X270/201 ENGLISH. INTERMEDIATE 2 Close Reading. Answer all questions. 30 marks are allocated to this paper.

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X70/0 NTIONL QLIFICTIONS 0 FRIDY, 3 MY.00 PM.00 PM ENGLISH INTERMEDITE Close Reading nswer all questions. 30 marks are allocated to this paper. Read the passage carefully and then answer all the questions, using your own words as far as possible. The questions will ask you to show that: you understand the main ideas and important details in the passage in other words, what the writer has said (nderstanding ); you can identify, using appropriate terms, the techniques the writer has used to get across these ideas in other words, how he has said it (nalysis ); you can, using appropriate evidence, comment on how effective the writer has been in other words, how well he has said it (Evaluation E). code letter (,, E) is used alongside each question to identify its purpose for you. The number of marks attached to each question will give some indication of the length of answer required. S X70/0 6/3400 *X70/0*

The gr8 db8 Some people say that text messaging is destroying the English language. David Crystal, an eminent professor of language, argues that it is not. Recently, a newspaper article headed I h8 txt msgs: how texting is wrecking our language argued that texters are vandals who are doing to our language what Genghis Khan did to his neighbours 800 years ago. They are destroying it: pillaging our punctuation; savaging our sentences. 5 0 5 0 5 30 35 40 s a new variety of language, texting has been condemned as textese, slanguage, a digital virus, bleak, bald, sad shorthand, drab shrinktalk which masks dyslexia, poor spelling and mental laziness. Ever since the arrival of printing thought to be the invention of the devil because it would put false opinions into people s minds people have been arguing that new technology would have disastrous consequences for language. Scares accompanied the introduction of the telegraph, the telephone, and broadcasting. But has there ever been a linguistic phenomenon that has aroused such curiosity, suspicion, fear, confusion, antagonism, fascination, excitement and enthusiasm all at once as texting? nd in such a short space of time. Less than a decade ago, hardly anyone had heard of it. People think that the written language seen on mobile phone screens is new and alien, but all the popular beliefs about texting are wrong. Its distinctiveness is not a new phenomenon, nor is its use restricted to the young. There is increasing evidence that it helps rather than hinders literacy. Texting has added a new dimension to language use, but its long-term impact is negligible. It is not a disaster. Research has made it clear that the early media hysteria about the novelty (and thus the dangers) of text messaging was misplaced. People seem to have swallowed whole the stories that youngsters use nothing else but abbreviations when they text, such as the reports that a teenager had written an essay so full of textspeak that her teacher was unable to understand it. n extract was posted online, and quoted incessantly, but, as no one was ever able to track down the entire essay, it was probably a hoax. There are several distinctive features of the way texts are written that combine to give the impression of novelty, but people have been initialising common phrases for ages. IO is known from 68. There is no real difference between a modern kid s lol ( laughing out loud ) and an earlier generation s SWLK ( sealed with a loving kiss ). English has had abbreviated words ever since it began to be written down. Words such as exam, vet, fridge and bus are so familiar that they have effectively become new words. When some of these abbreviated forms first came into use, they also attracted criticism. In 7, for example, Joseph ddison complained about the way words were being miserably curtailed he mentioned pos (itive) and incog (nito). Texters use deviant spellings and they know they are deviant. But they are by no means the first to use such nonstandard forms as cos for because or wot for what. Several of these are so much part of English literary tradition that they have been given entries in the Oxford English Dictionary. Cos is there from 88 and wot from 89. Many can be found in the way dialect is written by such writers as Charles Dickens, Mark Twain, Walter Scott and D.H. Lawrence. [X70/0] Page two

45 50 55 60 65 70 75 Sending a message on a mobile phone is not the most natural of ways to communicate. The keypad isn t linguistically sensible. No one took letter-frequency considerations into account when designing it. For example, key 7 on my mobile contains four symbols, pqrs. It takes four key-presses to access the letter s, and yet s is one of the most frequently occurring letters in English. It is twice as easy to input q, which is one of the least frequently occurring letters. It should be the other way round. So any strategy that reduces the time and awkwardness of inputting graphic symbols is bound to be attractive. bbreviations were used as a natural, intuitive response to a technological problem. nd they appeared in next to no time. Texters simply transferred (and then embellished) what they had encountered in other settings. We have all left notes in which we have replaced and with &, three with 3, and so on. But the need to save time and energy is by no means the whole story of texting. When we look at some texts, they are linguistically quite complex. There are an extraordinary number of ways in which people play with language creating riddles, solving crosswords, playing Scrabble, inventing new words. Professional writers do the same providing catchy copy for advertising slogans, thinking up puns in newspaper headlines, and writing poems, novels and plays. Children quickly learn that one of the most enjoyable things you can do with language is to play with its sounds, words, grammar and spelling. n extraordinary number of doom-laden prophecies have been made about the supposed linguistic evils unleashed by texting. Sadly, its creative potential has been virtually ignored. But children could not be good at texting if they had not already developed considerable literacy awareness. Before you can write and play with abbreviated forms, you need to have a sense of how the sounds of your language relate to the letters. You need to know that there are such things as alternative spellings. If you are aware that your texting behaviour is different, you must have already realised that there is such a thing as a standard. Some people dislike texting. Some are bemused by it. But it is merely the latest manifestation of the human ability to be linguistically creative and to adapt language to suit the demands of diverse settings. There is no disaster pending. We will not see a new generation of adults growing up unable to write proper English. The language as a whole will not decline. In texting what we are seeing, in a small way, is language in evolution. dapted from an article by David Crystal in The Guardian QESTIONS. Look at the opening paragraph (lines 4). (a) Write down one expression from this paragraph which continues the idea introduced by wrecking. (b) Identify a feature of the expression pillaging our punctuation; savaging our sentences which makes it effective.. The writer tells us that texting has been condemned (line 5). Explain fully how any one of the expressions he quotes in the rest of this paragraph conveys disapproval of text message language. Marks Code [X70/0] Page three

QESTIONS (continued) Marks Code 3. Why does the writer mention the telegraph, the telephone, and broadcasting (line ) at this point in his argument? 4. Look at the sentence But... texting? (lines 3). (a) In this sentence, what point is the writer making about attitudes to texting? (b) Show how the writer s word choice or structure helps to reinforce this point. 5. The writer tells us (line 7) that all the popular beliefs about texting are wrong. Look at the remainder of the paragraph (lines 7 0), and then explain in your own words what two of these popular beliefs are. 6. How effective do you find the writer s use of hysteria (line ) as an image or metaphor? 7. The expression swallowed whole (line ) suggests that people were too ready to believe what they had heard. Show how the writer continues this idea of gullibility in the remainder of the paragraph. 8. Why is the writer correct when he tells us that there is no real difference between lol and SWLK (see lines 9 3)? 9. Re-read lines 3 36, and then explain in your own words two points the writer is making about abbreviations. 0. Explain how effective you find the author s inclusion of the names of Dickens, Twain, Scott and Lawrence (line 4).. Re-read lines 43 50, and then explain in your own words in what ways The keypad isn t linguistically sensible.. Explain why the sentence bbreviations were used as a natural, intuitive response to a technological problem (line 5) is an appropriate link at this point in the passage. 3. Explain fully why the writer s use of But (line 55) is appropriate at this point in the structure of his argument. 4. What tone does the writer create by using the expression supposed linguistic evils (line 64)? 5. Look at lines 65 70, and then explain briefly and in your own words what the writer means when he refers to literacy awareness (line 66). 3 E E / 6. Look at the final paragraph (lines 7 76), and then explain how well you feel this paragraph works as a conclusion to the passage as a whole. Total (30) E [END OF QESTION PPER] [X70/0] Page four

[Open out for Questions]

CKNOWLEDGEMENT Close Reading rticle is adapted from b or not b by David Crystal, taken from The Guardian, 5 July 008. Reproduced by kind permission of Professor David Crystal & Mrs Hilary Crystal Business Partnership.

X70/0 NTIONL QLIFICTIONS 0 FRIDY, 3 MY.0 PM 3.50 PM ENGLISH INTERMEDITE Critical Essay nswer two questions. Each question must be taken from a different section. Each question is worth 5 marks. S X70/0 6/3400 *X70/0*

nswer TWO questions from this paper. Each question must be chosen from a different Section ( E). You are not allowed to choose two questions from the same Section. In all Sections you may use Scottish texts. Write the number of each question in the margin of your answer booklet and begin each essay on a fresh page. You should spend about 45 minutes on each essay. The following will be assessed: the relevance of your essays to the questions you have chosen your knowledge and understanding of key elements, central concerns and significant details of the chosen texts your explanation of ways in which aspects of structure/style/language contribute to the meaning/effect/impact of the chosen texts your evaluation of the effectiveness of the chosen texts, supported by detailed and relevant evidence the quality and technical accuracy of your writing. Each question is worth 5 marks. The total for this paper is 50 marks. SECTION DRM nswers to questions in this section should refer to the text and to such relevant features as: characterisation, key scene(s), structure, climax, theme, plot, conflict, setting.... Choose a play in which there is a character who suffers from a human weakness such as ambition, selfishness, lack of self-knowledge, jealousy, pride, lust... Show how the weakness is revealed, then explain how this weakness affects both the characters and the events of the play.. Choose a play in which there is an important relationship between two of the main characters. Describe the nature of the relationship, and explain how it is developed throughout the play. 3. Choose a play which you feel has a dramatic final scene. Describe briefly what happens and explain how effective the ending is in bringing to a conclusion the central concerns of the text. [X70/0] Page two

SECTION B PROSE nswers to questions in this section should refer to the text and to such relevant features as: characterisation, setting, language, key incident(s), climax, turning point, plot, structure, narrative technique, theme, ideas, description... 4. Choose a novel or a short story in which you feel there is an incident of great importance to the story as a whole. Describe the incident and go on to show its importance to the development of the characters and the central concerns of the text. 5. Choose a novel or a short story which has a character who affects you emotionally. Describe how you feel about the character, and show how the writer leads you to feel this way. 6. Choose a prose work (fiction or non-fiction) in which the writer uses a memorable style/voice/narrative technique. Explain in detail how features of the writing style/voice/narrative technique contribute to the effectiveness of the text. SECTION C POETRY nswers 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... 7. Choose a poem which deals with an important issue such as war, crime, poverty or racism. Explain how the poet deepens your understanding of the issue by the choice of content and the skilful use of poetic techniques. 8. Choose a poem which describes an animal or a place or an event in an effective way. Briefly state what is being described and go on to show how the techniques used in the poem make the description effective. 9. Choose a poem written in a specific form such as ballad, sonnet, elegy, monologue, ode... Explain how the distinctive features of this form contribute to your appreciation of the text. [Turn over [X70/0] Page three

SECTION D FILM ND TV DRM nswers to questions in this section should refer to the text and to such relevant features as: use of camera, key sequence, characterisation, mise-en-scène, editing, setting, music/sound, special effects, plot, dialogue... 0. Choose a film or TV drama* which has a character who could be described as a hero or as a villain. Explain how the the character is introduced and then developed throughout the film or TV drama.. Choose a film or TV drama* in which setting is an important feature. Explain how the setting is established and go on to show how the setting contributes to the effectiveness of the film or TV drama as a whole.. Choose a scene or sequence from a film or TV drama* in which an atmosphere of mystery, or horror, or suspense is created. Describe what happens in the scene or sequence, explaining how the techniques used by the film or programme makers create this atmosphere. * TV drama includes a single play, a series or a serial. SECTION E LNGGE nswers to questions in this section should refer to the text and to such relevant features as: register, accent, dialect, slang, jargon, vocabulary, tone, abbreviation... 3. Consider a text which aims to persuade people to support a particular group, or to buy a particular product. By referring to specific examples from your chosen text, show how persuasive techniques are used. 4. Consider a modern form of communication such as e-mail or text message. By referring to specific examples of language and vocabulary, explain how such communication differs from formal English, and what advantages this presents to users. 5. Consider the specialist language used by any group of people to talk about a particular interest, for example, a sport, a job, a hobby... By referring to specific examples, show how the specialist language used by the group is effective in communicating ideas clearly. [END OF QESTION PPER] [X70/0] Page four