Essay Question Answers to questions in this section should refer to the text and to such relevant features as: word choice, tone, imagery, structure, content,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
‘Price we pay for Sun’ Grace Nichols
Advertisements

+ Techniques Bank 1 - Please copy into back of jotters Simile Describing something by saying it is like something else Metaphor Describing something by.
Dulce Et Decorum Est By Wilfred Owen.
How to respond to the question
Disabled He sat in a wheeled chair, waiting for dark, And shivered in his ghastly suit of grey, Legless, sewn short at elbow. Through the park Voices of.
1.  As part of your final grade, you have to pass a textual analysis NAB.  Textual analysis involves looking at a text (poem, extract from a story,
Warm Up  Please grab a NOOK.  Then do the “Opener Comma” Exercises in your writer’s notebook. For the first one, if the sentence is correct, just write.
Dulche Et Decorum Est Example Assignment Starters - 1
PCQE An introduction. The Building Block Approach Literature essays are like: Lego models.
+ Technique Bank 3 - Please copy into back of jotters © Assonance Repeating the same sounds within words close together Euphemism.
TYPES OF POETRY. NARRATIVE POEMS A Narrative Poem combines elements of fiction and poetry to tell a story Like short stories, they usually include characters,
Blackberry Picking.
“Dulce Et Decorum Est” Essay Feedback. In your answer you must refer closely to the text and to at least two of: imagery, word choice, tone, sound or.
Literary Analysis.
Higher English Prelim Revision.
Intermediate 2/ Higher Critical Essay Prelim Support Notes.
“The Things They Carried,” “What Were They Like?” and “Facing It”
Writing on Unseen poetry. Language, structure and form LanguageStructureForm Word choice Imagery Simile Metaphor Personification Sound devices (assonance,
‘War Photographer’ Carol Ann Duffy.
Mirror by Sylvia Plath Who is the narrator of this poem?
Final Assessment Roots and Water. M.L.O To prepare for and plan your essay.
Textual Analysis Skills. What is Textual Analysis? You will be given a piece of fiction writing, prose, poetry or drama, which you will read and then.
What is a critical essay? A critical essay is when you answer a task on a novel, play, poem or film that you have studied and know thoroughly. It gives.
Critical Essay Reading. What is a critical response? A critical response is an essay where you can show your understanding and appreciation of a text.
A WALK TO THE JETTY From “Annie John” BY Jamaica Kincaid
Higher & Int. 2 English Introductions Against the Clock!
Prelim Support Notes  Write 2 critical essays from different genres  Drama, Prose, Poetry, or Media  25 marks each  Do not write 2 essays on the.
+ Technique Bank 4 - Please copy into back of jotters © Protagonist Main character of a text: usually the goodie! Antagonist.
DISABLED Wilfred Owen.  He has lost his legs.  He is described as “legless” with his pants sewn at the “elbow”
R EVISING FOR TEXTUAL ANALYSIS F OCUS ON THE KEY ASPECTS OF THE POEM THAT YOU WILL BE ASKED TO REFER TO IN YOUR ANSWER IN THE EXAM / NAB: Central concerns.
Miss L. Hamilton Extend your Bishop Justus 2013/2014 Year 10 Term 3 – English Language 3b Unit Lesson 2 LQ: Am I able to use language to express.
Close Reading A step by step guide….
Close Reading Tips and Tricks. Understanding Questions It is vital that you always use your own words. Only include a quote if you are asked to ‘pick.
1.For EACH of your studied texts, analyse how language features made at least TWO of the author’s descriptions more vivid for you. Note: “Descriptions”
Miss L. Hamilton Extend your Bishop Justus 2013/2014 Year 10 Term 3 – English Language 3b Unit Controlled Assessment #2 Lesson 14 LQ: Am I able.
Miss L. Hamilton Extend your Bishop Justus 2013/2014 Year 10 Term 3 – English Language 3b Unit Lesson 7 LQ: Am I able to improve on my current.
Exam revision 9ENG steps towards success Miss Macdonald’s tips and tricks.
Critical Essay.  To understand how to structure a critical essay.
DIDLS: The Tone Acronym
Int 2 Critical Essays. Purpose of the Critical Essay A DISCURSIVE essay on a text Presenting an ARGUMENT – clear line of thought which is linked throughout.
Guidelines for Answering. You Must Know! Theme Techniques.
Glasgow 5th March, 1971 By Edwin Morgan Structure 7 sentences which are statements of fact no rhyme no rhythm no stanzas newspaper column layout objective.
Poetry – Structuring An Answer
Critical Essay Writing
Miss L. Hamilton Extend your Bishop Justus 2013/2014 Year 11 Term 3 – English Language Exam Lesson 3: Question 2 LQ: Am I able to explore a newspaper.
“Genuine poetry can communicate before it is understood” “Genuine poetry can communicate before it is understood” T.S.Eliot T.S.Eliot
Higher Critical Essay. Marking Criteria  You need to do all of the following in order to pass the Critical essay. If you fail to achieve one or more.
Gunpowder Plot Int. 2 Essay Plan.. Question Choose a poem which seems to be about a common event or experience but which actually makes a deeper comment.
Writing a Critical Essay on ‘Valentine’ By Carol Ann Duffy
‘War Photographer’ Carol Ann Duffy.
Literature Paper 2 Section B: Poetry – Practice Exam Question
Constructed-Response Answer
Critical Essays Learning Intention:
Nothing’s changed and Owen’ poem Dulce et Decorum est both consider the human reaction to conflict. In Nothing’s changed, the poet is faced with the daily.
UNSEEN POETRY KO Paper Two Literature Section C 20% of Lit GCSE
Poetic Techniques.
Poetic Techniques.
Anthem for Doomed Youth
Find your copy of Dulce et Decorum est
AQA GCSE Paper 1 Glass, Bricks and Dust
Own Words Don’t quote Summarise using different words / phrases.
RUAE.
Have you watched/read The Hunger Games?
Guidelines for Answering
PEE An introduction.
‘The Telegram’ Critical essay May 2011.
The Invisible Process to help with analysis:
Own Words.
Presentation transcript:

Essay Question Answers to questions in this section should refer to the text and to such relevant features as: word choice, tone, imagery, structure, content, rhythm, theme, sound, ideas…..   Choose a poem, which deals with a real or imaginary incident that highlights an important theme. Show how the poet makes the incident convincing and then explain how this conveys the theme.    The horror of war Incident is gas attack Vivid description of soldiers and suffering of gas victim. Contrast between title and reality of war

Sample Introduction The powerful protest poem, “Dulce Et Decorum Est” describes an incident from the First World War witnessed by the author, Wilfred Owen. Owen describes the terrible suffering of a group of soldiers retreating from war and the impact of a gas attack to explore the theme of the horror and inhumanity of war. I found this poem very moving as it gives a very vivid account of human suffering and the suffering caused by conflict, a topic that I feel is still very relevant today.

Planning Your Essay To plan you need to think about how you will divide the poem up, selecting which quotes you will analyse in each paragraph of P.C.Q.E. In your groups plan 5 paragraphs of P.C.Q.E You need to consider these factors Write a point that clearly answers the questions Choose quotes that are most clearly relate to the demands of the task Choose quotes that reflect a good overall knowledge of the WHOLE text Choose quotes that are of a length that allows you to provide some depth of analysis but does not exceed 3 lines (you may use ellipsis) Make a note of the techniques you will analyse

Sample Paragraph Plan Paragraph 1: POINT: Owen opens the poem with a powerful and vivid image to engage the reader at the start of essay CONTEXT: describes shocking state of soldiers as they retreat from war QUOTE:” Bent double, like old beggars under sacks,/Knock-kneed, coughing like hags, we cursed through sludge……. All went lame, all blind;/Drunk with fatigue” EXPLANATION:Contrast with title/ use of similes/ onomatopoeia/ repetition/ metaphor

Exemplar P.C.Q.E The first way in which Owen portrays the character of the wounded soldier vividly is in the opening lines of the poem when the soldier is portrayed as a pathetic and isolated figure. Owen creates a gloomy mood suggesting the man’s isolation. He sat in a wheeled chair, waiting for dark, And shivered in his ghastly suit of grey, Legless, sewn short at elbow. Through the park Voices of boys rang saddening like a hymn..” The word choice of ‘wheeled chair’ creates a vivid image of the character who is the focus of the poem. It skilfully conveys how the once active soldier is now helpless and dependant on others. Owen implies the man is very depressed in the phrase, ‘waiting for dark’. Darkness has connotations of misery and death suggesting this character is now simply waiting out the rest of his life and that he may be suicidal. Enjambment is used to emphasise the source of the man’s misery, he has lost his limbs. The reference to his clothes, ‘sewn short’ creates a clear picture of the man’s pathetic appearance. It may also symbolise how his youthful, care free existence before the war has also been cut short. The contrast between the boys playing outside and the soldier effectively highlights his infirmity and his lost youth. A simile, ‘saddening like a hymn’ helps us understand how the happy voices of the boys serve only to remind the soldier of his loneliness. It is as if they are a funeral song, mourning his suffering.

Strengths and targets Strengths Clear linking to the task Strong use of technical terms Good understanding of the text Clear and fluent expression Clear and detailed explanation and analysis of quotes Targets Link more clearly to the task in your point/ explanation and analysis Make greater use of technical terms e.g. simile and metaphor Work on your expression – you do not explain ideas clearly Give more detailed analysis of quotes Give a clear personal response to the text. Technical accuracy spelling/ punctuation needs work-proof read carefully

Writing a conclusion To write a conclusion for a critical essay there is a simple formula you can follow. Refer back to the task and evaluate Give an example to back up your evaluation Give a personal response to the text as a whole Example: Throughout ‘Disabled’ Wilfred Owen conveys the character of the wounded soldier very vividly using emotive language and imagery to great effect. The use of rhetorical questions at the end of the poem particularly apt as it highlights the sense of loss the soldier feels and expresses Owen’s anti war theme in a subtle but moving manner. This poem clearly conveys the horror of war by confronting the reader with the misery and suffering of one man in order to suggest the impact the Great War and other conflicts had on millions of others.