Learning focus
Develop transferable AO3 skills: plan, measure, record, process, interpret and evaluate biological investigations accurately and safely.
Decode the purpose
Before focusing on details, identify what the setup changes and measures. Trace the path of liquids, gases or organisms and note where the observation will occur. This reveals the experimental logic.

Follow sequence precisely
Some methods depend on timing or order. Starting the stopwatch before mixing, rinsing a sample before weighing or equalising temperatures before combining reagents may be essential. Missing an order step can invalidate comparisons.

Use labels and clues
Apparatus diagrams provide information about connections, volumes and direction. Labels such as soda lime, capillary tube or water bath signal specific functions. Apply known principles even if the complete arrangement is unfamiliar.
Check feasibility and safety
Ask whether gas can escape, whether a seal is needed, whether liquid levels can be read and whether pressure could build. A method must be practical as well as biologically reasonable.
Practical or data skill
Study an unfamiliar apparatus diagram and annotate: independent variable, dependent variable, control variables, direction of movement, safety issue and expected observation.
Examination tip
Do not panic when the apparatus is unfamiliar. Identify the measurement and apply the standard AO3 framework.
Review questions and suggested answers
Question 1
What should be identified first in an unfamiliar setup?
Suggested answer
The purpose: what is changed and what is measured.
Question 2
Why can order of steps matter?
Suggested answer
Because timing, mixing or preparation may affect the response and comparability.
Question 3
Give one feasibility check.
Suggested answer
Check for leaks, trapped gas, a readable scale, stable temperature or safe pressure.