O-Level Biology Practical Resource Map: Drawing, Food Tests, Microscopy & Plant Experiments
A resource map for O-Level Biology 6093 Paper 3 students, routing drawing, food tests, microscopy, osmosis, enzymes, plants, data, planning, and ACE.
The core idea is simple: Use this page to choose your next Biology practical drill.
Use it as a working check: Route by skill: drawing, food tests, microscopy, osmosis, enzymes, plant work, data, planning, or ACE.
Then go one layer deeper: Open one drill, attempt the task, then write the observation or data sentence before reading more.
O-Level Biology Paper 3 revision becomes easier when the resources are grouped by task. This page is a map, not another complete guide.
Use the O-Level Biology Practical 2026 guide for the full Paper 3 overview. Use this map when you already know the format and need the next practical resource to open.
Pick by weak skill
| Weak skill | Start here | Then check |
| Food tests | Benedict's, iodine, biuret, and emulsion workflow | Observation wording and heating method |
| Biological drawing | Line drawing and proportion | Label lines, magnification, no shading |
| Microscopy | Light microscope and fieldwork guide | Focus, graticule, scale, specimen handling |
| Osmosis and diffusion | Potato, Visking tubing, or evidence lab | Mass change, percentage change, control |
| Enzymes | Rate investigation |
Practical course completion-record note
For practical, lab, and experiment courses, Eclat Institute maintains centre-held attendance records and may also issue an internal attendance or completion document based on participation and internal assessment.
- For SEAB private-candidate declarations, the key evidence is the centre's attendance or completion record, not a government-issued certificate.
- This is an internal centre-issued certificate, not an MOE/SEAB qualification or accreditation.
- Recognition (if any) is determined by the receiving school, institution, or employer.
- For SEAB private candidates taking science practical papers, SEAB states you should either have taken the subject before or attend a practical course and complete it before the practical paper date.
View our sample completion document (Current sample layout (design may be refined over time))

