Exam overview You will sit 2 papers:

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Exam overview You will sit 2 papers: Each paper has Section A (reading) and Section B (writing) We have 4 weeks to prepare for the assessment 2 weeks - Paper 1 2 weeks - Paper 2

Paper 1 – Overview Explorations in creative reading and writing Reading: you are given an extract from a 19th / 20th century story Read an extract from a story Q1 - read a specific section and write done 4 things you learn [4 marks] Q2 – read a specific section and answer a question on language [8 marks] Q3 – read the whole text and answer a question about structure [8 marks] Q4 – read a specific section and state analytically whether you agree with the opinion of a student on the text using quotations [20 marks]

Paper 1 - Overview Writing – Descriptive writing Q5 – You are given a picture / photograph and are asked to write descriptively about it [40 marks – 20 for content & organisation; 16 marks for technical accuracy]

Focusing on question 1 AO1: Identify and interpret implicit information and ideas What does this mean?

Focusing on question 1 AO1: Identify and interpret implicit information and ideas Recognise/ spot Explain the meaning of something Suggested though not directly expressed

Question 1 requires you to search for clues within the text Read the following: Jason folded the piece of paper as small as he could and stuffed it in the secret compartment in the heel of his boot. He glanced down at its previous owner, still and white. ‘Funny how they always look so peaceful afterwards,’ he thought. Pausing for a moment, he washed his hands, put on some of the man’s cologne and quietly closed the door. Answer the following questions: 1. What has Jason just done? What made you think this? (include evidence) 2. Has he done this before? What made you think this? (include evidence) 3. Why do you think he did it? What made you think this? (include evidence)

Now read Source A Read again the first part of the source, lines 1 to 6. List four pieces of information you are given about the woman in these lines. [4 marks]

What could you have found? When she was home from her boarding-school I used to see her almost every day sometimes, because their house was right opposite the Town Hall Annexe. She and her younger sister used to go in and out a lot, often with young men, which of course I didn’t like. When I had a free moment from the files and ledgers I stood by the window and used to look down over the road over the frosting and sometimes I’d see her. In the evening I marked it in my observations diary, at first with X, and then when I knew her name with M

Try this The sweet-shop in Llandaff in the year 1923 was the very centre of our lives. To us, it was what a bar is to a drunk, or a church is to a Bishop. Without it, there would have been little to live for. But it had one terrible drawback, this sweet-shop. The woman who owned it was a horror. We hated her and we had good reason for doing so.