TOK Exhibition — Guide
What Is the Exhibition?
The TOK Exhibition is your first major TOK assessment (DP2). You choose three objects from the real world and write a commentary (up to 950 words total, ~300 per object) showing how each object illustrates a different perspective on one of the IB’s 35 prescribed prompts.
- Worth 33% of your final TOK score
- Completed at the start of DP2
- Objects must be distinct — no two objects may make the same point
What Makes a Good Object?
Ask yourself: “What knowledge is at stake regarding this object?” If you cannot answer this question immediately, it may not be a good object.
Eight qualities of a good object:
- Links easily to the prompt — the connection is clear and direct
- Specific — a particular object, with a particular maker, date, location, and purpose. Generic photographs from the internet are not acceptable.
- Accessible knowledge context — the real-world knowledge context can be explained to a non-specialist in 2–3 sentences
- The object makes the link visible — seeing or reading about the object helps you see the connection to knowledge
- Personal significance — you have a genuine reason to care about this object
- Not purely symbolic — a dove representing peace is too indirect; the link to knowledge is too remote
- Has features useful for the prompt — the object possesses specific properties that connect to the keywords of the prompt
- Unique in your class — no two students may use the same object
Writing the Commentary
Your commentary for each object has three parts:
Part 1: WHAT?
What is the object and what is its real-world knowledge context?
- Identify the object: what it is, who made it, when, where, and for what purpose
- Describe its knowledge context: what knowledge is at stake here?
- Keep it to 2–3 sentences — include only what is relevant to the prompt
Part 2: HOW? WHY?
How does the object link to the prompt? Why did you choose it?
- This is the majority of the commentary
- Use the keywords from the prompt and the word “knowledge” at key moments
- Refer to specific features of the object that make the link visible
- Cite external evidence or examples where relevant
Part 3: ZOOM OUT
What perspective on the prompt does this object illustrate?
- Step back and state explicitly what aspect of the prompt this object reveals
- Link back to both the object and the prompt keywords
Four Elements Every Commentary Must Have
- Identification — What is the object, who made it, when, where?
- Knowledge context — What knowledge is at stake? (Many students omit this.)
- Explicit link to prompt — Use the keywords from the prompt. If neither the prompt’s keywords nor the word “knowledge” appear, warning bells should be ringing.
- Justification — Why is this object in the exhibition? Take a perspective on the prompt.
Typical Commentary Language
“This object is an X which is used to do Y in situation S.” “The knowledge involved here is K because …” “The prompt asks about [keyword] and we can see [keyword] in the knowledge context of this object because …” “This object shows that the prompt can be understood from the [perspective] perspective.”
Common Mistakes
| Mistake | Fix |
|---|---|
| Too much description of the object, too little about knowledge | Ask: what is known because of this object? |
| Symbolic objects (dove, scales of justice) | Choose objects with specific knowledge contexts |
| Generic images (“a photograph of a microscope”) | Name the specific instrument, researcher, institution |
| Omitting who, when, where | Include these — they are part of identification |
| Dropping TOK vocabulary without making it do work | Only use terms when they make a genuine conceptual contribution |
The Scoring Rubric
The Exhibition is marked on a single criterion: to what extent does the commentary show how the object illustrates the prompt?
Score 7–9: The object is specific and well-chosen; the commentary clearly and specifically links the object’s knowledge context to the prompt; the perspective is justified.
Score 4–6: The object is adequately chosen; the link is present but may be unclear or underdeveloped; the knowledge context is mentioned but not fully explored.
Score 1–3: The object is generic or symbolic; the link to the prompt is vague or missing; little discussion of knowledge.
Score 0: The prompt is not identified in the commentary.
Always state the prompt you are responding to. Failure to identify the prompt may result in 0 points.