The 20 Marks Most IAL Biology Students Still Lose in Unit 5 — Even After Reading the Scientific Article
Why the June 2026 WBI15 article is not a comprehension task — and how top students prepare for it differently

Most Students Misunderstand the Unit 5 Article
The scientific article in Edexcel IAL Biology Unit 5 (WBI15) is worth 30 marks. That is more than 20% of the entire paper. According to the official Pearson guidance, the article-based section appears as the final question on the paper and is designed to test both Unit 5 knowledge and synoptic understanding from earlier topics.
Many students think the article is mainly about memorising information. That is the biggest mistake.
The article gives context. The marks come from applying specification biology to unfamiliar situations.
Pearson states clearly in its official guidance that article questions may include synoptic assessment from Topics 1–7 and may also test interpretation of unfamiliar biological terms and techniques.
Read the official Pearson FAQ here:
Pearson Edexcel IAL Biology Scientific Article FAQs
What Is the WBI15 Scientific Article?
The article is pre-released weeks before the exam
Pearson releases the Unit 5 article around 6–8 weeks before the examination. For the June 2026 series, the article was expected around mid-to-late March 2026.
The article is accessed through Edexcel Online by schools and exams officers.
Pearson confirms that:
- students may annotate the article while preparing
- annotated copies cannot be taken into the exam
- a clean copy is provided inside the exam paper
Official Pearson update page:
International Science Qualification Updates
Why These 30 Marks Matter More Than Students Think
One question can heavily affect your final grade
The article section alone is worth 30 marks.
In many exam sessions, the difference between grade boundaries can be smaller than that. This means performance on Question 8 can directly change a student’s overall grade.
Students aiming for an A or A* cannot treat the article as optional revision.
According to Pearson:
“Questions on the scientific article account for just over 20% of the marks available on the Unit 5 examination paper.”
Source:
Pearson WBI15 Scientific Article FAQs
What the June 2026 Article Seems to Contain
Public teaching resources reveal the structure
While the exact topic is not publicly indexed in search engines, publicly available teaching resources for the June 2026 series suggest that the article contains:
- three major subsections
- a short article summary
- key takeaways
- hundreds of possible exam-style questions linked to the content
Several teacher resources also suggest that around 80% of the possible questions connect directly to specification biology topics.
Examples of these resources include:
The Biggest Mistakes Students Make With the Article
Mistake 1 — Treating it like comprehension
Many students highlight sentences and memorise paragraphs.
That rarely works.
Pearson repeatedly explains that the article is designed to assess biological understanding, interpretation, and synoptic links — not simple recall.
Mistake 2 — Revising only Unit 5 content
This is one of the most dangerous mistakes.
Pearson states that article questions may include synoptic assessment from Topics 1–7.
That means questions could link the article to:
- respiration
- enzymes
- immunity
- DNA technology
- gene expression
- transport systems
- homeostasis
Official source:
Pearson WBI15 FAQ PDF
Mistake 3 — Ignoring unfamiliar biological terms
Students often skip terms they do not recognise.
Past papers show this is risky.
Pearson specifically mentions that unfamiliar biological terms may appear in article questions. In the January 2024 paper, students were asked about “sarcopenia,” even though the term does not appear in the specification.
That means students should define every unfamiliar biological term found in the article.
Mistake 4 — Ignoring unfamiliar techniques
The article may mention techniques outside the specification.
Pearson explains that students are not expected to memorise technical procedures. However, they are expected to understand the biological principles behind those techniques.
For example:
- CRISPR may link to enzymes and nucleic acids
- electrophoresis may link to DNA fragments
- PCR may link to DNA replication
How Synoptic Questions Actually Work
The article is a bridge between topics
Strong students connect article content back to core biology.
For example, a paragraph about CRISPR gene editing could lead to questions about:
- complementary base pairing
- transcription
- translation
- enzyme action
- mutations
- DNA structure
A paragraph about muscle degeneration could connect to:
- respiration
- ATP
- ageing
- stem cells
- transport systems
- protein synthesis
This is why simply reading the article repeatedly is not enough.
How to Prepare for the Unit 5 Article Properly
Step 1 — Read the article three times
First read:
- understand the general idea
Second read:
- highlight unfamiliar terms
- annotate biological concepts
Third read:
- link every paragraph to specification topics
Step 2 — Build a vocabulary list
Write down:
- unfamiliar biological terms
- new techniques
- diseases
- proteins
- pathways
Define each one clearly in biological language.
Step 3 — Map the article to Topics 1–7
This is one of the highest-value revision techniques.
For each paragraph, ask:
- Which specification topic links to this?
- Which past paper question is similar?
- Which command words could appear?
Step 4 — Practise past article questions
Past papers follow similar patterns.
Students should practise:
- June 2025
- January 2025
- October 2025
- January 2026
under timed conditions.
Pearson past papers:
Edexcel International Advanced Level Biology Past Papers
How Much Time Should You Spend on Question 8?
Many students lose marks because of timing
Question 8 is worth 30 marks.
That usually means students should spend roughly 40–45 minutes on it.
A common mistake is spending too long on earlier questions and rushing the article section at the end.
Question 8 usually includes:
- short-answer questions
- data analysis
- evaluation
- extended writing
Good pacing matters.
FAQ — IAL Biology Unit 5 Scientific Article
Is the article always Question 8?
Usually yes, although numbering can vary slightly between papers.
Can you take annotated notes into the exam?
No. Pearson provides a clean copy in the examination paper.
Is the article only based on Unit 5?
No. Questions may assess synoptic knowledge from Topics 1–7.
Can students be tested on unfamiliar terms?
Yes. Pearson confirms this directly in the FAQ document.
Can students be asked about unfamiliar techniques?
Yes, but only the biological principles behind the technique are assessed.
The One Thing Top Students Do Differently
They treat the article as a biology exam, not a reading task
The students who score highest in Question 8 usually do one thing differently:
they connect every paragraph back to specification biology.
They do not memorise the article word-for-word.
Instead, they ask:
- Which biological process is this testing?
- Which topic does this connect to?
- Which command word could appear?
- Which mark-scheme phrases are likely needed?
That is why strong students often feel as if they have seen part of the exam before they walk into the exam hall.
Final Advice Before the June 2026 Exam
The article rewards understanding, not memorisation
The Unit 5 scientific article is one of the most predictable parts of the Edexcel IAL Biology paper — but only if students prepare correctly.
Students who:
- define every unfamiliar term
- practise synoptic links
- analyse past article questions
- connect the article to specification biology
are usually far more prepared for Question 8 than students who simply reread the article repeatedly.
The article is not there to give you answers.
It is there to test whether you can apply biology in unfamiliar contexts.
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