EXHIBITION

The TOK exhibition explores how TOK manifests in the world around us. For this reason it is strongly recommended that students base their exhibition on one of the TOK themes (either the core theme or one of the optional themes).

The TOK exhibition is an internal assessment component—it is marked by the teacher and is externally moderated by the IB.

For this task, students are required to create an exhibition of three objects that connect to one of the 35 “IA prompts”.

Students are required to create an exhibition comprising three objects, or images of objects, and an accompanying written commentary on each object. To enable their exhibition to be marked by their TOK teacher and for samples of student work to be submitted to the IB for moderation, students are required to produce a single file containing:

  • a title clearly indicating their selected IA prompt;

  • images of their three objects;

  • a typed commentary on each object that identifies each object and its specific real-world context, justifies its inclusion in the exhibition and links to the IA prompt (maximum 950 words);

  • appropriate citations and references.

Each student must create an individual exhibition. Group work may not be undertaken by students. Multiple students in the same TOK class are permitted to create exhibitions on the same IA prompt. However, students in the same class are not permitted to use any of the same objects.

TOK Guide, p. 39

IA PROMPTS

Students are required to create an exhibition of three objects that connect to one of the following IA prompts.

  1. What counts as knowledge?

  2. Are some types of knowledge more useful than others?

  3. What features of knowledge have an impact on its reliability?

  4. On what grounds might we doubt a claim?

  5. What counts as good evidence for a claim?

  6. How does the way that we organize or classify knowledge affect what we know?

  7. What are the implications of having, or not having, knowledge?

  8. To what extent is certainty attainable?

  9. Are some types of knowledge less open to interpretation than others?

  10. What challenges are raised by the dissemination and/or communication of knowledge?

  11. Can new knowledge change established values or beliefs?

  12. Is bias inevitable in the production of knowledge?

  13. How can we know that current knowledge is an improvement upon past knowledge?

  14. Does some knowledge belong only to particular communities of knowers?

  15. What constraints are there on the pursuit of knowledge?

  16. Should some knowledge not be sought on ethical grounds?

  17. Why do we seek knowledge?

  18. Are some things unknowable?

  19. What counts as a good justification for a claim?

  20. What is the relationship between personal experience and knowledge?

  21. What is the relationship between knowledge and culture?

  22. What role do experts play in influencing our consumption or acquisition of knowledge?

  23. How important are material tools in the production or acquisition of knowledge?

  24. How might the context in which knowledge is presented influence whether it is accepted or rejected?

  25. How can we distinguish between knowledge, belief and opinion?

  26. Does our knowledge depend on our interactions with other knowers?

  27. Does all knowledge impose ethical obligations on those who know it?

  28. To what extent is objectivity possible in the production or acquisition of knowledge?

  29. Who owns knowledge?

  30. What role does imagination play in producing knowledge about the world?

  31. How can we judge when evidence is adequate?

  32. What makes a good explanation?

  33. How is current knowledge shaped by its historical development?

  34. In what ways do our values affect our acquisition of knowledge?

  35. In what ways do values affect the production of knowledge?

TOK Guide, p. 40-41