Question detail
Which statement correctly describes cells in Principles of organisation?
Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.
At a glance
MCQ
Type
practice
Style
Topic
Principles of organisation
Question
- A. Students should be able to apply ideas about cells, tissues, organs and organ systems to unfamiliar biological examples.
- B. Giving a vague answer instead of directly addressing: Apply ideas about cells, tissues, organs and organ systems to unfamiliar biological examples.
- C. It is not correct that students should be able to apply ideas about cells, tissues, organs and organ systems to unfamiliar biological examples.
- D. The idea only requires memorising the topic title for Principles of organisation.
Answer
In this question, Students should be able to apply ideas about cells, tissues, organs and organ systems to unfamiliar biological examples. is correct It stays aligned to the exact wording and meaning of the objective.
Explanation
In AQA-style practice, the correct answer must match the objective closely and use the science rather than filler wording. That is why Students should be able to apply ideas about cells, tissues, organs and organ systems to unfamiliar biological examples. is the best option here. Linking the idea to cells is a curriculum-aligned term linked to the learning objective: Apply ideas about cells, tissues, organs and organ systems to unfamiliar biological examples keeps the explanation specific.
Common mistake
Principles of organisation common mistake 1
Giving a vague answer instead of directly addressing: Apply ideas about cells, tissues, organs and organ systems to unfamiliar biological examples..
Answer by clearly explaining how to apply ideas about cells, tissues, organs and organ systems to unfamiliar biological examples..
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