Get a free response within 2 hours
The TOK Essay Rubric Explained
Understand exactly how your essay is scored — the five assessment qualities, the holistic marking approach, and what each grade band demands.
Single Holistic Rubric
One rubric, 0–10 marks, five grade descriptors (A–E). No sub-scores. Examiners assess the essay as a whole against all five qualities simultaneously.
Five Assessment Qualities
Examiners look for: focus on title, AOK links, argument quality, multiple perspectives, and discussion of implications.
Grade A = 9–10
Grade A essays demonstrate all five qualities at a high level. They are rare — typically the top 3–5% of submissions globally.
How the Rubric Works
The IB TOK essay is assessed using a single holistic rubric. This is fundamentally different from assessment frameworks that score separate categories independently. Instead, one IB examiner reads your essay and arrives at a single mark from 0 to 10 by comparing it against five grade descriptors (A through E) across five assessment qualities. A moderation process checks that marks are consistent across examiners worldwide.
The holistic approach means that a weakness in one area can drag down the overall mark even if other areas are strong. Conversely, exceptional performance across all five qualities can result in a Grade A (9–10 marks). Most students achieve Grade C (5–6 marks), which represents competent but not exceptional work.
The Five Assessment Qualities
Sustained Focus on the Title
The essay addresses the prescribed title throughout — not just in the opening and conclusion. Every paragraph returns to the central question.
Effective Linking to AOKs
Arguments are grounded in specific Areas of Knowledge. The links are meaningful — not superficial name-dropping of AOK labels.
Clear & Coherent Arguments
Claims are supported by specific, developed examples — not anecdotes. The reasoning is clear and logically progresses.
Awareness of Perspectives
The essay acknowledges and evaluates different viewpoints — not just presents its own. Genuine engagement with counter-arguments is visible.
Discussion of Implications
The essay considers what follows from its conclusions. What are the wider consequences for how we know, or for how we act?
Quality 1: Sustained Focus on the Title
This is the quality students most often underestimate. “Sustained” means throughout — not just in the first paragraph and the conclusion. Examiners regularly see essays that begin by quoting the title, then proceed to write about general TOK concepts for 1,200 words, and return to the title only in a final paragraph. This scores poorly.
High-scoring essays treat the title as the organising question for every paragraph. Each body paragraph should open with a connection to the title, develop an argument in relation to it, and conclude by explicitly returning to what this means for the title’s central claim.
Quality 2: Effective Linking to AOKs
The best essays don’t just mention AOKs — they use them as lenses. If your title relates to the role of reason in knowing, you might contrast how reason functions in Mathematics (where formal proof produces certainty) versus in History (where reasoning from incomplete evidence produces provisional conclusions). The contrast illuminates something about the title that a single AOK couldn’t.
Avoid the common error of treating all AOKs as interchangeable. Each has distinctive knowledge-producing methods, strengths, and limitations. A sophisticated essay exploits these differences.
Quality 3: Arguments with Specific Examples
Examples must be specific, developed, and directly connected to your argument. The IB explicitly discourages the use of “famous person + vague reference” examples (e.g., “Einstein proved that science can be wrong”). A developed example explains what happened, how it relates to your claim, and what it reveals about knowledge — in roughly 3–5 sentences.
Aim for examples drawn from genuinely different domains — not three examples all from physics or all from history. Cross-AOK examples demonstrate breadth and reinforce your AOK links simultaneously.
Quality 4: Awareness of Different Perspectives
This quality requires genuine intellectual humility. The essay should not only present perspectives that support its main claim but also engage seriously with views that challenge it. Superficial “some people think X, but I disagree because Y” is not sufficient. Examiners want to see that you understand why someone might hold the opposing view — and that you can articulate that view charitably before evaluating it.
Strong performance here often involves cultural, disciplinary, or philosophical perspectives — not just “optimistic vs. pessimistic” framings.
Quality 5: Discussion of Implications
Implications are what follows from your argument. If you conclude that cultural context significantly shapes what counts as knowledge in the Human Sciences, what are the implications? For researchers? For policy-makers? For how we evaluate knowledge claims across cultures? The best essays pursue implications with the same rigour as their central arguments, rather than relegating them to a final throwaway sentence.
Grade Descriptor Summary
| Grade | Mark | What it typically looks like |
|---|---|---|
| A | 9–10 | All five qualities at a high level. Specific, well-developed examples. Genuine engagement with perspectives. Clear implications. Title sustained throughout. |
| B | 7–8 | Most qualities present and effective. Some unevenness — perhaps implications are underdeveloped or one perspective is handled superficially. |
| C | 5–6 | Competent engagement with the title and AOKs. Arguments are clear but examples may be generic. Perspectives acknowledged but not deeply evaluated. |
| D | 3–4 | Some relevant content but significant weaknesses: title lost mid-essay, examples are vague, AOK links are labelling rather than analysis. |
| E | 0–2 | Minimal engagement with the rubric qualities. May be off-topic, purely descriptive, or not recognisably a TOK essay. |
Writing separate “paragraphs per quality” instead of integrating all five throughout. Some students try to plan their essay as: “Paragraph 1 = AOK links, Paragraph 2 = perspectives, Paragraph 3 = implications.” Examiners see through this approach immediately and mark it down. All five qualities should be present in every substantive paragraph, woven naturally into a coherent argument — not cordoned off into separate sections.
- Every paragraph references the prescribed title either explicitly or in its framing question
- I have named and meaningfully used at least two distinct AOKs (not just mentioned them)
- Each of my examples is specific — it names a real case, study, event, or text
- I have genuinely engaged with at least one view that challenges my main argument
- My conclusion (or final paragraph) discusses what follows from my argument — not just repeats it
- My essay is under 1,600 words (title does not count; bibliography does not count)