The WAEC Biology Practical (Paper 3) is worth 80 marks — that’s a massive 38% of your total Biology score! Yet many students treat it as an afterthought, focusing only on the objective and essay papers.
Here’s the truth: students who prepare well for the practical paper often score higher overall than students who only focus on theory. Why? Because practical questions are more predictable and there are clear patterns in what WAEC tests year after year.
This guide will show you everything you need to know about the WAEC Biology Practical exam.
What Does the WAEC Biology Practical Exam Test?
The practical paper tests your ability to:
- Identify biological specimens (plants, animals, organs, food items)
- Draw and label biological diagrams accurately
- Perform food tests and interpret results
- Observe and describe features of specimens
- Classify organisms based on observable features
- Explain ecological relationships between organisms
- Set up and interpret experiments (osmosis, photosynthesis, etc.)
Common Specimens in WAEC Biology Practical
Based on analysis of past practical papers, these specimens appear frequently:
Animal Specimens
| Specimen | What WAEC Tests |
|---|---|
| Cockroach | External features, habitat, feeding, economic importance |
| Tilapia (fish) | External features, fins, scales, gills, adaptations to aquatic life |
| Toad/Frog | External features, skin texture, adaptations, metamorphosis |
| Lizard | Scales, claws, adaptations to terrestrial life |
| Earthworm | Segmentation, setae, habitat, economic importance |
| Snail | Shell, foot, tentacles, habitat |
| Domestic fowl egg | Raw vs. boiled, parts of the egg, functions |
| Catfish | Barbels, fins, adaptations, differences from tilapia |
| Bean weevil | Parasitism, damage to stored beans |
Plant Specimens
| Specimen | What WAEC Tests |
|---|---|
| Bean seed | Parts (testa, cotyledon, radicle, plumule), germination |
| Maize grain | Parts, differences from bean seed (monocot vs dicot) |
| Hibiscus flower | Parts (sepal, petal, stamen, pistil), pollination |
| Cassava plant/tuber | Storage organ, economic importance, vegetative propagation |
| Mango leaf | Leaf structure, venation (net-veined = dicot) |
| Maize/Guinea grass | Leaf structure, venation (parallel = monocot) |
| Orange fruit | Fruit type (berry/hesperidium), dispersal |
| Pineapple | Multiple fruit, dispersal by animals |
| Coconut | Seed dispersal by water, structure |
| Groundnut | Fruit type, legume, nitrogen fixation |
Other Common Specimens
| Specimen | What WAEC Tests |
|---|---|
| Humus (dry and moist) | Soil composition, importance to plants |
| Sandy, loamy, clayey soil | Soil types, water retention, drainage |
| Microscope | Parts, usage, magnification calculation |
How to Draw Biological Diagrams (The Right Way)
Diagrams carry heavy marks in the practical paper — typically 5-10 marks per diagram. Here’s how to draw them properly and maximize your marks:
Rules for Biological Drawing
- Use a sharp pencil — NEVER use pen for diagrams
- Draw BIG — Your diagram should be at least half a page
- Use smooth, continuous lines — No sketchy or hairy lines
- Don’t shade or color — Biological diagrams are line drawings only
- Label with straight, horizontal lines — Use a ruler
- Labels should be on ONE side (preferably the right side)
- Don’t cross label lines — Keep them neat and organized
- Add a title below the diagram
- Include magnification if asked (e.g., “×2” means twice the actual size)
- Draw only what you can see — Don’t add parts that aren’t visible on the specimen
Diagrams You Must Practice
Before your practical exam, practice drawing these until you can do them from memory:
Animal diagrams:
- External features of a tilapia (with labeled fins)
- External features of a cockroach
- External features of a toad
- Longitudinal section of a boiled egg
- Parts of an earthworm
Plant diagrams:
- Longitudinal section of a bean seed
- Longitudinal section of a maize grain
- Half/section of a hibiscus flower
- Transverse section of a leaf
- External features of a named fruit
Food Tests You Must Know
Food tests are a staple of the WAEC Biology practical paper. Know these five tests:
1. Test for Starch — Iodine Test
| Step | What Happens |
|---|---|
| Add a few drops of iodine solution to the food sample | If starch is present, the solution turns blue-black |
| If absent, the solution remains brown/yellow |
2. Test for Reducing Sugar — Benedict’s Test
| Step | What Happens |
|---|---|
| Add Benedict’s solution to the food sample in a test tube | |
| Heat in a water bath for 2-3 minutes | If reducing sugar is present, color changes: green → yellow → orange → brick-red (depending on concentration) |
| If absent, the solution remains blue |
3. Test for Protein — Biuret Test
| Step | What Happens |
|---|---|
| Add sodium hydroxide (NaOH) to the food sample | |
| Then add copper sulphate (CuSO₄) drop by drop | If protein is present, the solution turns purple/violet |
| If absent, the solution remains blue |
4. Test for Fat/Oil — Emulsion Test
| Step | What Happens |
|---|---|
| Dissolve the food sample in ethanol | |
| Pour the ethanol solution into cold water | If fat/oil is present, a white cloudy emulsion forms |
| If absent, the solution remains clear |
5. Test for Vitamin C — DCPIP Test
| Step | What Happens |
|---|---|
| Add the food extract drop by drop to DCPIP solution | If Vitamin C is present, the blue DCPIP is decolorized (turns colorless) |
| If absent, the DCPIP remains blue |
Common Practical Questions and How to Answer Them
Type 1: Identify and Classify
Question: “Identify specimens A, B, and C. State their classes and give one reason for your classification.”
How to answer:
- Name the specimen (use common or scientific name)
- State the class (e.g., Insecta, Pisces, Mammalia, Dicotyledoneae)
- Give a visible feature that supports your classification
- Example: “Specimen A is a cockroach. It belongs to Class Insecta because it has three pairs of jointed legs and a body divided into head, thorax, and abdomen.”
Type 2: Similarities and Differences
Question: “State three observable differences between specimens D and E.”
How to answer:
- Use a table format (WAEC loves tables!)
- State features that you can actually SEE on the specimen
- Example:
| Feature | Specimen D (Bean seed) | Specimen E (Maize grain) |
|---|---|---|
| Number of cotyledons | Two | One |
| Shape | Kidney-shaped | Flattened/wedge-shaped |
| Seed coat | Thick testa, easily removed | Thin, fused with fruit wall |
Type 3: Draw and Label
Question: “Make a large, labeled diagram of specimen F as seen.”
How to answer:
- Follow all the diagram rules listed above
- Draw ONLY what you see (not from textbook memory)
- Label at least 5-6 parts
- Add a title and magnification
Type 4: Ecological Relationships
Question: “What is the relationship between specimens A and B?”
How to answer:
- Identify the relationship (parasitism, mutualism, predation, etc.)
- Explain which organism benefits and which is harmed
- Example: “The relationship between the bean weevil (A) and the bean seed (B) is parasitism. The bean weevil bores into the bean seed to feed and lay eggs, damaging the seed, while the weevil benefits by obtaining food and shelter.”
Top 10 Tips for WAEC Biology Practical
- Arrive early and settle down before the exam starts
- Read all questions first before touching any specimen
- Handle specimens carefully — don’t damage them
- Draw what you SEE, not what you think it should look like
- Use a table format for similarities/differences questions
- Label diagrams neatly with straight lines and clear writing
- Practice food tests at home if possible (or watch videos)
- Know the economic importance of common specimens
- Learn habitat and feeding habits of animal specimens
- Time yourself — spend roughly equal time on each question
Watch Practical Preparation Videos
Reading about practicals is one thing — watching them is better. At NaijaBiologyTips, our video courses include:
- ✅ Specimen identification and features explained visually
- ✅ Step-by-step diagram drawing demonstrations
- ✅ Food test procedures demonstrated
- ✅ Past practical questions solved with explanations
- ✅ Tips from an experienced biology instructor
Don’t let the practical paper be your downfall. It’s 80 marks of relatively predictable content — prepare well and secure those marks!
👉 Start preparing at NaijaBiologyTips.site
Free Practical Checklist
Use this checklist to track your practical preparation:
- I can identify and describe 10+ animal specimens
- I can identify and describe 10+ plant specimens
- I can draw and label diagrams of common specimens
- I know all 5 food tests (starch, sugar, protein, fat, Vitamin C)
- I can state ecological relationships between organisms
- I can classify organisms based on observable features
- I’ve practiced with at least 5 past practical papers
- I can draw diagrams following all biological drawing rules
- I know the economic importance of common specimens
- I’m confident with practical exam timing
If you can tick all 10 boxes, you’re ready for Paper 3! 💪
Share this with every Biology student you know. The practical paper is where the easy marks are!
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