IGCSE

IGCSE Biology 0610: Syllabus, Revision and How to Achieve Top Grades

Tutopiya Team Educational Expert
• 12 min read

IGCSE Biology 0610 is the Cambridge IGCSE Biology syllabus. It covers cell biology, organisation, nutrition, respiration, inheritance, ecology, and more. It is one of the most popular IGCSE sciences and is widely searched by students preparing for exams or for future medicine and life sciences courses.

IGCSE Biology 0610 at a Glance

  • Core and Extended – Choose the tier that matches your target grade (Core C–G, Extended A*–E).
  • Theory and practical – Multiple-choice, structured questions, and often a practical or alternative-to-practical paper.
  • Key topics – Cells, enzymes, human biology, plant biology, genetics, evolution, ecology.

Revise using the syllabus checklist and past papers so you cover every topic and question type.

Revision Tips for IGCSE Biology 0610

  • Learn definitions and use them precisely (e.g. osmosis, photosynthesis).
  • Draw and label diagrams (e.g. heart, kidney, leaf structure) – marks are often for accuracy.
  • Practise “explain” and “describe” questions with cause-and-effect and clear steps.
  • Use past papers and mark schemes to see how extended answers are marked.

Tutopiya’s Biology tutors and practice resources can help you strengthen weak topics and exam technique for 0610.

How Biology 0610 Is Assessed and Common Mistakes

The syllabus is assessed with a mix of multiple-choice, short-answer, and extended-response questions across two or more papers, often including a practical or alternative-to-practical component. Cell biology, enzymes, human physiology (e.g. digestion, circulation), inheritance, and ecology appear frequently. Draw and label diagrams (heart, kidney, leaf, etc.) until you can do them from memory; many marks depend on accurate labelling and brief annotations. Common mistakes: Using vague language instead of precise terms (e.g. “denatured”, “active site”); missing the “why” in explain questions; wrong or missing labels on diagrams; ignoring the number of marks (two marks usually need two distinct points). Practise with past paper diagrams and mark schemes so you know the exact wording that gets marks.

Tutopiya Resources and Free Trial

Book a free trial with an IGCSE Biology tutor or explore Tutopiya’s learning portal for free resources and Biology 0610 support.

T

Written by

Tutopiya Team

Educational Expert

Get Started

Courses

Company

Subjects & Curriculums

Resources

🚀 Start Your Learning Today