In simple terms
A friendly intro before the formal notes — no formulas yet.
Curating Your Comparison: Presentation & Integrity
The presentation of your Comparative Study is not just decoration; it is the framework that holds your argument together. By strategically designing your screens and properly crediting your sources, you transform your research into a convincing and academically sound analysis that examiners can easily follow and reward.
Think of yourself as a museum curator. A curator doesn't just randomly hang paintings on a wall. They carefully select artworks, arrange them in a specific order, write clear explanatory labels, and light them effectively to tell a story and guide the visitor's understanding. Your task in the Comparative Study is to curate your research and analysis on screens, using layout, annotations, and text to present a clear, compelling narrative about the artworks you have chosen.
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Plan your narrative flow screen by screen, ensuring a logical progression from introduction to conclusion.
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Integrate visual and textual elements purposefully on each screen, using annotations to link your analysis directly to the artwork.
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Practise 'cite as you write' by embedding in-text citations from the very beginning of your drafting process.
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Review your final presentation against the Criterion D descriptors, checking for coherence, visual appropriateness, and flawless academic referencing.
Explore the concept
Use the live diagram and synced steps — play it or tap a step card to walk through.
Full topic notes
Formal explanation with the rigour you need for the exam.
Deconstructing Criterion D: Presentation and Subject-Specific Language
Criterion D assesses the degree to which your presentation is 'coherent, fluent, and visually appropriate' and how effectively you use 'subject-specific language'. These two aspects are intertwined. A clear visual structure allows your sophisticated vocabulary to be understood in context, and precise language helps to explain your visual choices. To reach the top mark band (9-10), your study must be seamless. The examiner should not have to struggle to connect your text to your images or to follow your train of thought. The presentation should feel like a guided tour led by an expert—you.
Coherent and Fluent: Your screens must follow a logical narrative. This typically means an introduction, focused analysis of each work, direct comparison, and a synthesising conclusion. Use consistent headings and layout templates.
Visually Appropriate: The design should serve the analysis. Use high-quality images. Choose readable fonts (e.g., Arial, Times New Roman) and a simple colour scheme that does not obscure text or images. Avoid distracting backgrounds or animations.
Subject-Specific Language: Go beyond simply naming elements like 'line' or 'colour'. Use evaluative and analytical language, such as 'agitated brushwork', 'monumental scale', 'asymmetrical balance', or 'saturated palette' to describe their effect and contribution to meaning.
Integration: The highest achievement in Criterion D is seen when the visual layout, written text, and subject-specific language work together harmoniously to build a convincing argument.
Designing for Clarity: Effective Screen Layout and Structure
Each screen in your presentation is a building block of your overall argument. Avoid cognitive overload by dedicating each screen (or a two-screen spread) to a single, focused idea. Use a grid system to align text and images, which creates a professional and organised look. Visual hierarchy is key: use headings, subheadings, and bold text to guide the reader's attention to the most important information. Most importantly, your images are your primary evidence; they should be large, clear, and directly referenced in your text.
Use Annotations: Use arrows, circles, or close-up insets to point directly to the features you are discussing. For example, if you mention 'impasto', show a close-up of the textured paint.
Juxtapose for Comparison: On your comparative screens, place the artworks side-by-side to make similarities and differences immediately apparent to the examiner.
Balance Images and Text: A common mistake is to have a screen that is wall-to-wall text or, conversely, just a gallery of images. Aim for a balance where the text explains and the images provide evidence.
Number Your Screens: Simple screen numbers (e.g., 'Screen 5 of 15') help the examiner navigate your study and reference specific points in their feedback.
Academic Integrity: The Foundation of Scholarly Work
Academic integrity is the moral compass of your intellectual journey in the IB. For the Comparative Study, it means being transparent about your research process. Every piece of information that is not common knowledge and every idea that is not originally your own must be acknowledged. This is not a punishment or a chore; it is a fundamental practice that validates your own voice, shows respect for the work of other artists and scholars, and protects you from accusations of malpractice. Plagiarism, even when unintentional, has serious consequences. The key to avoiding it is to develop good research habits from the very start.
Acknowledge Everything: Cite facts, statistics, direct quotations, and paraphrased ideas. This includes information from books, journals, museum websites, gallery wall texts, documentaries, and interviews.
Cite Images Correctly: Every artwork image must have a full caption including Artist, Title, Date, and Medium. You must also cite the source where you found the image (e.g., the museum's online collection).
Understand Paraphrasing: To paraphrase is to completely restructure an idea in your own words and sentence structure. Simply changing a few words in a sentence ('patchwriting') is still considered plagiarism. Always follow a paraphrase with an in-text citation.
Your Voice is Central: Your study should be driven by your own analysis. Use sources as supporting evidence to bolster your claims, not as a substitute for your own thinking. The examiner wants to hear your interpretation, informed by research.
The Mechanics of Citation: In-text References and the List of Sources
Consistency is paramount when citing. The IB does not mandate a single citation style, but you must choose one recognised style (such as MLA, Chicago, or APA) and apply it consistently throughout your study. There are two components to proper citation: the in-text citation, which appears in the body of your text, and the comprehensive 'List of Sources' (or Bibliography) which appears on your final screen(s).
To ensure your academic integrity is beyond reproach, create your 'List of Sources' as you conduct your research, not at the end. Use free online tools like Zotero, MyBib, or Cite This For Me to automatically format your citations as you find sources. This saves enormous time and prevents you from losing track of where your information came from.
Worked examples
See the formulas applied — reveal one step at a time, like the exam.
A student is comparing the portrayal of power in Jacques-Louis David's 'Napoleon Crossing the Alps' and Kehinde Wiley's 'Napoleon Leading the Army over the Alps'. How could they design a screen to effectively compare the artists' use of symbolism?
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A highly effective screen would be titled 'Recontextualising Power: A Dialogue in Symbolism'. The screen would feature both paintings side-by-side, with equal prominence. On David's painting, annotations would point to the names 'BONAPARTE', 'HANNIBAL', and 'KAROLUS MAGNUS' carved into the rocks, with a text box explaining: 'David inscribes Napoleon into a lineage of historical greatness, using the very landscape as a testament to his power.' On Wiley's painting, annotations would highlight the subject's modern Timberland boots and camouflage, and the ornate, floral background. The corresponding text would state: 'In contrast, Wiley disrupts this historical narrative. The contemporary clothing grounds the figure in the present, while the Rococo-style background, a symbol of aristocratic luxury, is subverted and reclaimed, questioning traditional European iconographies of power.' Below both images, a synthesising paragraph would begin: 'Thus, while both artists use symbolism to construct an image of power, David's approach is one of historical affirmation, whereas Wiley's is one of critical re-appropriation, challenging the viewer to consider who is granted heroic status in Western art history.' This layout directly links visual symbols with their contextual interpretation, demonstrating strong analytical and comparative skills (Criterion B and C) through a clear and visually appropriate structure (Criterion D).
A student is analysing the cultural context of a Ukiyo-e print by Hokusai. They use information from a book by art historian Christine Guth. How should they correctly integrate and cite this source using MLA 9 style?
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On a screen discussing the context of 'The Great Wave off Kanagawa', the student's text might read: 'The sudden popularity of Prussian blue, a synthetic pigment imported by Dutch traders, offered Japanese artists a vibrant and fade-resistant alternative to traditional indigo. This new technology enabled Hokusai to achieve the dramatic tonal range that makes the wave so compelling (Guth 124). The print was not just an aesthetic object; it was part of a thriving commercial market for images of famous Japanese landscapes, catering to a new class of domestic tourists.' The in-text citation '(Guth 124)' clearly points the examiner to the source. On the final 'List of Sources' screen, the full citation would be listed alphabetically: Guth, Christine M. E. Art of Edo Japan: The Artist and the City, 1615-1868. Yale University Press, 1996. This two-part system demonstrates meticulous research and adherence to academic conventions, strengthening the credibility of the student's contextual analysis (Criterion A) and fulfilling the requirements of academic honesty.
How it all connects
The big idea sits in the middle — tap a linked idea to explore the link.
Tap a linked idea to see how it connects back to the main topic — that connection is what examiners reward.
Glossary
Try to recall each definition before you reveal it.
Quick check
Answer in your head first — then tap to check. No pressure.
Revision flashcards
Flip the card. Test yourself before the exam.
Formal Qualities
The elements of art (line, shape, colour, form, texture, space, value) and principles of design (balance, rhythm, emphasis, proportion, unity, variety) used to analyse an artwork's composition and material properties.
Key takeaways
Review these before you close the topic — retrieval beats re-reading.
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Coherent and Fluent: Your screens must follow a logical narrative. This typically means an introduction, focused analysis of each work, direct comparison, and a synthesising conclusion. Use consistent headings and layout templates.
- ✓
Visually Appropriate: The design should serve the analysis. Use high-quality images. Choose readable fonts (e.g., Arial, Times New Roman) and a simple colour scheme that does not obscure text or images. Avoid distracting backgrounds or animations.
- ✓
Subject-Specific Language: Go beyond simply naming elements like 'line' or 'colour'. Use evaluative and analytical language, such as 'agitated brushwork', 'monumental scale', 'asymmetrical balance', or 'saturated palette' to describe their effect and contribution to meaning.
- ✓
Integration: The highest achievement in Criterion D is seen when the visual layout, written text, and subject-specific language work together harmoniously to build a convincing argument.
Practice — then mark it
The whole point: a real Cambridge question, marked mark-by-mark.
Test your understanding of presentation and citation by analysing a sample Comparative Study and marking it against Criterion D.
Test your understanding of presentation and citation by analysing a sample Comparative Study and marking it against Criterion D.
Extra simulations & links
PhET, GeoGebra and other curated tools — open in a new tab.
Frequently asked
Checkpoint
One marked question is worth ten re-reads — close the loop before you move on.
Reading it isn’t knowing it — prove it.
Before you move on: do Test your understanding of presentation and citation by analysing a sample Comparative Study and marking it against Criterion D. on paper, snap a photo, and get examiner-style feedback on exactly where you win and lose marks.