Question detail

Select the option that keeps the biology idea accurate: explain that vaccination introduces small quantities of dead or inactive pathogen into the body.?

Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.

At a glance

MCQ

Type

practice

Style

Topic

Communicable diseases

Question

  1. A. Explain that vaccination introduces small quantities of dead or inactive pathogen into the body.
  2. B. A statement about another biology topic rather than Communicable diseases
  3. C. A revision technique rather than the scientific idea being tested
  4. D. A reversed cause-and-effect version of the objective

Answer

Explain that vaccination introduces small quantities of dead or inactive pathogen into the body. is the best answer for this Communicable diseases objective.

Explanation

Explain that vaccination introduces small quantities of dead or inactive pathogen into the body. is supported by the approved learning objective: "Explain that vaccination introduces small quantities of dead or inactive pathogen into the body". It stays within Communicable diseases, uses the key idea "[object Object]", and avoids distractors that either switch topic, describe a study method, or reverse the biology relationship.

Common mistake

Misunderstanding the Nature of Vaccines

Students often confuse vaccines with live pathogens, thinking they contain live viruses or bacteria.

Clarify that vaccines introduce small quantities of dead or inactive pathogens, which stimulate the immune response without causing disease.

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Explain That Vaccination Introduces Small Quantities Of Dead Or Inactive Pathogen Into The Body Mcq 1 | AQA GCSE Biology Question detail | ExamCompanion