AICE Marine Science – Nuts and Bolts

Welcome to my guide to the AICE Marine Science Exam, designed specifically for educators and home-school students preparing for this challenging assessment. This post will explore the key aspects of the exam, including its structure, content, and effective strategies to enhance student preparation and performance.

How difficult is to pass the Cambridge/AICE Marine Science Exam

The Advanced International Certificate of Education (AICE) Marine Science AS level exam is part of the Cambridge International curriculum, offering a detailed and scientific study of marine environments. This exam not only tests students on their knowledge and understanding of marine ecosystems but also evaluates their ability to apply scientific methods and reasoning to real-world environmental issues.

From June 2025

Before June 2025

The Importance of Command Words

State/List/Identify

When a question uses the command word: state, identify or list – students must express the answer clearly and directly without additional explanation.
Students can use one short bullet point for each mark.

Explain

When the command word is explain – students must show why or how something happens by providing reasoning or evidence.
Students should write more detailed responses, typically one well-developed bullet point for every two marks.

Describe

When a question uses the command word describe – students must state the key points of a topic or provide its main characteristics and features.
I teach my students to write one bullet point with a short but concise statement for each mark.

Evaluate

When students are asked to evaluate, they must consider both strengths and weaknesses of a strategy, method or idea.
I teach my students to use two bullet points, each describing advantages and disadvantages of a strategy, method or idea.

Example 1: State three pieces of evidence that support the theory of plate tectonics. [3]

  • jigsaw fit of continents
  • matching of rock composition on different continents
  • distribution of same/similar fossil species on different continents.

Example 2: Explain why the sea anemone can occupy trophic level 2 and trophic level 3 in a food web.[4]

  • on trophic level 2 because sea anemone receives nutrition/energy from the zooxanthellae that photosynthesize.
  • on trophic level 3 because they use nematocyst to catch/kill animal prey that occupy trophic level 2.

Example 3: Describe how seagrasses are of economic importance. [4]

  • absorb carbon dioxide
  • help to control climate/ is a carbon sink
  • provides nursery grounds
  • economically important fish and shellfish species.

Example 4: Evaluate the impacts of an El Niño event on marine ecosystems and coastal human populations. [5]

  • Decline in fish populations since upwelling is reduced
  • Coral bleaching due to warmer sea surface temperatures
  • Reduced fisheries yield causes economic losses
  • Food insecurity in coastal communities
  • Impacts are mostly negative, especially for fisheries-dependent regions but some areas might benefit from milder winters.

How I Teach My Students to Answer AICE Questions Effectively

Daily Study and Practice Routine for Exam Success


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