e m o v e d f r o m c u p b o a r d
a n d a lu m i n i u m f o i l p la c e d o n
o n e o f le a v e s
N o c h lo r o p h y ll
aluminium foil
V a r i e g a t e d p o t p la n t
p la c e d i n d a r k
c u p b o ard fo r 2 d ay s
S ta g e 1
S ta g e 2
P la n t k e p t i n
s u n li g h t f o r 6
h o u rs
L e a f a f t e r t e s t in g f o r s t a r c h
S ta g e 3
A
F o il r e m o v e d a n d
le a f t e s t e d f o r
s ta rc h
B
C
S ta g e 4
S ta g e 5
recall how to carry out a simple experiment to determine the energy content
in a food sample. (pp45)
A glass tube runs from inside the flask, through the bung and into an
indicator solution of either limewater or hydrogen carbonate. The
carbon dioxide produced changes the colour of the indicator solution.
To show heat production the flask needs a cotton wool bung with a
thermometer going through the bung into the flask.
10
Dark
Dim Light
Control no leaf
A variation could involve the use of water snails or, if not available,
small land insects placed on a gauze platform above the indicator, with
and without the water plant.
11
12
tap open
3-way tap
(open)
capillary
tube
water bath
tap closed
yeast and
glucose A
Other Experiments
A simple experiment to investigate the effect of exercise on heart rate in
humans
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