1 / 37

GCSE ENGLISH LITERATURE J360

Assessment Objectives:AO1 Respond to texts critically and imaginatively; select and evaluate relevant textual detail to illustrate and support interpretationsWhen answering the question you must select relevant material from the play to comment on and quote, thus supporting your ideas.AO2 Explain

ohanzee
Télécharger la présentation

GCSE ENGLISH LITERATURE J360

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


    1. Welcome and thank you for coming. VA and GA Welcome and thank you for coming. VA and GA

    2. Assessment Objectives: AO1 Respond to texts critically and imaginatively; select and evaluate relevant textual detail to illustrate and support interpretations When answering the question you must select relevant material from the play to comment on and quote, thus supporting your ideas. AO2 Explain how language, structure and form contribute to writers presentation of ideas, themes and settings You must incorporate comments on how the playwright uses language and structure to enhance/explore character, themes and ideas in the play. A662 Modern Drama Paper

    3. Band Descriptors Band 5 (some straightforward comments, a little support, a little response to language....) Band 4 (reasonably organised, some relevant support, understanding of some features of language....) Band 3 (developed personal response, use of appropriate support, understanding some features of language...) Band 2 (clear and well developed critical response, clear evaluation of supporting material, critical understanding of language. . .) Band 1 (sophisticated critical perception, cogent and precise evaluation, sensitive understanding of language....) Band 5 = I Band 1 = A Band 3 = D Band 4 = FBand 5 = I Band 1 = A Band 3 = D Band 4 = F

    5. Choice of questions In the exam you will have the choice between the extract based question and a general question. Choose your question carefully do the one that you feel most confident about. Only answer ONE question remember the extract is only set for the first question.

    6. Extract Based Questions In an extract based question, you must stay focused on the extract set - devote at least two thirds of your answer to discussing, quoting from and commenting on the extract itself. References to the wider play should be firmly rooted in your comments on the extract. You must quote from the extract briefly and frequently to support your points. You must answer the question set do not just write a general analysis of the passage.

    7. Extract based Questions Do not spend much time putting the extract in context, but do so briefly in your opening paragraph. Devote at least two thirds of your answer to discussing, quoting from and commenting on the extract itself. Begin your essay by briefly locating the extract in the context of the whole play and establish the dramatic context for the characters and audience. Pay close attention to the build up of dramatic detail in the extract.

    8. General/Discursive Questions You must focus on the question set make sure you understand what it is asking. You must select relevant sections of the play to look at how well you do this will have an impact on your mark. You must use brief and frequent quotes to support your points. Show a sharp awareness of audience response at key moments. Conclude strongly but dont repeat points in your conclusion.

    9. Dont...... Produce generalised answers, failing to look at the extract, or act as though you dont know the rest of the play. Fail to quote. Ignore the question. Only comment on one part of the play in a general question. Ignore one strand in a two-stranded question. Completely lose focus on the question. Include pre-taught material with no relevance to the question set.

    10. Do..... See yourself as a member of an audience, not a reader. See stage directions as part of the dramatic action Pay attention to the wording of the question, especially in your opening paragraph. Integrate brief frequent quotations. Avoid pre-planned answers use your knowledge to answer the question. Keep focused on the question.

    11. Questions? GOOD LUCK IN A662

    12. A663 Prose from Different Cultures There are TWO Assessment Objectives: AO2 Explain how language, structure and form contribute to writers presentation of ideas, themes and settings. You must incorporate comments on how the playwright uses language and structure to enhance/explore character, themes and ideas in the play.

    13. A663 Prose from Different Cultures AO4 Relate texts to their social, cultural and historical contexts; explain how texts have been influential and significant to self and other readers in different contexts and at different times. You must explore the cultural setting of the text. How different readers may respond to the text over time, what the writers attitude is, and how the setting of the text influences the events and characters.

    14. Weightings of AO3 & AO4 AO4 has a higher weighting in the mark scheme than AO3. This means that you must make sure that you include many references to the cultural context of the text in your exam response. We are now going to consider how you can do this effectively.

    15. What is AO4? AO4: relate texts to their social, cultural and historical contexts; explain how texts have been influential and significant to self and to other readers in different contexts and at different times

    16. PRACTICALITIES AO4 quality is required, rather than just coverage - examiners dont want bolted on information. FOCUS and RELEVANCE are key only include references to cultural context in your comments on the question set, as relevant to that question. AS APPROPRIATE TO TEXT AND TASK The key terms are relate and explain - not just know about.

    17. SO WHAT IS CONTEXT? Context = exploring the SETTING of a text How is the setting significant in the narrative of the text? How does the setting relate to the real world? How do these things influence the way we respond to the text?

    18. SETTING and THE NARRATIVE In the text, to what extent: do things happen as they do are characters like they are because of when/ where the story takes place?

    19. SETTING AND THE REAL WORLD Setting becomes context: when we link the setting in the text and a setting in the real world when we start to explore the relationship between them. To do this, we need some knowledge from outside the text: the social . . . cultural . . . historical . . . CONTEXT of the text

    20. EXPLORING SETTING How does exploring / understanding context:

    21. THE CONTEXT OF THE READER . . . explain how texts have been influential and significant to self and to other readers in different contexts and at different times For example - how/why a text may influence views/ attitudes/ circumstances how/why responses to a text may change over time how/why a text may provoke different reactions in different readers Any relevant response to these aspects WILL be credited If there is no reference to these aspects, the whole mark range will still be accessible for example, they may not have been relevant to the extract or question set

    22. LINKING TEXT AND CONTEXT You need to learn how to: select from your contextual knowledge what is relevant explain how the contextual material helps to shape the text itself explore how the contextual material helps to shape the way we respond to the text integrate all this into a response to the task set Bolt-on background is not what examiners are looking for. Never begin with an introduction about the cultural context of the text your understanding of this element must be fully integrated into your response.

    23. THE TASK AO4 in the questions

    24. The Texts The specification prescribes the TEXT to be studied: a prose text from Different Cultures so, by definition, setting and context will be significant and any reading / teaching / study cant help but address these aspects

    25. AO4 Preparation (ii) The Exam Board does NOT prescribe the CONTEXT to be studied. Your teacher will guide you to relevant context as it arises in the novel. So, as events happen, you will learn about how the cultural context of the text has determined or influenced the events and characters.

    26. AO4 Preparation (iii) So, for example in Of Mice and Men, the specification does not prescribe:

    27. Exam Questions the P T R structure A663 questions will: PROMPT an exploration P of a specific TOPIC or issue in the text T and of a way of RESPONDING to this R

    28. So generically -

    29. TASKS an example of P T R The task asks the candidate: What makes the ENDING of the novel so POWERFUL and MOVING? The candidate asks him/herself: How does my KNOWLEDGE / UNDERSTANDING OF CONTEXT help me to explain what makes the ENDING of this novel so POWERFUL and MOVING? The task also reminds the candidate about language - eg at F tier: You should consider . . . the words and phrases [the writer] uses

    30. P T R PROMPTS

    31. P T R TOPICS and RESPONSES TOPICS RESPONSES

    32. You couldnt learn a Different Cultures text without addressing . . . the context What context will help to open up the text to the reader? AO4 performance will directly affect outcomes Key terms are relate and explain - not just know about Bolt-on background will not gain credit

    33. DONT underestimate - AO4 has teeth DONT overload - a little AO4 can go a long way DO ask - how does context help understanding / affect response ? DO emphasise - keep it relevant to the task

    34. Passage-based Questions There are two common problems: Lack of focus on the passage Lack of focus on the question AVOID: An introduction about the author, historical or cultural setting/background. Excessive detail when putting the passage in the context of the rest of the novel. Detailed reference to the rest of novel outside the passage.

    35. Passage-based questions continued.... DO: Read the question carefully and focus on the key words highlight them. Quote briefly and frequently from the passage to support your points. Refer briefly to other points in the novel, tethering your comments firmly to the passage. Think carefully about your point dont just include pre-taught points unless you have made them relevant to your response.

    36. General/Discursive Essay Make sure that you have understood the demands of the title. Choose the sections of the novel that you look at carefully, ensuring that they are the most relevant moments. Include brief, frequent quotations to keep your answer firmly rooted in the text. Make sure that references to cultural context are fully integrated into your comments, not bolted on.

    37. Questions? Good Luck in A663

More Related