Cambridge IGCSE™: Information and Communication Technology 0417/11 May/June 2021
Cambridge IGCSE™: Information and Communication Technology 0417/11 May/June 2021
Published
This mark scheme is published as an aid to teachers and candidates, to indicate the requirements of the
examination. It shows the basis on which Examiners were instructed to award marks. It does not indicate the
details of the discussions that took place at an Examiners’ meeting before marking began, which would have
considered the acceptability of alternative answers.
Mark schemes should be read in conjunction with the question paper and the Principal Examiner Report for
Teachers.
Cambridge International will not enter into discussions about these mark schemes.
Cambridge International is publishing the mark schemes for the May/June 2021 series for most Cambridge
IGCSE™, Cambridge International A and AS Level components and some Cambridge O Level components.
These general marking principles must be applied by all examiners when marking candidate answers.
They should be applied alongside the specific content of the mark scheme or generic level descriptors
for a question. Each question paper and mark scheme will also comply with these marking principles.
• the specific content of the mark scheme or the generic level descriptors for the question
• the specific skills defined in the mark scheme or in the generic level descriptors for the question
• the standard of response required by a candidate as exemplified by the standardisation scripts.
Marks awarded are always whole marks (not half marks, or other fractions).
• marks are awarded for correct/valid answers, as defined in the mark scheme. However, credit
is given for valid answers which go beyond the scope of the syllabus and mark scheme,
referring to your Team Leader as appropriate
• marks are awarded when candidates clearly demonstrate what they know and can do
• marks are not deducted for errors
• marks are not deducted for omissions
• answers should only be judged on the quality of spelling, punctuation and grammar when these
features are specifically assessed by the question as indicated by the mark scheme. The
meaning, however, should be unambiguous.
Rules must be applied consistently, e.g. in situations where candidates have not followed
instructions or in the application of generic level descriptors.
Marks should be awarded using the full range of marks defined in the mark scheme for the question
(however; the use of the full mark range may be limited according to the quality of the candidate
responses seen).
Marks awarded are based solely on the requirements as defined in the mark scheme. Marks should
not be awarded with grade thresholds or grade descriptors in mind.
1 2
yes no
Full name
Capital of England
Gender
2 Microphone 2
Touch screen
3 Four from: 4
Screens tend to be anti-glare
Uses touch screen
Front and back facing cameras are included
Has a built in battery
Lightweight
Uses Bluetooth/WiFi/3G/4G/5G
Uses solid state memory
Uses an onscreen keyboard
Portable
Small footprint
Disadvantages
Have to pay to travel to the bank to use the service
Customers could waste time standing in queues/travelling to the bank
More difficult for people who have a condition which affects their mobility
Smaller customer base as it is local
Potential for physical robberies
Cannot keep track of the accounts as easily
Not 24/7
5(a) 6 rows 1
5(b) 8 columns 1
6(c) Matched pairs – 1 mark for the feature and 1 mark for the method 6
Hyperlinks
Click each hyperlink to see that it takes the user to the correct web page/part
of the web page/website
Form buttons/icons
Click to see that they carry out the correct task
Text
Use spellchecker/grammar checker/proofread text to check it makes sense
Images
Check the images are not pixelated/correct size/correct image
Videos
Check the videos run correctly/correct video
Sound
Check the sound file runs correctly/correct sound file linked
8 Six from: 6
Comparison
Both are network devices
Both are hardware devices
Both have computers and devices connected to them
Both send data to devices//Both are communication devices
Contrast
In a hub data packets/data are broadcast to every device connected to it
A hub is less secure than a switch in distributing data
Switch checks the data packet
Switch sends to an appropriate device
10 4
Direct Parallel Pilot
Two from:
Examples
Can lead to the identity theft of data
Can lead to the misuse of/access to personal data
Data can be deleted
Data can be changed
Data can be corrupted
Place malicious files/software