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

  1. A. A tissue is a group of similar cells working together for a shared function.
  2. B. Giving a vague answer instead of directly addressing: Define a tissue as a group of similar cells working together for a shared function.
  3. C. A tissue is not a group of similar cells working together for a shared function.
  4. D. The idea only requires memorising the topic title for Principles of organisation.

Answer

In this question, A tissue is a group of similar cells working together for a shared function. 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 A tissue is a group of similar cells working together for a shared function. is the best option here. Linking the idea to cells is a curriculum-aligned term linked to the learning objective: Define a tissue as a group of similar cells working together for a shared function keeps the explanation specific.

Common mistake

Principles of organisation common mistake 1

Giving a vague answer instead of directly addressing: Define a tissue as a group of similar cells working together for a shared function..

Answer by clearly explaining how to define a tissue as a group of similar cells working together for a shared function..

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