ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE (EMC) Component 01 Non-fiction written and spoken texts

Similar documents
ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE (EMC)

Exemplar 7: AS LEVEL Exemplar Candidate Work DRAMA AND THEATRE. AS Level portfolio for a performance of Metamorphosis.

ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE (EMC)

MUSIC. Listening and Appraising component. GCSE (9 1) Candidate style answers. For first teaching in 2016.

ENGLISH LITERATURE. Preparing for mock exams: how to set a question A LEVEL

DRAMA. Performance and response. GCSE (9 1) Learner Booklet. Component 04 examined assessment : Key definitions and points for learners

MUSIC. Transition guide KS3-KS4 Topic: Chords. GCSE (9 1) Transition Guide. Version 1. J536 For first teaching in 2016

MUSIC. Transition guide KS4-KS5 Topic: Composition Version 1. A LEVEL Transition Guide. H543 For first teaching in 2016

Qualification Accredited. GCSE (9 1) Scheme of Work MUSIC J536. For first teaching in Three year scheme of work. Version 1.

ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE (EMC) Component 03 Section B: Writing as a Reader

GCSE French. Mark Scheme for June Unit A701/01/02: Listening (Foundation/Higher) General Certificate of Secondary Education

Tuesday 24 May 2016 Morning

ENTRY LEVEL CERTIFICATE

BBC LEARNING ENGLISH 6 Minute Vocabulary Discourse markers: showing attitude

Language & Literature Comparative Commentary

Mark Scheme (Results) January International GCSE English Language (4EA0) Paper 2

Correlation --- The Manitoba English Language Arts: A Foundation for Implementation to Scholastic Stepping Up with Literacy Place

The purpose of this pack is to provide centres with marked exemplars of responses to the June 2015 examination.

QUESTION 2. Question 2 is worth 8 marks, and you should spend around 10 minutes on it. Here s a sample question:

Marking Exercise on Sound and Editing (These scripts were part of the OCR Get Ahead INSET Training sessions in autumn 2009 and used in the context of

National Curriculum English

TEST ONE. Singing Star Showing this week. !The Wild Wheel Ride! Indoor tennis centre. RACING CAR TRACK To drive, children must be 1 metre or more

Level 2 Award. Thinking and Reasoning Skills. Mark Scheme for January OCR Level 2 Award Unit 1 B901: Thinking and Reasoning Skills

PERFORMING ARTS. Unit 29 Musicianship Suite. Cambridge TECHNICALS LEVEL 3. F/507/6840 Guided learning hours: 60. ocr.org.

Chapter One The night is so cold as we run down the dark alley. I will never, never, never again take a bus to a funeral. A funeral that s out of town

GCE English Language. Exemplar responses. Unit 1 6EN01

Cambridge International Examinations Cambridge Primary Checkpoint

LATIN. J282/01 Language GCSE (9 1) Candidate Style Answers. J282 For first teaching in Version 1

GCSE Classical Greek. Mark Scheme for June Unit B402 Classical Greek Language 2 (History) General Certificate of Secondary Education

Lesson 18: Sentence Structure

Key Stage 2 Writing at Greater Depth Standards referenced to Frankie s exemplification materials. Examples from Frankie s Writing

Tutorial letter 202/1/2017 Applied English Language Studies: Further Explorations ENG2601 Semester 1 Department of English Studies CONTENTS

in the park, my mum my sister on the swing. 2 In the sentence below, Dad booked the cinema tickets before he collected them.

Mark Scheme (Results) Summer 2010

GCE. Music. Mark Scheme for January Advanced GCE Unit G356: Historical and Analytical Studies in Music. Oxford Cambridge and RSA Examinations

The unit focuses on features of personal record writing. Pupils read a range of biographical and autobiographical texts and write a short biography.

BBC LEARNING ENGLISH 6 Minute Grammar Past simple

Cambridge National Engineering. Mark Scheme for June Unit R113: Electronic principles

STYLE. Sample Test. School Tests for Young Learners of English. Form A. Level 1

Sentences. Directions Write S if the group of words is a sentence. Write F if the group of words is a fragment. 1. There is nothing to do now.

GCE. Music. Mark Scheme for June Advanced GCE Unit G356: Historical and Analytical Studies in Music. Oxford Cambridge and RSA Examinations

GCE Media Studies. Mark Scheme for June Unit F633: Global Cinema and Critical Perspectives. Advanced GCE. Oxford Cambridge and RSA Examinations

RSS - 1 FLUENCY ACTIVITIES

Part 1: Writing Identifying and Fixing Sentence Fragments and Run-on Sentences:

Name. and. but. yet. nor

Introduction to Vocal Music: The development of Secular Song

Rhetoric. Class Period: Ethos (Credibility), or ethical appeal, means convincing by the character of the

House of Language International Schools HOLIS. Language Worksheets 1 st Semester Gr.5 Page 1

Tuesday 23 May 2017 Morning

Qualification Accredited. Oxford Cambridge and RSA. AS LEVEL Sample SAM Taster Booklet MUSIC H143. For first teaching in

Units 1 & 2 Pre-exam Practice

Unit of Work: ROFL Year: 6 Term: 4

2013 HSC English (ESL) Listening Paper Marking Guidelines

ENGLISH 2201: Essays and Prose

Learning Intentions: 1. To review writing tasks common to Junior Cycle English in preparation for your exam.

Developed in Consultation with Tennessee Educators

Basic English. Robert Taggart

In years 3, 4 and 5 children are expected to: Read daily at home. Bring library books back to school every week. If the library book is unfinished,

ENGLISH 1201: Essays and Prose

Examiners Report January GCSE English Literature 5ET2H 01. Understanding Poetry

Cecil Jones Academy English Fundamentals Map

A Level English Language and Literature EXEMPLAR RESPONSES

NZQA Support Material Contents. Unit standard 17361, version 4 Read recounts (ESOL)

Hello. I m Q-rex. Target Language. Phone Number :

Exploring the soliloquies of Romeo and Juliet

BBC LEARNING ENGLISH 6 Minute Grammar Narrative tenses

The purpose of this pack is to provide centres with marked exemplars of responses to the June 2015 examination.

Candidate Exemplar Material Based on Specimen Question Papers. GCSE English Literature, 47102H

Studium Języków Obcych

GCSE ENGLISH LANGUAGE Charlie and the Chocolate Factory

Excel Test Zone. Get the Results You Want! SAMPLE TEST WRITING

Tuesday 3 November 2015 Morning

Positioning and Stance

A word or phrase that describes one thing in terms of another and is not mean to be understood as literally true. Examples: metaphor, simile,

Lesson 1 Pre-Visit Bringing Home Plate Home: Baseball & Sports Media

CASAS Content Standards for Reading by Instructional Level

Tuesday 24 May 2016 Morning

ENGLISH. ATAR course examination Marking Key

Cambridge International Examinations Cambridge International General Certificate of Secondary Education. Published

Mark Scheme (pre-standardisation) Summer Pearson Edexcel International GCSE in English Literature (4ET0) Paper 02R

Module 6 Looks. Ge Ready

BBC LEARNING ENGLISH 6 Minute Vocabulary Synonyms

Grammar Glossary. Active: Somebody saw you. We must find them. I have repaired it. Passive: You were seen. They must be found. It has been repaired.

The purpose of this pack is to provide centres with a set of exemplars with commentaries.

S-V S-V-AC S-V-SC S-V-DO S-V-IO-DO S-V-DO-AC S-V-DO-OC THERE ARE SEVEN BASIC SENTENCE PATTERNS.

It is a rough transcript, capturing as much of the audible conversation as possible.

A Close Reading of Dave Barry s In Depth, but Shallowly

Speech, Language and Communication Progression Tool

A-LEVEL DANCE. DANC3 Dance Appreciation: Content and Context Mark scheme June Version/Stage: 1.0 Final

1. alliteration (M) the repetition of a consonant sound at the beginning of nearby words

The Fourth Wall. By Rebekah M. Ball. Performance Rights

MARK SCHEME for the May/June 2008 question paper 0411 DRAMA. 0411/01 Paper 1 (Written Examination), maximum raw mark 80

Getting to know you. Vocabulary Listen and check your answers. Mark the stress on

Instructions and answers for teachers

Share. There are no full stops in the above passage so it would be very difficult to read.

CLEP College Composition: at a Glance

ENGLISH FILE Beginner

COMPONENT 1 Varieties of film and filmmaking

Mark Scheme (Results) January GCE English Literature (6ET03) Paper 01

Eleventh Grade Language Arts Curriculum Pacing Guide

Transcription:

AS LEVEL Candidate Style Answers with commentary H074/01 ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE (EMC) Component 01 Non-fiction written and spoken texts June 2015

CONTENTS INTRODUCTION 3 SECTION A: READING SPOKEN AND WRITTEN NON-FICTION 4 SECTION B: WRITING NON-FICTION 7 We d like to know your view on the resources we produce. By clicking on the Like or Dislike button you can help us to ensure that our resources work for you. When the email template pops up please add additional comments if you wish and then just click Send. Thank you. If you do not currently offer this OCR qualification but would like to do so, please complete the Expression of Interest Form which can be found here: www.ocr.org.uk/expression-of-interest OCR Resources: the small print OCR s resources are provided to support the teaching of OCR specifications, but in no way constitute an endorsed teaching method that is required by the Board and the decision to use them lies with the individual teacher. Whilst every effort is made to ensure the accuracy of the content, OCR cannot be held responsible for any errors or omissions within these resources. OCR 2015 This resource may be freely copied and distributed, as long as the OCR logo and this message remain intact and OCR is acknowledged as the originator of this work. Please get in touch if you want to discuss the accessibility of resources we offer to support delivery of our qualifications: resources.feedback@ocr.org.uk 2

INTRODUCTION These candidate style answers have been written by subject experts to support teachers in interpreting the new OCR AS level Language and Literature (EMC) specification and sample assessment materials. These responses have been written to exemplify a good, or excellent, response to each question, but it is important to note that they were not written by AS level candidates. Exemplars of actual examination scripts and nonexam assessment tasks will be provided when they are available after the first examination series. As these responses have not been through a full standardisation and moderation process, they have not been given a final mark or a grade. Instead they are presented as higher level responses that clearly demonstrate features of a Level 5 and / or Level 6 response. Please also refer to the marking criteria in the AS level Language and Literature Sample Assessment Materials when reading these candidate style answers. Please note that this resource is provided as guidance only and does not constitute an indication of endorsed answers or grading. 3

SECTION A: READING SPOKEN AND WRITTEN NON-FICTION Text A is an extract from Horrible Histories CBeebies TV programme about prehistoric times. Text B is an extract from the BBC TV live commentary on a snowboarding event at the Sochi Winter Olympics. 1. Compare the ways in which the writers or speakers use language to present the events they are describing. In your answer you should consider: context mode and genre purpose and audience. Text A is a scripted spoken text aimed at a TV audience of children. Its purpose is to both inform and entertain its audience. Text B is a transcript of a live commentary on an Olympic snowboarding event aimed at a general audience, albeit one interested in sport, particularly snowboarding. Despite these differences in mode and audience, the many shared characteristics, in language, register and structure show that Text A is a deliberate generic parody of the sports commentary context exemplified by Text B. 1 In Text B the register and conventions of sports commentary are used throughout, with two speakers commenting on a live event in the form of a conversation. The language is generally informal with ellipsis ( it s not That was oh he s gone down! ) and hedges ( And that ) included which emphasise the unscripted nature of the text. 2 Both texts also use nonverbal sounds, which underline their live or apparently live context, such as ta-ta-dada and uh-oh. 3 The transcript in Text B suggests that Ed Leigh takes the agenda-setting position, using rhetorical and actual questions to elicit responses from Tim Warwood, such as Can Shaun White handle the pressure? His slightly controversial question, How badly did he sit down here? leads Tim Warwood to disagree partially in his response Well he gets the grab Oh I don t know, introducing more drama to the commentary. 4 1. A03/A04: Understanding of contextual factors related to purpose and similarities and differences between the texts. 2. A01/A02: Reference to characteristics of spoken discourse, use of appropriate terminology e.g. ellipsis, hedges. 3. A02/A04: Use of phonology to show similarities between the texts in relation to the context of the broadcast. 4. A02/A04; Features of interaction in spoken discourse related to the context of a cocommentary. In contrast, apart from a summary introduction from the anchor, Text A is in the form of a monologue by Bob Hale. The writers have introduced some of the genre conventions seen in the unscripted text, with dramatic exclamations But not for long! and rhetorical questions Do you recognise this fellow? that echo the conversational two-person live commentary and introduce drama. Adjacency pairs ( goodbye Stone Age, hello Bronze Age ) are also used to make the tone seem more conversational. 5 5. A04/A02: Comparison between texts related to grammatical and lexical features. 4

The News Anchor s introduction and handover locate Text A firmly in the genre of TV commentary, which we also see in Ed Leigh s opening and closing comments in Text B, where he provides a brief introduction to Shaun White and then summarises all the scores at the end. 6 His use of metaphor in these introductory remarks - The king of snowboarding. His throne is under threat - suggests that some of his comments may have been pre-scripted for insertion at appropriate moments. 7 6. A04/A03: Comparison of similarities between texts related to the context of television conventions. 7. A02/A02: Exploration of use of language for effect contextualised in relation to the semiprepared nature of the live commentary. This is in contrast to the many characteristics of spoken discourse throughout both texts. There is turntaking: How badly does he sit down here? / Well, he gets the grab., Bob. / Thanks Anne. Some unfinished or elliptical sentences: Huge backside air. Bit of a sketch there, Front side 1080. That was oh he s gone down. And repetition: it s bigger than that. Always bigger than that. Now the replay the replay is key. 8 Although ellipsis and repetition indicate spontaneity, there are not very many examples, even in unscripted Text B, suggesting that both speakers are experienced commentators. 9 In both texts we see a variety of sentence types, such as imperatives: Sit back and watch this ; exclamations: There it is!, He s gone down now! ; interrogatives: Can Shaun White handle this? and rhetorical questions: how did he land that?, And why? 10 This range of sentence types, in addition to declaratives, helps to create interactivity between the speakers in Text B, and between speakers and the audience in both texts. 11 The language used in Text B is very informal, with some colloquial usage throughout: yanking, bum and alley-oop. This informality is in keeping with the purpose of sports commentary, to provide a more informed explanation of an event to a general audience in an accessible manner. However, both speakers also use some subject-specific lexis throughout backside air, Double McTwist, gets the grab which assumes a certain level of familiarity from the audience. The combination of informal and specialist lexis within the discourse works to invite the audience into an exclusive club of snowboarding aficionados, even if this exclusivity is more impressionistic than actual. 12 This combination of informal and specialist lexis is also used in Text A, which marks the text as a parody of live commentary. 13 In this case, Bob Hale mixes idiomatic expressions like hard as nails and informal expressions, gets a few jobs done, with specialist historical terms like Stone Age, Neanderthal and Homo heidelbergensis. Text A also inserts vague language into sentences alongside precise descriptors, which makes the text appear more spontaneous and for humorous effect; Yes, Homo sapiens, our great great great great tons of million grandparents. 8. A04/A02: Comparison of features of spoken discourse. 9. A03: Effective commentary on wider contextual factors. 10. A01: Appropriate use of terminology e.g. Imperatives, interrogatives. 11. A03/A04: Comparison sentence structure of texts, related to the interaction between speakers and audience in a broadcasting context. 12. A01/A02/A03: Effective commentary on lexis related to wider contextual factors/ audience appeal. 13. A04: Similarities between texts. 14. A02/A03: Effective commentary on lexis related to wider contextual factors/ audience appeal. In Text A, the combination of the specialist with humour also helps to simplify the information for a young audience. 14 5

As well as serving to underline the genre conventions, the mixture of register in Text A also contributes greatly to the humour, where serious factual data is undercut by jokes, puns and repetition. Rhyming pairs ( mean and lean, tons of fun ) and punning repetitions, it s cold like ice for an age. It s called an Ice Age, are also reminiscent of the slightly clichéd language of sports commentary. They also serve the purpose of the text which is to present history in an entertaining manner to a young audience. 15 15. Effective commentary on lexis related to wider contextual/generic factors and appeal to a specific audience. Overall comment: This is a strong response that fluently compares the two texts, and explores their audience and purpose; it makes thorough reference to language features of grammar and lexis and considers contextual factors. 6

SECTION B: WRITING NON-FICTION 4. Write about an aspect of your daily routine in the style of a sports commentary for T.V. or radio. Your purpose is to entertain the audience. Well, good morning and welcome to this year s annual first day of term pentathlon. 1 You join us just as the plucky Stoke Newington contestant is limbering up for the first of these challenging events. And to recap, she will have to complete the Getting out of Bed, Eating Breakfast, Getting Dressed, Catching the Bus and Arriving at School events with near-perfect scores to stand a chance of reaching the medal table. Emma, you ve seen her in training, what are her chances? 2 EMMA: Yes Gabi, it s a big ask, but she s a tough cookie, so maybe she s in with a fighting chance. 3 Last season she was handicapped by both a faulty toaster and slow-walking friends 4 but she s done a lot of work with Dad, her trainer, 5 over the summer so... 6 GABI: Oh that was the alarm so we re off! And that was a beautifully curved arm arc there as she turns off the alarm but, oh dear, slight fumble on the glasses. Will the judges spot that? 7 EMMA: I m afraid they will but she does recover well with a complicated double leg swing 8 into the slippers and gets the glasses right in place. What a trooper! 1. A03: Use of generic opening suited to context of sports commentary. 2. A03/A05: Cohesive links between sections, drawing on turn taking conventions of TV presenting. 3.A03: Deliberate use of colloquial language/ cliché; A05: Co-ordinating conjunctions (but, so) used to create balanced sentence. 4.A05: Expanded noun phrases add detail concisely. 5. A05: Subordinate clause used for comic effect. 6. A03: Interruption shown through ellipsis conveys spontaneity of sports commentary. 7. A05: Variety of sentence types used (exclamatory, declarative, interrogatory). 8. A03/A05: Effective parodic use of technical terms associated with sports. 7

GABI: The glasses are crucial here, aren t they, especially now the course has the cat on the stairs to overcome. EMMA: It s a tricky one but she glances past and bounds down the stairs ooooh she didn t see the ball at the bottom and has really tumbled there. That s gonna 9 seriously eat into her time on the next event, the Eating Breakfast. 10 GABI: She s in now, she s in the kitchen! What is she doing? I think this is new. Yes! 11 She has skipped the toast which used to give her so much trouble and has completely changed her routine to go down the cereal route. What will that do to the scores? EMMA: Well that is just 12 I wasn t expecting that at all. The scoring is based on a mixture of execution and difficulty. 13 So she s hedged her bets on this one going for an easier move with the cereal but she ll have to score very high on execution. But that double pour of milk and corn flakes was a beauty so she may just get away with it. GABI: The camera just zooming in on Dad in the crowd and he s clearly pleased with that one. 14 Good tactical decision there I d say. EMMA: It s very early to call it, but I think this change of coach will make a big impact. There was a lot of whispering about flare-ups with her previous coach, Mum, 15 so I hope this change will be positive for her. It s always. GABI: Sorry to interrupt but she s on now to Getting Dressed. 16 But, oh no! She s been called back to the kitchen to put her bowl in the dishwasher. Disaster! That s a huge error. Will she argue with that call? She looks like but no, she s thought better of it and is pressing on. Good girl. 17 So now she has to make up a lot of time on the next event. 9. A05: Deliberate use of colloquial language to convey informality of context. 10. A05: Thematic link throughout the commentary, maintains overall textual cohesion. Use of definite article for humorous effect. 11. A03/A05: Use of short sentences, repetition, questions and exclamations to convey spontaneity and drama of the situation. 12. A03: Use of sentence fragment and ellipsis to convey spontaneous speech. 13. A05: Continued use of context specific lexis sustains and develops overall theme. 14. A03: Use of contextual conventions of the sports broadcast to add realism. 15. A05: Effective use of subordinate clause provides a call-back to an earlier joke, developing overall textual cohesion. 16. A03: Continued/ consistent use of cohesive devices to link sections of the text and move the description on. 17. A03/A05: Selective use of similar sentence structures appropriate to the context throughout the text provides consistency and supports overall cohesion. 8

EMMA: Well this is one she really excels at. She s prepared well for this so I expect good things. Yes! Lovely flip-up tights entry 18 there and she s straight into the shirt. I do want to point out the new elastic cuff buttons, a technical innovation that many competitors are using this year. 18. A05: Parodic use of context specific lexis sustains acts as call-back to earlier examples and sustains overall theme. GABI: That will help them gain valuable seconds won t it? Although there have been questions raised on whether performance-enhancing equipment is allowed in this event. I m surprised the judges have let them in to be frank. EMMA: You have to move with the times, Gabi. In years past trousers weren t allowed in the women s pentathlon, but now they re an accepted part of the sport. Do they enhance performance? Arguably yes but... 19 GABI: Ok the scrunchies are on and now she s being helped on with her schoolbag and she s ready for the speed section of the pentathlon, the Catching the Bus. 20 And here she really needs to work with her team-mates in getting in formation on the way to the bus stop. EMMA: Yes and there has been a lot of movement in Team Stoke Newington since their disastrous performance last season. So here you see them all converging at the end of the road, that s beautiful choreography from the coaching team and they re into the sprint with Wright at the front, closely followed by Sherman and Kidjowski. 21 GABI: The Hornsey team are coming in from the north side there so they ll need to keep that pace up. And here it comes! The bus is already in sight and they re nowhere near the bus stop. Wright now makes the break to really sprint and she s got to get across the main road through the traffic. I don t think she can do it! 22 EMMA: No! Yes! She s there! She s caught the bus. How did she do it? 23 GABI: So that s Wright on the bus in a dramatic finish to the penultimate event. 24 Wow, what a morning! 19. A05; Effective and controlled shift between wider reflection/discussion and description of the event between the two commentators. 20. A05: Theme of pentathlon events again returned to as cohesive device to structure the commentary. 21. A05: Effective management of shifts in tense for clarity. 22. A03/A05: Viewpoint of commentators sustained throughout the piece, effectively using vocabulary and sentence structure to consistently suggest spontaneous speech appropriate to the generic context. 23. A05: Use of exclamations and rhetorical question to create drama appropriate to context. 24. A05: Final use of events as a reference chain running through the whole commentary as a cohesive device. Overall comment: This is a very effective, entertaining piece that follows the conventions of a sports commentary with a high degree of control of the chosen techniques and awareness of the ways language varies according to contextual factors. 9

OCR customer contact centre General qualifications Telephone 01223 553998 Facsimile 01223 552627 Email general.qualifications@ocr.org.uk For staff training purposes and as part of our quality assurance programme your call may be recorded or monitored. OCR 2015 Oxford Cambridge and RSA Examinations is a Company Limited by Guarantee. Registered in England. Registered office 1 Hills Road, Cambridge CB1 2EU. Registered company number 3484466. OCR is an exempt charity.