IB Maths HL Paper 3 catches many students off guard — unlike Papers 1 and 2, it consists of just two extended questions that demand sustained mathematical reasoning rather than quick-fire problem solving. Here's how to prepare properly.
What Makes Paper 3 Different
Paper 3 is unique to HL students and worth 20% of the final grade. Rather than testing many topics briefly, it presents two long, multi-part questions that often connect several areas of the syllabus — for example, combining calculus with sequences and series, or vectors with complex numbers. Each part typically builds on the previous one, so an early mistake can affect your ability to complete later parts.
Common Question Types
- Modelling problems — using calculus or functions to model a real-world or mathematical scenario, often building in complexity across the question
- Proof and exploration — guided proofs where you establish a result in early parts, then apply it later
- Combined topic questions — drawing on two or more syllabus areas, such as statistics combined with calculus
How to Prepare
1. Practice Full Papers, Not Just Questions
Because Paper 3 questions build progressively, practicing isolated questions out of context can be misleading. Work through complete past Paper 3 papers under timed conditions to build the stamina and sustained focus the format demands.
2. Study Mark Schemes Closely
Paper 3 mark schemes reveal exactly how method marks are awarded for partial progress — even if you can't complete a question, understanding what method steps earn marks helps you maximise score on questions you don't fully solve.
3. Strengthen Connections Between Topics
Since Paper 3 often combines multiple syllabus areas, revision should focus on how topics relate to each other — not just mastering each topic individually. Building a habit of asking "how could this connect to calculus/vectors/statistics?" while revising other topics pays off significantly.
4. Don't Panic on Unfamiliar Setups
Paper 3 questions are often built around unfamiliar contexts deliberately — the underlying maths is usually within the syllabus, but presented in a novel way. Practicing a wide range of past papers builds comfort with this style.