GCSE DESIGN AND TECHNOLOGY ELECTRONIC PRODUCTS

Similar documents
GCSE DESIGN AND TECHNOLOGY SYSTEMS AND CONTROL TECHNOLOGY

GCSE Design and Technology Electronic Products

abc Unit 1: Written Paper Final Mark Scheme Design and Technology Electronic Products June 2011 General Certificate of Secondary Education

GCSE DESIGN AND TECHNOLOGY SHORT COURSE

GCSE Electronics 44301

GCSE Electronics Mark scheme June Version 1.1: Final mark scheme

ELECTRONICS ELEC1. Mark scheme June 2016 INTRODUCTORY ELECTRONICS. Version: 1.0 Final

GCSE Design and Technology Short Course

GCSE Engineering Mark scheme June Version: 1.0 Final

Final. Mark Scheme. Design and Technology: Resistant Materials. (Specification 4560) Unit 1: Written Paper

GCSE Mathematics (Linear)

GCSE Physics. PH3HP Final Mark Scheme June Version/Stage: v1.0

A-LEVEL Electronics. ELEC5 Communications Systems Mark scheme June Version: 1.0 Final

Version 3.0. Genera June Engin. (Spec. Final

GCSE Mathematics (Linear)

GCSE Mathematics (Linear)

PHYSICS B: PHYSICS IN CONTEXT

Free-Standing Mathematics Qualification Mathematics

General Certificate of Secondary Education Engineering 48501

Version 1.0. klm. General Certificate of Secondary Education June Design and Technology (Resistant Materials Technology) Final.

A-LEVEL Physics PHA5/2B Medical Physics Mark scheme

Final. Mark Scheme. Design and Technology: Graphic Products. (Specification 4550) Unit 1: Written Paper

Design and Technology: Electronic Products

Surname Other Names. Centre Number Candidate Number Candidate Signature

LEVEL 3 TECHNICAL LEVEL ENGINEERING Mathematics for Engineers Mark scheme

GCSE MATHEMATICS. Practice Papers - Set 1- Teacher Booklet. NEW PRACTICE PAPER SET 2 Foundation Tier Paper 1 Mark Scheme (Published November 2015)

Final. Mark Scheme. Engineering (Double Award) (Specification 4850) Unit 1: Written Paper. General Certificate of Secondary Education June 2011

General Certificate of Secondary Education June 2012 Design and Technology: Resistant Materials Technology

Name My end of year 8 Target = Teacher. OLSJ Design & Technology Electronic Products. Overall Progress Effort Rating ABCDEFG.

UNIT E1 (Paper version of on-screen assessment) A.M. WEDNESDAY, 8 June hour

Monday 13 June 2016 Afternoon Time allowed: 2 hours

ELECTRONICS STARTER KIT

AS Drama and Theatre Studies

Version 1.0. General Certificate of Education January Media Studies. Unit 1: Investigating Media. Final. Mark Scheme

Design and Technology Electronic Products Unit 2: Knowledge and Understanding of Electronic Products

Electronics (JUN ) General Certificate of Secondary Education June Time allowed 2 hours TOTAL

A.M. WEDNESDAY, 19 May minutes

GCE SYSTEMS AND CONTROL TECHNOLOGY

abc Mark Scheme Mathematics 4301 Specification A General Certificate of Secondary Education Paper 2 Foundation 2008 examination - November series

Final. Mark Scheme. Design and Technology: Graphic Products. (Specification 4550) Unit 1: Written Paper

GCSE (9-1) WJEC Eduqas GCSE (9-1) in ELECTRONICS ACCREDITED BY OFQUAL DESIGNATED BY QUALIFICATIONS WALES SAMPLE ASSESSMENT MATERIALS

GCSE Electronics Practical Electronics System Synthesis Report on the Examination June Version: 1.0

Home Map Projects Construction Soldering Study Components Symbols Membership FAQ Links

Unit F Mark scheme

Light activated switch

Version 1.0. klm. General Certificate of Secondary Education June Design and Technology (Graphic Products) Final.

Tuesday 19 May 2015 Morning

GCSE Electronics. Scheme of Work

GCSE Mathematics H Applications of Mathematics Unit 2: Higher Tier Mark scheme 93702H. November Version 1.0 Final

5v AC R. 12v. 1kohm. F=35KHz oscilloscope. 3 Final Project OFF. ON Toggle Switch. Relay 5v 2N3906 2N uF LM311. IR Detector +5v GND LED PNP NPN

Process Components. Process component

EASY BUILD TIMER KIT TEACHING RESOURCES. Version 2.0 LEARN ABOUT SIMPLE TIMING CIRCUITS WITH THIS

Electronics (JUN ) General Certificate of Secondary Education June Thursday 5 June pm to 3.30 pm. Time allowed 2 hours

GCSE Design and Technology: Electronic Products

Temperature activated switch

AQA Qualifications. GCSE Mathematics. Unit H Mark scheme H June Version 1: Final mark scheme

Date of Exam Morning Time allowed: 2 hours

Design and Technology

Cambridge National Engineering. Mark Scheme for June Unit R113: Electronic principles

Version 1.0: abc. General Certificate of Education. Applied Science 8771/8773/8776/8779. Medical Physics. Mark Scheme

GCSE DESIGN AND TECHNOLOGY: RESISTANT MATERIALS TECHNOLOGY 45601

DIGIT & POINTER MULTIMETER

GCSE Design and Technology: Graphic Products

Semiconductors, ICs and Digital Fundamentals

ProfiScale MULTI Multimeter

DARK ACTIVATED COLOUR CHANGING NIGHT LIGHT KIT

GCSE Mathematics. Paper F Mark scheme F June Version 1: Final Mark Scheme

GCSE Mathematics. Paper F Mark scheme F November Version/Stage: 1.0 Final

555 Morse Code Practice Oscillator Kit (draft 1.1)

GCSE Mathematics. Paper 3 Foundation Tier. Mark scheme November Version: 1.0 Final

General Certificate of Education Design and Technology: Product Design 3D

Calculate the maximum amount of energy this battery can deliver.

HEAT ACTIVATED SWITCH KIT

Electronics & Control

GCSE. Manufacturing. Mark Scheme for June General Certificate of Secondary Education. Unit B232: Manufacturing Processes

Tuesday 24 May 2016 Morning

Mark Scheme DRAM1A. Drama and Theatre Studies. (Specification 2240) Unit 1A: Live Theatre Production Seen

Final. Mark Scheme. Design and Technology: Graphic Products. (Specification 4550) Unit 1: Written Paper

IR add-on module circuit board assembly - Jeffrey La Favre January 27, 2015

General Certificate of Education Design and Technology: Product Design 3D

A-LEVEL Media Studies

Functional Skills Functional Mathematics

2014 Mechatronics. Higher. Finalised Marking Instructions

Xylophone Teaching Notes Issue 1.3

tinycylon Assembly Instructions Contents Written by Dale Wheat Version August 2016 Visit dalewheat.com for the latest update!

Electronic Components

ELEXBO A-Car-Engineering

Cambridge Assessment International Education Cambridge Ordinary Level. Published

Design and Technology

Electronics. Module Descriptor

= V IN. and V CE. = the supply voltage 0.7 V, the transistor is on, V BE. = 0.7 V and V CE. until saturation is reached.

Workshop Part Identification Lecture N I A G A R A C O L L E G E T E C H N O L O G Y D E P T.

DET: Technological Studies Applied Electronics Intermediate 2

Programmable Timer Teaching Notes Issue 1.2

THIS IS A NEW SPECIFICATION

GCSE DESIGN AND TECHNOLOGY RESISTANT MATERIALS TECHNOLOGY

4368 Mark scheme and Guidance

Muonhunter one board version assembly instructions for version rev muonhunter.com - Mihaly Vadai

DVM98. True RMS Digital Multimeter. 1 Safety information. 1.1 Preliminary. 1.2 During use

Bi-Directional DC Motor Speed Controller 5-32Vdc (3166v2)

Transcription:

GCSE DESIGN AND TECHNOLOGY ELECTRONIC PRODUCTS 45401 Mark scheme 4540 June 2014 Version 1.0: Final

Mark schemes are prepared by the Lead Assessment Writer and considered, together with the relevant questions, by a panel of subject teachers. This mark scheme includes any amendments made at the standardisation events which all associates participate in and is the scheme which was used by them in this examination. The standardisation process ensures that the mark scheme covers the students responses to questions and that every associate understands and applies it in the same correct way. As preparation for standardisation each associate analyses a number of students scripts: alternative answers not already covered by the mark scheme are discussed and legislated for. If, after the standardisation process, associates encounter unusual answers which have not been raised they are required to refer these to the Lead Assessment Writer. It must be stressed that a mark scheme is a working document, in many cases further developed and expanded on the basis of students reactions to a particular paper. Assumptions about future mark schemes on the basis of one year s document should be avoided; whilst the guiding principles of assessment remain constant, details will change, depending on the content of a particular examination paper. Further copies of this Mark Scheme are available from aqa.org.uk Copyright 2014 AQA and its licensors. All rights reserved. AQA retains the copyright on all its publications. However, registered schools/colleges for AQA are permitted to copy material from this booklet for their own internal use, with the following important exception: AQA cannot give permission to schools/colleges to photocopy any material that is acknowledged to a third party even for internal use within the centre.

FOR EXAMINERS PLEASE NOTE THAT IF YOU ARE UNSURE HOW TO AWARD A RESPONSE FROM A CANDIDATE, PLEASE SEEK CLARIFICATION OR ADVICE FROM YOUR TEAM LEADER OR THE PRINCIPAL EXAMINER. Question Part Sub Part Section A Marking Guidance 1 a 1 mark for each specific component Marks Process: transistor, Darlington, astable, 555, PIC, op-amp, FET, thyristor or any suitable response Output: LED, buzzer, bulb, speaker, piezo, siren, bell, or any suitable response. 1 b Up to 3 marks Total 4 Award: 1 mark for a simple response 2 marks for a reasoned or justified response, or several simple responses. 3 marks for 2 or more justified responses. Reference to, for example, small size low cost visible/audible from a distance ease of availability reliability Total 3 1 c Construction up to 2 marks 1 mark for each reference to a construction detail e.g. vacuum formed, injection moulded, fabricated, screwed, glued, dimensions, material Location of input and output components up to 2 marks 1 mark each for a coherent reference to : location of temp.sensing component location of temp too high output component (The component must be in a realistic location on the case e.g. not on an edge) 1 mark for a reference to the feature to make the product visually appealing e.g. shape, logo, colour that is justified. Specific reference to a hygiene feature up to 2 marks e.g. rounded corners, membrane switch, ease of cleaning, suitable material 1 mark for indicating how the battery can be charged. This could simply be the recharging point in the case. No credit for removing battery for re-charging purposes. Quality of communication up to 3 marks 3 marks for a clear, neatly drawn coherent idea, and clear notes 2 marks for a clear sketch with further detail in notes 1 mark for a very basic sketch, or sketch with brief notes. Total 11 3

1 d A circuit diagram and notes showing how the input/process/output components combine to create a working solution. Explanation: 1 mark for a very basic response that lacks technical detail, and/or would not work. Additional technical detail 2 to 3 marks A largely complete solution with some notes, but lacking detail in notes. Some parts of the circuit would work. High level response 4 to 5 marks A complete solution, with well-explained notes, that would work. 1 e Up to 5 marks Quality of diagram: up to 3 marks 3 marks for a clear, neatly drawn circuit diagram, with some components labelled or with values. 2 marks for a clear circuit diagram. 1 mark for a very basic circuit diagram. Total 8 For each method: 1 mark for simple reference to one method 2 marks for a justified or explained method 3 marks for objective, well-detailed method. Testing/evaluating methods could include: User review/questionnaire Use of product in real world location Calibration/ measurement of accuracy Testing in a fridge Shop customer review Test of visibility/audibility of outputs Test battery life Total 5 1 f Up to 4 marks 1 mark for simple point 2 marks for a justified or explained point Disposal methods could include: Case re-cycled Sold/ passed on to another user Taken to a disposal point Battery to be re-used in another product Battery placed in proper battery disposal bin Total 4 4

2 a 1 mark for each correctly drawn symbol as per the specification. (note: PTM throw must be long enough to touch poles Ignore if circle drawn round LED; it is acceptable Accept variable resistor symbol) 2 b 1 mark each 1 mark for loudspeaker/speaker 1 mark for bell Buzzer - polarised NPN transistor - polarised PTM - non-polarised Thermistor - non-polarised 2 c 1 mark for long/short lead 1 mark for minus signs drawn on case Total 6 Total 4 2 d Up to 2 marks 1 mark for each reason ( if axial lead cap drawn, 1 mark for waist, 1 mark for minus signs) Reasons could include: smaller component smaller board cheaper than through hole components automated assembly possibility of double sided boards or similar suitable response ( answers such as cheap quick easy no marks unless qualified) 5

3 a Up to 6 marks 1 mark for pin 7 to +V 1 mark for pin 3 to LDR/resistor junction 1 mark for pin 2 to resistor/resistor junction 1 mark for drawing LED on breadboard in a functioning position. ( symbol or pictorial) 1 mark for indicating orientation of LED (polarity) 1 mark for connecting LED to pin 6 Note: if wires or components share the same hole, only penalise this once. +V 0 Total 6 3 b Up to 3 marks 1 mark for each response, for example, incorrect connections faulty I.C. faulty component incorrect polarity of component wrong value of resistor broken wire faulty breadboard power supply connections or similar suitable response. Total 3 3 c Up to 4 marks 1 mark for each reference to a distinct step which could include: select V range lead to anode lead to cathode probes on either side of LED take a reading or similar suitable response Total 4 6

3 d 1 mark for a simple explanation 2 marks for a detailed explanation Working model, actual sized model, functioning circuit, real-world testing. or similar suitable response 4 a 1 mark each correctly named connection base, collector, emitter 4 b 1 mark for reference to: Total 3 Protection of the transistor, or stops too much current on the base, or prevents the transistor blowing 4 c Up to 2 marks Total 1 1 mark for reference to protection of transistor 1 mark for reference to back E.M.F. 4 d Up to 4 marks 4 e 1 mark for added transistor drawn 1 mark for emitter of first transistor to base of second 1 mark for emitter of second transistor to 0V 1 mark for both collectors correctly connected to buzzer Up to 2 marks 1 mark for each response, which could include: smaller circuit board easier to assemble less chance of making a mistake fewer components so more reliable justified reference to cost of components or any suitable response Total 4 7

(No marks for the unjustified quick easy cheap ) 5 a i 1 mark for buzzer 5 a ii 1 mark Reed switch, magnetic reed switch, vibration sensor, PIR, tilt switch, proximity switch, PTB or any suitable specific component. 5 b Up to 2 marks Note: do not accept motion sensor Total 1 Total 1 1 mark for correct shape of symbol 1 mark for drawing three leads correctly 5 c Up to 3 marks B A Q 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 6 a 6 b Up to 2 marks 1 mark for basic response goes on/off, or causes LED to flash. 1mark for further technical detail.e.g. pin 3 goes high/low, pulse generator, clock, or other suitable response Up to 5 marks 1 mark for the formula 1 mark for correct substitution of resistor values [ ( 1000 + 200,000) or, if using MΩ x µf, (0.001 x 0.2)] 1 mark for correct substitution of cap. Values [ 10/1,000,000 or, if using MΩ, x 10] Total 3 8

1 mark for correct answer 0.716 ( accept rounded to 0.7) 1 mark for units Hertz or Hz Total 5 6 c Up to 6 marks 1 each for: Pin 8 to +V Pin 1 to 0V Pin 6 to res/cap junction Pin 2 to res/cap junction Resistor and LED pads drawn Pin 3 correctly drives the LED ( if tracks cross, disregard one of the tracks) 6 d Up to 2 marks 1 mark each for thicker tracks, larger solder pads/lands, add text, strain relief holes, consideration of PCB size. or suitable response Total 6 7 a Up to 2 marks 1 mark each for reference to IC can cost more computer/software/download cable needed limited to around 6V, so regulator may be needed programming skills required need for programming Or similar suitable response. 7 b Up to 2 marks 1 mark for digital signal having only 2 states 1 mark for analogue signal being variable. 7 c Up to 5 marks 1 for outputs on 1 for wait 1 9

1 for outputs off 1 for wait 1 1 for loop Basic or other program systems acceptable 7 d ( simple re-writes of the question, giving no evidence of a programming system no marks) Up to 5 marks Total 5 1 for compare of light level with yes/no routes correct 1 for 1 on, 0 off 1 for correct timing 1 for 0 on, 1 off 1 for loop back to the compare Note: do not penalise if an LED remains on in light conditions. Basic or other program systems acceptable ( simple re-writes of the question, giving no evidence of a programming system no marks) Total 5 10

8 QWC Question Looking for details of hazards and precautions for two processes. Hazards could include: Material in eyes Hands trapped or injured Clothing caught in machinery Cuts to fingers Breathing-in dust Burns to hands or other parts of body Tripping Irritation to skin Precautions could include: Wearing of goggles/safety glasses Use of clamps and vices Wearing aprons Rolling-up sleeves Removal of ties Wearing of face masks/ filters Well-ventilated environment Wearing gloves Good workshop safety practice. Consider the technical content and quality of communication. Marks awarded as follows: 0 marks no answer worthy of credit. 1-2 marks Very limited coverage of just hazards or precautions, or just one process discussed. Many spelling and punctuation mistakes. Limited use of technical vocabulary. 3-4 marks Some coverage of hazards and precautions for two processes using some technical terms. Some spelling, punctuation or grammar errors. Poor structure of answer, and repetition made. 5-6 marks Good coverage and a well-structured response. Hazards and precautions for two processes discussed using specific terms and vocabulary. There may be one or two spelling or punctuation mistakes, or minor grammar error. 7-8 marks Good coverage and depth of answer, and a well-structured response. Hazards and precautions for two processes discussed using technical terms, and specific names of tools and equipment. Excellent spelling, grammar and punctuation. Avoidance of repetition. Total 8 TOTAL 120 11