The Anthropology IA is the piece of coursework where you stop reading about anthropology and start doing it. Rather than summarising a textbook debate, you go out and watch a real corner of social life unfold in front of you, write down what you see in unflinching detail, and then make sense of it the way an anthropologist would. Most students lose marks not because they cannot describe a scene, but because they choose a setting too sprawling to observe meaningfully, name a concept without applying it, or write as though they themselves were never standing there. This guide walks through the whole thing: what the study actually asks of you, what each part rewards, exactly how to build it, and what separates a thin retelling from a genuinely anthropological account.
It helps to be clear about what kind of work this is from the outset. The Anthropology IA is not an essay that argues a thesis from the library, and it is not a survey that reports what other people have written about a culture. It is a small piece of fieldwork. You become, briefly and modestly, an ethnographer: you select a slice of everyday life, you observe it carefully and ethically, and you produce a written account that is faithful both to what happened and to what it appeared to mean to the people involved. Everything that earns marks flows from taking that role seriously. A student who treats the observation as a chore to get through before the "real" analysis tends to produce a thin description that the analysis then has nothing to stand on. A student who treats the observation as the heart of the study — who comes back from the café counter or the market stall with pages of concrete, specific notes — has the raw material from which strong analysis and honest reflexivity can be built.
The other thing worth grasping early is that this study deliberately puts you in the picture. In many subjects the marker wants you to disappear behind the evidence and write as a neutral voice. Anthropology does the opposite. Because you are the instrument through which the setting is observed, who you are matters: your background, your familiarity or strangeness, where you positioned yourself, and what you already assumed all shaped the account you produced. Far from being a weakness to hide, that fact is something the study explicitly rewards you for examining. The pages that follow keep returning to it, because the difference between a competent Anthropology IA and a top-band one is very often the difference between a student who notices their own presence and one who pretends it away.
The IB Anthropology IA at a glance
The Social & Cultural Anthropology IA is a short written study grounded in a single first-hand observation of a real social setting. You watch an everyday scene, ethically and at close range, and produce what anthropologists call a thick description: a rich account of what happens and what it appears to mean to the people involved. You then interpret that description through recognised anthropological concepts, and finish with a reflexive critique that turns the analytical lens back on yourself — your position, your assumptions, and the limits of what one short observation can reveal. The work that scores is the work that holds all four of those together rather than stopping at the description.
Notice what these four cards do not contain. There is no mark total to chase and no fixed word count to hit precisely, because the study is judged on the quality of your engagement rather than on quantity. That is liberating and dangerous in equal measure. It is liberating because you are not trying to pad an account to a target; it is dangerous because students sometimes read the absence of a hard length as permission to be brief, and a study that is too short simply cannot describe thickly or reflect deeply enough to reach the upper bands. Treat the four cards as a checklist of qualities every page should keep serving: is the observation first-hand and ethical, is the description genuinely thick, is a concept actually being applied, and is the critique honestly reflexive? If any one of those is missing, no amount of polish elsewhere will compensate.
How the Anthropology IA is judged: what each part rewards
The study is assessed on the quality of your engagement with anthropological practice. Build it part by part, and check what each part is actually rewarding:
The observation
A first-hand observation of a real, everyday social setting, conducted ethically, that produces a thick description — rich detail of what happens and what it means to the participants, recorded respectfully and concretely rather than summarised from memory.
Trap: a thin, surface-level description that lists actions without their texture or apparent meaning.
Analysis through concepts
Interpreting the observation using anthropological concepts — ritual, reciprocity, exchange, symbolism, kinship, identity — so that each analytical claim is anchored in something you actually saw, and the concept genuinely illuminates the scene rather than merely labelling it.
Trap: describing the setting at length without applying any concept to it.
Critique & reflexivity
Reflecting on the observer's own position, assumptions and presence, and on the limits of the observation — how being who you are, where you stood, and what you already believed shaped what you were able to notice and what you may have missed.
Trap: no reflexivity — writing as if the observer were invisible, neutral or absent from the scene.
Structure & referencing
A clear structure that moves from setting and method through description and analysis to reflexive critique, with accurate referencing of the anthropological sources and concepts you draw on, in a consistent style.
Trap: naming theorists or concepts loosely with no proper citation, or a study that wanders without a clear shape.
Build it part by part — free
The Anthropology IA frame walks you through each of these parts with guidance beside you, ✗-weak vs ✓-strong examples for the description, the concept analysis and the reflexive critique, and a live check of what is still missing for the top band. The planning sections are free.
Open the Anthropology IA frame →How to write an Anthropology IA, step by step
- Choose an everyday social setting you can observe ethically. Pick a bounded, public or consented scene you can watch first-hand and repeatedly without intruding on privacy — a queue, a shared meal, a market exchange — not a setting too big or too public to observe meaningfully.
- Observe and take detailed field notes. Watch closely and record concrete notes: who does what, in what order, with which gestures and words, and what it appears to mean to the people there. Capture detail you cannot reconstruct later.
- Write a thick description. Turn your field notes into a rich, layered account that captures not only the surface action but its texture and apparent significance for the participants — describe before you interpret.
- Interpret it through anthropological concepts. Read the description through recognised concepts such as ritual, reciprocity, exchange, symbolism, kinship or identity, grounding every analytical claim in observed detail rather than asserting it.
- Critique reflexively. Reflect honestly on your own position and presence, the assumptions you brought, and the limits of what a single short observation can reveal — this is where the strongest studies pull ahead.
- Reference. Structure the study clearly and reference every concept and source accurately and consistently throughout.
Anthropology IA structure: what goes in each part
There is no single mandated layout, but the clearest structure that maps onto what is rewarded is:
- The setting & why it was chosen — the social scene, its boundaries, and why it is anthropologically worth observing.
- Method & ethics — how you observed, what field notes you took, how you handled consent, privacy and anonymity.
- Thick description — a rich, concrete account of what happens and what it appears to mean to the participants.
- Analysis through concepts — interpretation of the description through named anthropological concepts, anchored in observed detail.
- Reflexive critique — your position, assumptions and presence, and the limits of the observation.
- References — accurate, consistent citation of the concepts and sources you use.
A word on each part is worth adding, because the structure is where students most often go astray. The temptation is to spend almost the whole study on the description — it is the most enjoyable part to write and the easiest to fill with detail — and then to bolt a paragraph of analysis and a sentence of reflexivity onto the end. Resist this. The description earns its place by being rich, but it is the foundation, not the building. The analysis is where you show you can think like an anthropologist, reading the detail you gathered through a concept that genuinely fits it. And the reflexive critique, short though it may be, is disproportionately important: it is the part that most clearly separates students who understand what anthropology is from those who have merely described something. Budget your length so that analysis and reflexivity each get the room they need to be more than gestures.
The method and ethics section deserves particular care, because it is easy to treat as paperwork. It is not. How you observed shapes what you could see, so a frank account of your method — where you stood, how long you watched, whether people knew you were observing — is part of the evidence, not a preamble to it. Likewise, ethics is assessed and woven through the whole study rather than confined to a box. Choosing a public or consented setting, seeking permission where a space is not clearly open, doing no harm, and anonymising everyone are not hurdles to clear before the interesting work begins; they are part of doing the work well, and a study that treats people as specimens rather than participants loses marks even when its description is vivid.
What a strong vs weak Anthropology IA looks like
The fastest way to lift your marks is to see the difference. Here is the same work done two ways. Read each pair not as a rule to copy but as an illustration of a habit: narrowing the setting, anchoring a concept in observed detail, and owning your own position rather than writing yourself out of the scene.
The setting
Applying a concept
Reflexivity
Need a setting first?
Browse 24 examiner-ranked Anthropology observation ideas, each with the setting, the concept and why it yields reflexive analysis — then drop one straight into the frame.
See 24 Anthropology IA ideas →Common mistakes that cost marks
- A setting too big to observe. "Coffee culture" or "my school" cannot be watched as a scene — narrow it to one bounded, repeatable moment.
- Thin description. Listing actions without their texture or apparent meaning caps the study before the analysis even begins.
- Naming a concept without applying it. A concept that labels the scene but never illuminates an observed detail earns nothing.
- No reflexivity. Writing as if you were invisible or neutral is the single most common reason strong descriptions miss the top band.
- Ignoring ethics. Observing private individuals without consent, or identifying people, undermines the study however rich the detail.
- Over-generalising. Treating one short observation as proof of how a whole society behaves reads as a failure of anthropological judgement.
- Loose referencing. Mentioning theorists by name with no proper citation weakens the structure-and-referencing part.
Anthropology IA — frequently asked questions
What is the IB Anthropology IA?
It is a short written study built on a first-hand observation of an everyday social setting, producing a thick description that is then analysed through anthropological concepts and critiqued reflexively.
What is a thick description in the Anthropology IA?
A rich, detailed account of what happens in a setting and what it appears to mean to the people involved — not just the surface action, but its texture and significance — written before you interpret it.
What is reflexivity, and why does it matter?
Reflexivity is being honest about how your own position, presence and assumptions shaped what you were able to observe. A study that pretends the observer was invisible or neutral cannot reach the top band — the reflexive critique is where strong studies pull ahead.
How do I choose an ethical observation setting?
Choose a public or consented everyday scene you can watch without intruding on privacy or deceiving anyone, seek permission where the space is not clearly public, do no harm, and anonymise everyone in your write-up.
Can I use AI to write my Anthropology IA?
The IB permits AI tools provided you acknowledge them honestly — anything used directly must be cited, and passing AI work off as your own is academic misconduct. The observation, analysis and reflexive critique must be your own. IA Studio is a writing frame: you write your IA, with built-in AI-acknowledgement guidance.
From a setting to a top-band IA
Bringing it together, the difference between an average Anthropology IA and a top-band one rarely comes down to the setting you chose; almost any everyday scene can yield a strong study, and almost any can yield a weak one. What matters is how you handle it. The top-band studies share a small set of habits. They observe something genuinely bounded, so the description can be thick rather than thin. They record concrete detail in the moment rather than reconstructing a hazy memory afterwards. They keep the participants' own understanding — the emic view — distinct from the analytical reading the observer brings from the outside, the etic view, rather than blurring the two together. They apply a concept that actually fits the scene, letting it illuminate observed detail instead of decorating the description with a fashionable term. And, above all, they are reflexive: they treat the observer as part of the study, examining how position and presence shaped the account, and they are honest about the limits of what one short observation can show.
If you build those habits in deliberately rather than hoping they emerge, the marks tend to follow. A useful final test before you submit is to read the study back asking three blunt questions. Could a reader who was not there picture the scene from your description alone? Does every analytical claim point to something you actually saw? And have you said, plainly and without false modesty, how being who you are shaped what you noticed and what you might have missed? A study that can answer all three with a clear yes is doing the things this assessment exists to reward, and is doing the genuine work of anthropology in miniature.
Write your Anthropology IA, part by part
Examiner-written frame for the observation, the thick description, the concept analysis and the reflexive critique, with worked examples, a live readiness check and DOCX/PDF export. The planning sections are free.
Start your Anthropology IA →Guidance written by experienced IB examiners and aligned to the current Social & Cultural Anthropology guide. Not affiliated with or endorsed by the International Baccalaureate Organization.
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