Extended Essay - Choosing your Category

 

Choosing your category for the Extended Essay in Group 1 is crucial. You have three options. Just as importantly, and a historical challenge, is ensuring there is suitable secondary research and setting up of a theoretical frame for the research. This is called a literature review.

The Nature of Research

The Extended Essay is the IB Diploma's introduction to "high school" students of the higher education's academic research paper. It always was and still is the component that sets the IBDP apart from all other post-16 further education qualifications, and is one of the key reasons that university admissions officers all over the world say that IBDP students are better prepared for the rigours of higher education than all others. So, as you spend hours of sleepless nights staring at your screens as the deadlines approach and Time's winged chariot is hurrying near, know that it'll all be worth it in the end!

The assessment criteria for the Extended Essay prioritises structuring an academic research paper properly, researching and citing a variety of sources effectively, and reflecting on the process (as seen in the new criteria speficially evaluating your comments at the three different stages of reflection. This should give you confidence that, even if your paper or research is not hugely sophisticated because you find it so challenging, at least you get rewarded for trying to do the right thing.

Literature Review

The mistake made by many Extended Essay supervisors of Group 1 students is to consider this to be nothing more than a long essay. Good research is, in fact, quite scientific in structure: the student identifies a problem and considers a way to test a hypothesis. This is followed by a synthesis and evaluation of all of what has been written about the topic, to set a context to your question and hypothesis. This synthesis (and evaluation of its reliability) then acts as the backdrop for your own testing and experimenting. This is called a Literature Review.

For example: 

This is clearly an absurd example, as your friends from Group 4 will tell you, but it should exemplify the oft-forgotten nature of the Literature Review. Too often, students (especially in the literary categories) write long essays about the primary source. They can be very good. But it is certainly true that by simply adding an element to the research that requires a little challenging of the premises on which you base your arguments by exploring secondary sources - the attitudes towards women in different time periods; the changing roles and functions of the public relations and advertising industry over time - grades for the Essay are significantly improved. This has always been the case with my students, elevating some really quite average papers to B grades.

Indeed, in its latest iteration of the Extended Essay, the IB has spelt out to schools and supervisors this requirement:

Choosing your Category

In choosing your category for a Group 1 Extended Essay, you have three options. As explained above, the literature options lend themselves to better analysis of primary sources, but lesser analysis of secondary sources. The studies in language section tend to create the opposite outcomes unless you are carefully supported in structuring the essay.

The category choices are:

Helping you to "chunk" the essay is the best thing your supervisor - or this site page - can do. Consider this essay structure:

MY PROGRESS

How much of Extended Essay - Choosing your Category have you understood?