IB Maths AA SL Topic 5 — Calculus Paper 1 & 2 🎯 Skill ~3 min practice

AA SL Integrating Polynomials skills

Integration is differentiation in reverse. For powers of x, the rule flips: add 1 to the power, then divide by the new power. Apply it term by term and never forget the + C on indefinite integrals.

The Method

xn dx  =  xn+1n + 1  +  C add 1 to the power, divide by the new power · ✓ in formula booklet
  1. Add 1 to the powerxn becomes xn+1.
  2. Divide by the new power — write xn+1 over (n + 1).
  3. Add + C at the end (indefinite integrals only — never on definite integrals).

The reverse power move

Example: integrate x³

Step 1 — power +1 x³ → x
Step 2 — divide by new x4
+
Step 3 — add C C

Final answer: x³ dx = x⁴/4 + C. Sanity check: differentiating x⁴/4 gives 4x³/4 = x³ ✓

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Don’t forget + C on indefinite integrals

Any constant differentiates to zero, so when integrating you don’t know what was there before. Adding + C covers all possibilities. Indefinite integrals always need + C; definite integrals never do — the C cancels when you subtract.

Worked examples

WE 1 EASY

Find ∫ (3x² − 4x + 5) dx.

step 1 — integrate term by term 3x² → 3 × x³/3 = x³ −4x → −4 × x²/2 = −2x² 5 → 5xstep 2 — combine + Cx³ − 2x² + 5x + C a constant integrates to a constant times x. always include + C!
WE 2 MEDIUM

Find ∫ (6√x − 1/x²) dx.

step 1 — rewrite as powers 6√x = 6x1/2 −1/x² = −x−2step 2 — integrate each term 6x1/2 → 6 × x3/2/(3/2) = 4x3/2 −x−2 → −x−1/(−1) = 1/x4x3/2 + 1/x + C always rewrite roots and fractions as powers FIRST — then the rule applies cleanly!
WE 3 HARD

Find ∫ x(2x − 3)² dx.

step 1 — expand the bracket (2x − 3)² = 4x² − 12x + 9step 2 — multiply by x x(4x² − 12x + 9) = 4x³ − 12x² + 9xstep 3 — integrate term by term 4x³ → x⁴ −12x² → −4x³ 9x → 9x²/2x⁴ − 4x³ + 9x²/2 + C products and powers of brackets — always expand BEFORE integrating!

Practice questions

Try each one yourself first, then click the question to reveal the worked answer. Always check + C is there!
Q1 EASY Find ∫ (4x³ + 2x) dx. Show answer ▼Hide answer ▲
4x³ → 4 × x⁴/4 = x⁴ 2x → 2 × x²/2 = x² x⁴ + x² + C
Q2 EASY Find ∫ (5x⁴ − 6x² + 7) dx. Show answer ▼Hide answer ▲
5x⁴ → x⁵ −6x² → −2x³ 7 → 7x x⁵ − 2x³ + 7x + C
Q3 MEDIUM Find ∫ (√x + 2/x³) dx. Show answer ▼Hide answer ▲
rewrite as powers √x = x1/2   2/x³ = 2x−3 x1/2 → x3/2/(3/2) = 2x3/2/3 2x−3 → 2x−2/(−2) = −x−2 = −1/x² 2x3/2/3 − 1/x² + C
Q4 MEDIUM Find ∫ (3x² − 1)(x + 2) dx. Show answer ▼Hide answer ▲
expand first (3x² − 1)(x + 2) = 3x³ + 6x² − x − 2 integrate term by term 3x³ → 3x⁴/4 6x² → 2x³ −x → −x²/2 −2 → −2x 3x⁴/4 + 2x³ − x²/2 − 2x + C
Q5 HARD Find ∫ (x² + 3x)/√x dx. Show answer ▼Hide answer ▲
split the fraction first (x² + 3x)/x1/2 = x3/2 + 3x1/2 integrate x3/2 → x5/2/(5/2) = 2x5/2/5 3x1/2 → 3 × x3/2/(3/2) = 2x3/2 2x5/2/5 + 2x3/2 + C when there’s a fraction, split the numerator over the denominator first — never integrate as one piece!

⚠ Common mistakes

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Want the theory?

Read the full Integrating Powers of x notes for why integration reverses differentiation, the link to area under curves, and how integration scales linearly across sums and constants.

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