WAEC · Biology · India
Biology for the WAEC Exam — Indian candidates
10% of the WAEC test plan. Cell biology, genetics, ecology, evolution, and human physiology in WAEC Biology. Calibrated for Indian candidates.
Behind every published pass rate is a distribution of which topics caused most of the failures. This is one of those topics. Biology sits at roughly 10% of the West African Examinations Council content distribution — WAEC Biology is required for medicine, nursing, agriculture, and life science admissions across West Africa. The syllabus covers cell structure, genetics and heredity, ecology, evolution, and human systems. Practical skills (microscopy, dissection, biological drawings) are tested in Paper 3. Pass rates for the WAEC are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For Indian candidates preparing for WAEC, the calibration of study to local context matters: India is the world's largest single-country exam market. Most national exams (JEE, NEET, GATE, CUET) are conducted by NTA in English plus regional language editions.
Common failure modes
These are the patterns that cause most candidates to lose marks on this topic. Recognising them in advance is half the work.
- !Drawing incomplete biological specimens without labels and magnification
- !Confusing convergent and divergent evolution examples
- !Misidentifying nutrient deficiency symptoms in plants
Study tips
- 1Practice biological drawings of onion cells, blood cells, leaf cross-sections, and insect specimens.
- 2Master Mendel's laws: Law of Segregation and Law of Independent Assortment with Punnett squares.
- 3Memorize the food chains, food webs, and pyramid diagrams for common WAEC ecosystems.
- 4For candidates in India, WAEC test windows are typically denser in the spring; book test centres in metro cities (Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Chennai, Kolkata) early to secure preferred dates.
Sample WAEC Biology questions
These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real WAEC questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.
- 1
In a monohybrid cross between two heterozygous parents (Aa × Aa), the phenotypic ratio of the offspring is:
- A1:2:1
- B3:1Correct
- C1:1
- D2:1:1
Why this answer?
From Aa × Aa, the genotypic ratio is 1AA : 2Aa : 1aa. Since A is dominant over a, both AA and Aa show the dominant phenotype, while aa shows the recessive. The phenotypic ratio is 3 dominant : 1 recessive = 3:1.
Frequently asked questions
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English Language, Math, and the sciences — WAEC syllabus with PYQs.
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