The Digital Society IA is the one piece of coursework your Digital Society grade is marked on internally. It is an inquiry project: a written report of around 1,500 words, paired with a 10-minute multimedia presentation, in which you investigate a real-world example of a digital system's impact and analyse it through the course. Most students who lose marks do so not because they cannot talk about technology, but because they pick a topic that is far too broad, or they describe an issue instead of investigating a specific example with real sources. This guide walks you through the whole thing: what the inquiry project is, what it rewards, exactly how to build each part, and what separates a top-band inquiry from an average one.
The IB Digital Society IA at a glance
The inquiry project asks you to investigate how a particular digital system affects identifiable people or communities, and to communicate that inquiry in two linked ways: a concise written report of roughly 1,500 words and a 10-minute multimedia presentation. The whole inquiry is marked out of 24. The single thing that decides whether the project works is the example: it has to be specific and real, with a focused inquiry question, so that you can investigate it with genuine sources rather than gesturing at a broad theme. A sharp example makes every later section easier; a vague one makes the whole inquiry impossible to mark well.
How the Digital Society IA is marked: what it rewards
The inquiry project rewards four things, and a top-band inquiry shows all four. Build your project with each one consciously in view, and keep checking what each one is really asking for.
A real-world example
A specific digital system's impact on identifiable people or communities, framed by a focused inquiry question. The example has to be concrete enough that you can actually investigate it.
Trap: a vague topic with no specific real-world example, so there is nothing concrete to investigate.
Sources & concepts
A range of referenced sources that speak to your question, analysed through the course concepts rather than simply summarised.
Trap: opinion with no sources or concepts โ assertion standing in for evidence and analysis.
Perspectives
Multiple, weighed perspectives on the impact โ those who benefit and those who are harmed โ set out fairly and then weighed against each other.
Trap: a one-sided account that only shows the benefits or only the harms.
Evaluation
A reasoned conclusion that draws the inquiry together and synthesises what the sources and perspectives have shown.
Trap: no synthesis of the findings โ a conclusion that simply restates the introduction.
Build it section by section
The Digital Society IA frame walks you through the example, sources, concepts, perspectives and evaluation with examiner guidance beside you, โ-weak vs โ-strong examples, a source and concept prompt, and a live "what's missing for top band" check.
Open the Digital Society IA frame โHow to write a Digital Society IA, step by step
- Pick a specific real-world digital impact and a focused inquiry question. The most important decision is the example. Name a particular digital system and its impact on identifiable people or communities, and frame a sharp inquiry question around it rather than a broad theme.
- Gather a range of referenced sources. Collect a range of credible sources that speak directly to your question, and reference them properly from the start so the evidence is traceable.
- Analyse through the course concepts. Use the course concepts to analyse the impact โ explaining why it happens and what it means โ rather than simply describing it.
- Weigh multiple perspectives. Set out the perspectives of those who benefit and those who are harmed, and weigh them against one another instead of choosing a side from the outset.
- Reach a reasoned conclusion. Draw the inquiry together into a conclusion that synthesises the findings, answering your inquiry question on the strength of the evidence and perspectives.
- Build the report and the 10-minute presentation. Produce the ~1,500-word report and a 10-minute multimedia presentation that together communicate the inquiry clearly.
Digital Society IA structure: what goes in each section
There is no single mandated layout, but the structure that maps most cleanly onto what the inquiry project rewards is:
- The example & inquiry question โ the specific digital system, who it affects, and the focused question you are investigating.
- Sources โ the range of referenced sources you are drawing on, and why each is relevant.
- Concepts โ the course concepts the impact connects to, and how they frame the analysis.
- Perspectives โ those who benefit and those who are harmed, set out fairly.
- Analysis โ the impact analysed through the concepts and across the perspectives, grounded in the sources.
- Conclusion โ a reasoned synthesis that answers the inquiry question.
- Presentation โ a 10-minute multimedia presentation that communicates the inquiry.
- References โ a consistent citation style throughout.
What a strong vs weak Digital Society IA looks like
The fastest way to lift your marks is to see the difference. Here is the same work done two ways.
The inquiry question
Using sources & perspectives
The evaluation
Need an example first?
Browse 24 examiner-ranked Digital Society inquiry ideas, each with a named system, the concepts it draws on and why it scores โ then drop one straight into the frame.
See 24 Digital Society IA ideas โCommon mistakes that cost marks
- Too broad a topic. A theme like "AI" or "social media" is not an inquiry โ name a specific system and an identifiable group.
- No focused inquiry question. Without a sharp question there is nothing for the report and presentation to answer.
- Opinion instead of sources. Assertion with no referenced evidence caps the inquiry โ every claim needs a source.
- Description, not concept-based analysis. Concepts have to explain why the impact happens, not just label it.
- One-sided perspectives. Showing only the benefits or only the harms means there is nothing to weigh.
- A conclusion that doesn't synthesise. Restating the introduction is not a reasoned conclusion.
- A presentation that just repeats the report. The 10-minute presentation should communicate the inquiry, not read the document aloud.
Digital Society IA โ frequently asked questions
How long is the IB Digital Society IA?
The inquiry project is a report of around 1,500 words plus a 10-minute multimedia presentation. The whole inquiry is marked out of 24.
What is the Digital Society inquiry project?
It is the Digital Society IA: you investigate a real-world example of a digital system's impact on identifiable people or communities, using referenced sources and the course concepts, and present it as a written report plus a 10-minute multimedia presentation.
How is the Digital Society IA marked?
Out of 24. It rewards a specific real-world example with a focused inquiry question, a range of referenced sources analysed through the course concepts, multiple weighed perspectives on the impact, and a reasoned conclusion that draws the inquiry together.
How do I choose a Digital Society inquiry question?
Avoid a broad topic such as "social media is bad". Instead pick a specific impact of a named digital system on identifiable people or communities, and frame a focused inquiry question around that example so it can be investigated with real sources.
Can I use AI to write my Digital Society IA?
The IB permits AI tools provided you acknowledge them honestly โ anything used directly must be cited, and passing AI work off as your own is academic misconduct. The inquiry, the report and the presentation must be your own. IA Studio is a writing frame: you do the inquiry and write it up, with built-in AI-acknowledgement guidance.
Write your Digital Society IA, section by section
Examiner-written frame with the real criteria, worked examples, a source and concept prompt, a live readiness check and DOCX/PDF export.
Start your Digital Society IA โGuidance written by experienced IB examiners and aligned to the current Digital Society guide. Not affiliated with or endorsed by the International Baccalaureate Organization.
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