Anthropology · IA Observation study
Saved Free

Write a top-mark Anthropology IA.

A step-by-step practice frame for the IB Social & Cultural Anthropology Internal Assessment — an Observation and critique. Directly observe a social setting ethically, write the observation, then critique your own methods, positionality and ethics reflexively (HL adds engaging with published anthropology) — with the assessment criteria built in.

The planning sections are free — unlock every remaining section of this tool for a one-time £9.99, or get the 🎒 Diploma Pass — every subject for a one-time £24.99. No subscription.

📄 Official IB subject brief (ibo.org ↗) — your teacher or IB coordinator can share the full subject guide.

How it's marked. On an in-person observation of a social setting you directly observed, plus a critique that reflexively evaluates your methods, positionality, ethics and the limits of your data (HL adds engaging with published anthropology) — weighted 25% SL / 20% HL.
The rule that defines a strong study: The critique — reflexivity, method and positionality — is where the marks are won, not the description: directly observe ethically, then critically evaluate how you came to see what you saw.
Untitled study 0 words

IB Social & Cultural Anthropology IA help, examiner-written

The IB Social & Cultural Anthropology Internal Assessment is a short written study, roughly 1,500–2,000 words, built on first-hand engagement with anthropological practice. You make a focused observation of an everyday social setting or cultural practice you can watch ethically — a café counter, a queue, a shared meal, a market stall, a school or sporting routine — produce a rich descriptive account, or "thick description," and then analyse it through recognised anthropological concepts and theory. This examiner-written practice frame walks you through the method step by step: choose an observable, ethical setting; decide which concept or concepts will frame it; plan how you will observe, take field notes and handle consent; write a thick description that records not just what happens but what it appears to mean to the people involved; and analyse that description through concepts such as ritual, reciprocity, exchange, identity, kinship or symbolism.

How the Anthropology IA is marked

The IA is internally assessed on the quality of your engagement with anthropological practice: how focused and ethical your observation is, how rich and concrete your description is, how aptly and insightfully you apply anthropological concepts and theory, and how genuinely reflexive your evaluation is. Top-band studies describe thickly, ground every analytical claim in observed detail, keep the emic view (how insiders understand the practice) distinct from the etic view (your outside analytical reading), and reflect honestly on how the observer's own position, assumptions and method shaped the account.

Thick description, the emic/etic distinction & reflexivity

The study is built around observation, not opinion. Describe the setting concretely and respectfully before you interpret it; read that detail through anthropological concepts and theory rather than naming a concept and moving on; and distinguish the participants' own understanding from your analytical reading. Throughout, stay reflexive — aware that you are an observer with a position, assumptions and limits — and stay ethical: seek consent where needed, do no harm, and never identify private individuals. The strongest studies acknowledge their own limits rather than over-generalising about a whole society.

Free to start · examiner-written

It is free to start: the planning sections are free, and the later sections are a one-time unlock per tool. Sign in to save your work and sync it across devices.