Changing GCSE specifications is the metaphorical equivalent
of redecorating your house. You pick the paint, move the furniture, prepare the
room, and then you paint. But, then you decide a few years later that you
picked the wrong colour and you do it all over again. In my short time teaching, I will have taught
eight different English GCSEs. I have gone through the process several times
and there hasn’t been many changes between specs. This new specification,
however, has a slightly different texture to it. I can cope with the closed
book aspect. I can cope with the pre1914 text aspect. I can cope with older non-fiction
texts. The exam papers are a different thing.
This blog is about my first thoughts on Paper 1 on the GCSE
English Language exam. As a department, we set Year 9 students a paper based on
an extract from ‘Oliver Twist’. We used similar question to those used in the specimen
paper provided and we marked using the mark scheme provided. We didn’t prepare students for the paper, because
we wanted to see how they dealt with the paper and see what the major problems
were. The paper will be a baseline assessment for teachers in Year 10. I wanted
us to engage with the new format and look at the nuts and bolts of the paper,
rather than spend six meetings deciding on the name of units of work instead of
dealing with how to teach things.
Question 1: List
four things from this part of the text about X.
This was a pretty straightforward question. Most students
did well on this, but the most able struggled with it as, at times, they felt
that something more complex was needed. Therefore, they overdid it. We all know
examiners like to build students up with the questioning on papers, but with
most able students they want to impress from the word go. Every question is an
important question in their eyes. So it is no surprise that some students wrote
a whole page, squeezing every last idea out for four small marks.
Question2: How
does the writer use language here to describe X?
This is probably the one question that has changed things
for us. Looking at the examples provided, I am worried. Because: simply this
question seems to be about technique vomiting. Chuck everything at the reader and
hope some of it makes sense. We have always spent time trying to build students
up to make detailed and developed interpretations of a text and explore
multiple meanings and ideas. We have always wanted students to explore choices
made by referring to the wider meaning of the text. But, now the subject
terminology is at the forefront of the analysis. In fact, it is the driver of
the thinking. Whereas before the technique used to be an indicator of the writer’s
ideas and thoughts, the new questioning focuses on the techniques and a brief
explanation of the feeling it creates. Yes, there may be some implicit meaning,
but the focus is clearly on the technique and its effect and not the whole text
and the writer’s purpose.
I’d say that this question could possibly be the worst going
by the full mark example. It goes a bit like this:
The verb ‘vomiting’
reflects the disgust of process and the use of colon highlights the importance
of things as the writer is introducing a new idea. The writer also uses complex
sentences which show the complexity of the process. The pronoun ‘us’ is used in
a collect sense and then changes to ‘we’ in the second sentences, highlighting the
different people out there.
Our students fell down because they didn’t list techniques.
They logically, as we have always taught them to, worked through a point and
explored it. They highlighted a feature and then developed it in several
sentences. The example provided suggested that sentences in response to the
question need to combine the technique and effect in one sentence. The X has
the effect of this. The context of the writing is lost when the development is
limited to a sentence.
The terminology wasn’t so much as an issue for our students
(thanks to KS2); however, there is clearly a need to make sure every student knows
a noun, verb, adjective, adverb and pronoun. I think the speed at which students
have to list this terms is a problem too. Students get to them in the end, but they
are not used to the parrot fashion of looking at a sentence and spotting noun,
verb and adjective. I see across the land hundred of teachers making PowerPoint
getting students to spot a noun, a verb and an adjective in an extract.
Plus, some of the technique spotting is dodgy. A complex sentence
is referred to in the example and I’d say it is clutching at straws. How could
you explain the use of a compound, complex or simple sentence and its effect?
A complex sentence highlights how complex the issue is.
A complex sentence highlights how there are two things and one
cannot function without the other. A simple sentence highlights how simple the man’s thoughts are.
A simple sentence reinforces how there is just one person in the room.
A compound sentence highlights how there are two things joined together.
Now, don’t even get me on the indefinite and definite article.
I don’t give an ‘a’ or a ‘the’ about it. Seriously, we are going to be having
students clutching at straws to interpret meaning. Tenuous is the term that springs to mind. I also seem to recall that exam boards stating that technical terminology wasn't necessary for success in the exam. It seems that that is the opposite now.
I think from now on my classroom conversation will centre on using phrases like ‘ the noun highlights….’ and ‘the preposition shows’. I do think this question is a game changer. Repeat after me students……
A verb shows action
A list of verbs show a continuous action
A present tense verb shows it is immediate.
Furthermore, I think the model of point and develop will
have to change. Paper 2 has more of the old style PEE potential, but this question
will change the way we analyse a text.
Question 3: How
has the writer structured the text to interest you as a reader?
This question I enjoyed. It is fairly straightforward.
Students did better when they approached the text in a logical fashion and then
made links back to the rest of the text. They were also able to explain things
in depth with this question, so they did better because they were able to talk
about writing, which is what we want our students to do. Talk and discuss it.
Not list things.
It is again an interesting point that ‘subject terminology’ is
plastered all over the mark scheme, yet I am struggling to find such
terminology in the examples. I am convinced that there are none. But, this is
the problem: there is very little terminology for describing the structure of a
text. I can think of a handful and I studied English at university. So this
aspect of the exam paper confused me.
Aside from all this stuff, I have noticed a new word in the
mark scheme: judicious. We are now expecting students use quotes judiciously
but not conservatively or liberally.
Question 4: A student
said this: …… To what extent do you agree?
This is, I think, a dramatic shift in the textual analysis
at GCSE. We have had elements of criticism implied in the tasks and the top band
has always been marked as ‘critically evaluating’ the text, but I in all my
minutes of teaching I have not had to teach this kind of critical discussion at
GCSE. Boy, do I love the idea! We do explore the text when teaching, but we don’t
make the critical aspect an explicit assessment aspect. And, I am, relishing
the thought of it. However, it is a difficult aspect. When students are
struggling to recall the key points of a text, they then have to work out if
they think the portrayal of Y is
realistic.
Obviously, the quantity of texts students read is important,
but also offering critical viewpoints is just as important too. Our KS3 curriculum
does include some of these in essays. How courageous is … ? But now, I think we have to look at embedding
this further. Rather than spot and explain a text, we are making a point and
challenging it. Read this poem. Frank read it in the pub and he said it isn’t
an effective way to show the reality of life. Do you agree with Frank or not?
Overall, I am happy with the new specifications. I like the shift
back to fiction and non-fiction texts and not just non-fiction texts. This now seems
to be a happy compromise. It means we can increase the breadth of texts we can
use. As long as it is an effective description, setting or character, then you
can use it. Looking at the wider impact on our teaching, I think these are the
key points we need to build or make explicit in our teaching:
·
Students must have a concrete knowledge of the
key parts of a sentence.
·
Students must be able to quickly spot parts of a
sentence under pressure.
·
Students must change the way they write analysis
so it is concise and follows the identify + effect pattern in one single
sentence.
·
Students must be concise with their
explanations.
·
Students must have clear terminology for describing
the structure of a text.
·
Students must be familiar with different
opinions about a text
·
Students must be able to formulate a response to
an opinion about a text or aspect.
I might blog about the other paper when I get to it.
Nonetheless, I have tomorrow’s lesson sorted out:
Year 10:
One student said: ''Of Mice and Men’ is the biggest waste of
time and it is too predictable.’
How far do you agree with that statement?
Thanks for reading,
Xris
Thanks for this post, Xris.
ReplyDeleteTotally agree about technique spotting and terminology use for Q2 and Q3 - I will raise it at the AQA meeting I go to in July.
At the moment we're spending lang lessons in year 10 (or planning to at least) on lots of reading practice, extracts, skills-based stuff, and writing. Then in year 11 will start using the actual wording of the questions. I'm finding it so tricky to find the time to fit everything (Lit and Lang) in to a desired level, though!
Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
Sam Crome, Head of English
Thanks Sam. Let me know how that meeting goes.
ReplyDeleteXris
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I know this is an older post, but did AQA give any response to this question?
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