February 16, 2026 • By KayScience
The AQA osmosis required practical is one of the most examined experiments in GCSE Biology. Students often lose marks not because they misunderstand osmosis, but because they cannot clearly explain the method, identify variables, or structure a strong evaluation in an osmosis 6 mark question. This guide focuses on what examiners actually reward across AQA, Edexcel and OCR.
Osmosis is the movement of water from a dilute solution to a more concentrated solution through a partially permeable membrane.
In the GCSE osmosis method, students typically:
Cut equal-sized potato cylinders
Measure their initial mass
Place them in different sugar concentrations
Leave for a set time
Remove, dry and reweigh
Calculate percentage change in mass
Examiners are looking for precision. Simply listing steps is not enough. You must show understanding of control variables and why they matter.
Independent variable: concentration of sugar solution
Dependent variable: change in mass
Control variables: size of potato pieces, volume of solution, temperature, time left in solution
Students often forget to mention drying the potato before reweighing. That costs marks.
Percentage change formula:
Percentage change = ((final mass – initial mass) / initial mass) × 100
In Edexcel and OCR papers, calculation accuracy is assessed strictly. Show full working.
For more core topic coverage, click on Videos and Quizzes at https://www.kayscience.com.
Most osmosis 6 mark questions ask you to:
Explain results
Evaluate the method
Suggest improvements
A strong answer includes:
Clear scientific reasoning (water moves by osmosis due to concentration gradient)
Reference to control variables
Specific improvements (repeat experiment, calculate mean, use more concentrations)
For structured practice, explore https://www.kayscience.com/exam-questions.
A student investigated osmosis using potato cylinders placed in different sugar solutions. Explain how the results show osmosis has occurred and evaluate the method. (6 marks)
When evaluating, always link improvements to reliability or validity. For example: “Repeating each concentration and calculating a mean reduces the effect of anomalies and increases reliability.” Generic statements like “make it more accurate” do not gain credit.
For structured support with required practicals and exam technique, see https://www.kayscience.com/tuition-timetable.