How might context shape whether knowledge is accepted or rejected?
TOK Exhibition Prompt 24 — Object Examples & Rationale
A complete, examiner-written breakdown of IB TOK Exhibition IA Prompt 24 — five worked object examples, linked optional themes, knowledge questions and top-band commentary to help you nail the TOK exhibition for IB DP May 2026.
The Prompt
“How might the context in which knowledge is presented influence whether it is accepted or rejected?” — Prompt 24 of the 35 prescribed IA prompts.
Assessment Weight
TOK exhibition = one-third of your final TOK grade.
Word Count
950 words max across all 3 objects combined (plus references).
Session
Updated & mapped for TOK assessment.
Decoding Prompt 24 – “How might the context in which knowledge is presented influence whether it is accepted or rejected?”
IB TOK Exhibition Prompt 24 asks a deeply contemporary question: how does the context in which knowledge is presented — the setting, the speaker, the medium, the audience — shape whether it is believed or dismissed? This prompt recognises that knowledge claims are rarely judged on content alone; framing, authority, timing, and cultural setting all filter what counts as trustworthy. Your three objects must each illuminate a different aspect of how context mediates knowledge acceptance.
Strong exhibitions on Prompt 24 demonstrate how context operates through different channels: institutional authority, linguistic framing, platform or media choice, cultural timing, and visual presentation. The richest object examples come from knowledge & language, knowledge & technology, and knowledge & politics — each showing a distinct mechanism by which context shapes reception.
TOK Exhibition Objects for Prompt 24
Each example below includes the object, linked optional theme, examiner-written rationale, and a knowledge question to extend your analysis.
A Peer-Reviewed Journal Article (The Lancet, 1998)
The 1998 Andrew Wakefield paper published in The Lancet illustrates how the institutional context in which knowledge is presented can drive its initial acceptance far beyond what the evidence warrants. Because the claim linking the MMR vaccine to autism appeared in a prestigious peer-reviewed journal, parents, policymakers and media treated the findings as trustworthy for more than a decade, even though the underlying data was later shown to be fraudulent. The paper was eventually retracted in 2010. This object powerfully demonstrates that context — the authority of the journal, the credentials of the reviewers, the visual format of a formal scientific paper — can lend a knowledge claim a credibility completely detached from its actual epistemic quality. It invites deep reflection on how the outward signals of credibility (publication venue, jargon, citation format) function as shortcuts in how we accept or reject knowledge, often bypassing the harder work of critical evaluation.
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The Front Page of a Daily Newspaper
A physical newspaper front page exemplifies how editorial context — placement, font size, photo choice, headline framing — controls which knowledge a reader even notices, let alone accepts. The same underlying story can be framed as a crisis, a scandal, a triumph or a minor incident, depending purely on presentation. A tiny change in headline wording (e.g., “protests” vs. “riots”) alters reader reception profoundly, shaping whether the reported facts feel trustworthy or suspicious. This object reveals how context operates at the level of language itself: the choice of verbs, the position above or below the fold, the accompanying image, the font weight — each of these is a contextual signal the reader decodes before processing the factual claim. The newspaper front page demonstrates that knowledge acceptance is mediated not only by whether information is true, but by whether it has been made to feel important and credible.
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A TED Talk Screenshot
A screenshot of a speaker delivering a TED talk — standing alone on the famous red circle, facing a rapt audience, flanked by sleek typography — captures how the visual and platform context of modern knowledge dissemination confers instant credibility. A complex idea condensed into 18 minutes and presented through this specific visual grammar is widely accepted as sophisticated thinking, even when the underlying argument would fail peer review or expert scrutiny. The TED format has become so culturally coded as “serious ideas” that viewers rarely question claims delivered within it. This object highlights how technology and design — the choice of platform, the stagecraft, the production values — function as a contextual stamp of authority that shapes knowledge reception in ways the human speaker alone could not achieve. It invites reflection on how 21st-century knowledge is increasingly evaluated by the aesthetic of its delivery as much as by the rigour of its content.
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2 More Objects for Prompt 24
Two additional examiner-written object examples to help you finalise your TOK exhibition selection.
A WhatsApp Forwarded Message Screenshot
A screenshot of a forwarded WhatsApp message embodies how the context of a personal messaging platform transforms the reception of knowledge claims. A message received from a trusted family member or friend on WhatsApp carries implicit credibility that the exact same text posted by a stranger on a public forum would lack. This trust-by-proximity effect has reshaped how misinformation spreads: false health claims, doctored images, and fabricated quotes achieve wide acceptance not because of their merit but because of the intimate, semi-private context in which they arrive. This object illustrates that the social closeness of the sender is now a dominant contextual factor in knowledge acceptance — often overriding expertise, source verification, or logical scrutiny. It reveals a fundamental tension in contemporary knowledge production: the platforms designed to connect us also create contexts where weak evidence travels faster than rigorous knowledge.
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A Museum Display Label
A museum display label — the small printed card beside a painting or artefact — represents how the curatorial context of a museum profoundly shapes how we accept and interpret the objects it houses. An ordinary sculpture displayed in a gallery with a carefully worded descriptive label, lighting, and framed spatial position becomes, for the viewer, legitimate “art” worthy of contemplation. The same object outside the museum might be ignored or dismissed. This object exemplifies how institutional context performs an epistemic transformation: it tells the visitor what counts as important, how it should be interpreted, and why the claims made on the label should be trusted. The museum label is a small but powerful tool for converting an object into a knowledge claim, illustrating how context in the arts — provenance, display, annotation — determines whether an artefact is received as profound, trivial, or even offensive.
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Knowledge Questions for Prompt 24
Use these knowledge questions to strengthen the analytical depth of your exhibition commentary.
Can knowledge be evaluated independently of the context in which it is presented, or is context inseparable from content?
When credible packaging presents flawed knowledge, who bears the responsibility for false acceptance — the source or the receiver?
How do visual design and platform aesthetics function as epistemic shortcuts in the acceptance of modern knowledge claims?
Is rejecting knowledge on the basis of its source (ad hominem) ever epistemically justified?
Does the same claim become different knowledge when delivered in a scientific paper versus a tweet versus a dinner conversation?
In an age of algorithmic curation, can we still meaningfully evaluate knowledge “on its merits” independent of the context it reaches us in?
How to Score High on Prompt 24
Three strategies our IB examiners use when coaching students through the TOK exhibition.
Name the contextual mechanism explicitly
Don’t just say “the context matters” — identify exactly which contextual feature (authority, framing, platform, proximity, curation) drives acceptance or rejection for each object.
Vary the three contexts across your objects
Pick one institutional, one digital-platform, and one cultural-framing example. Three objects that all illustrate the same kind of context feel repetitive to examiners.
Justify — don’t just describe
The top markband (9–10) is reached only when the commentary explains why the object illustrates the prompt, not just that it does.
TOK Exhibition Prompt 24 — FAQs
What is TOK Exhibition Prompt 24?
What optional themes fit Prompt 24?
What word limit applies to the TOK exhibition?
Can I use digital or online-only objects for Prompt 24?
Can SEV7N help me with Prompt 24?
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