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How to write the Psychology IA Examiner guide Β· 2026
Open the Psychology IA frame β†’

How to write the IB Psychology IA

The complete, examiner-written guide to the Psychology Internal Assessment (the experimental study): the structure, the word count, how it is marked, a step-by-step method, and worked examples of weak vs strong writing β€” then plan yours in the Psychology IA frame.

The Psychology IA is the only piece of coursework your Psychology grade is marked on internally β€” worth 25% of your final grade at SL and 20% at HL. Most students lose marks not because they cannot run an experiment, but because they choose a study that is impossible to replicate safely, never operationalise their variables, or stop at a table of averages without ever running a statistical test. This guide takes you through the whole thing: what the IA is, how it is marked, exactly how to write each part, and what separates a top-band experimental study from an average one.

The IB Psychology IA at a glance

/22Total marks
~2,200Words
20–25%Of final grade (HL/SL)
4Criteria

The Psychology IA is an experimental study that partially replicates a published study. You take a piece of established psychological research, pull out one small, testable relationship from it, and rebuild that relationship as a simple experiment you can run yourself. The whole report is about 2,200 words and is marked out of 22 across four criteria. Because it is a replication, the original study does almost all of the theoretical heavy lifting for you β€” your job is to design the experiment cleanly, run it ethically, analyse the numbers properly, and reflect honestly on what went right and wrong. The word "partially" matters: you are not expected to reproduce the entire original study, only a manageable slice of it.

How the Psychology IA is marked: the four criteria

Every mark you earn comes from one of these four criteria. The most reliable way to write the IA is to treat each criterion as a separate checklist and make sure nothing on it is missing:

Introduction

A clear aim; a genuine partial replication of a published study that your work is built on; operationalised independent and dependent variables defined in measurable terms; and a stated hypothesis (research and null) that follows logically from the background study.

Trap: no link to a background study, or vaguely defined variables.

Exploration

An ethical, well-controlled experimental design with an appropriate sampling method, standardised conditions, controlled variables, informed consent and debriefing β€” and no stress, harm or deception to participants.

Trap: an unethical or poorly controlled design.

Analysis

Descriptive statistics (a measure of central tendency and of dispersion) presented clearly, plus an appropriate inferential test matched to your design and data, leading to a clear decision about the null hypothesis.

Trap: descriptive statistics only, with no inferential test.

Evaluation

Linking back to the original study, weighing limitations by their impact on the result rather than simply listing them, and proposing realistic, specific improvements.

Trap: generic, unweighted limitations.

Build it section by section

The Psychology IA frame walks you through each of these criteria with the rubric beside you, βœ—-weak vs βœ“-strong examples, a hypothesis-and-variables builder, statistical-test guidance and a live "what's missing for top band" check. The first section is free.

Open the Psychology IA frame β†’

How to write a Psychology IA, step by step

  1. Choose a simple, ethical study to replicate. Pick a published study with a clean experimental design you can rebuild with classmates as participants β€” no stress, no deception, nothing that needs special equipment or vulnerable groups.
  2. Operationalise your IV and DV, and write the hypothesis. Turn the abstract idea into something you can manipulate and measure exactly, then state a research hypothesis and a null hypothesis that flow from the original study.
  3. Design ethically. Plan informed consent, the right to withdraw, anonymity and a debrief, and remove anything that could cause harm or distress.
  4. Sample your participants. Choose and justify a sampling method, describe who took part, and explain how they were allocated to conditions.
  5. Run the experiment. Carry out the procedure under standardised conditions, holding your controlled variables constant across both conditions.
  6. Calculate descriptive and inferential statistics. Report a measure of central tendency and one of dispersion, then run an inferential test that matches your design (independent/repeated measures) and your data.
  7. Make a decision. Quote the test statistic and significance level, and state clearly whether you reject or retain the null hypothesis.
  8. Evaluate against the original study. Compare your result to the study you replicated, weigh your limitations by their impact, and propose targeted, realistic improvements.

Psychology IA structure: what goes in each section

There is no rigid template, but the structure that maps most cleanly onto the four criteria is:

What a strong vs weak Psychology IA looks like

The quickest way to raise your marks is to see the same work done two ways. Here are three places where strong and weak IAs diverge.

The hypothesis

βœ— Weak
"People will remember words better if they think about the meaning." β€” no named study, no operationalised variables, no measurable outcome.
βœ“ Strong
"Following Craik and Lockhart's levels-of-processing model, participants in the semantic condition (judging whether each word fits a sentence) will recall significantly more words out of 20 than those in the structural condition (judging upper- or lower-case)." β€” an IV and DV defined in measurable terms, tied to a named study.

The statistics

βœ— Weak
"The semantic group remembered 12 words on average and the structural group remembered 8, so deep processing works." β€” a mean only, with no test and no decision.
βœ“ Strong
"A Mann–Whitney U test (independent measures, ordinal recall scores) gave U = 41, p < 0.05, so the null hypothesis is rejected: the difference in recall is unlikely to be due to chance." β€” a justified inferential test, a statistic, and a clear decision.

The evaluation

βœ— Weak
"There were some limitations and the sample was small. To improve, I would test more people." β€” generic, unweighted, untied to the study.
βœ“ Strong
"Unlike Craik and Lockhart's controlled timing, participants set their own pace, so the structural group may have processed words more deeply than intended β€” the single largest threat to the finding. A fixed two-second exposure per word would address this and is the priority improvement." β€” linked to the original study and weighed by impact.

Need a topic first?

Browse 24 examiner-ranked Psychology IA ideas, each with a replicable study, the IV and DV, and why it scores β€” then drop one straight into the frame.

See 24 Psychology IA ideas β†’

Common mistakes that cost marks

Psychology IA β€” frequently asked questions

How long is the IB Psychology IA?

The experimental study report is about 2,200 words, partially replicates a published study, and is marked out of 22.

How is the Psychology IA marked?

Out of 22 across four criteria: Introduction, Exploration, Analysis and Evaluation. It is worth 25% of your final grade at SL and 20% at HL.

What is the structure of a Psychology IA?

Introduction (aim, replicated study, operationalised variables, hypotheses) β†’ Exploration (ethical, controlled design and sampling) β†’ procedure β†’ Analysis (descriptive and inferential statistics with a decision) β†’ Evaluation (linked to the original study) β†’ references and appendices.

Do I need an inferential test in the Psychology IA?

Yes. The Analysis criterion expects appropriate descriptive statistics plus an appropriate inferential test and a clear decision about the null hypothesis. Descriptive statistics alone cannot reach the top band.

Can I use AI to write my Psychology IA?

The IB permits AI tools provided you acknowledge them honestly β€” anything used directly must be cited, and passing AI work off as your own is academic misconduct. The IA must be your own. IA Studio is a writing frame: you write your IA, with built-in AI-acknowledgement guidance.

Write your Psychology IA, section by section

Examiner-written frame with the real criteria, worked examples, a hypothesis-and-variables builder, statistical-test guidance, a live readiness check and DOCX/PDF export. The first section is free.

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Guidance written by experienced IB examiners and aligned to the current Psychology guide. Not affiliated with or endorsed by the International Baccalaureate Organization.

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