Year 10: Parent`s guide to the new GCSE English
Transcription
Year 10: Parent`s guide to the new GCSE English
Year 10: Parent’s guide to the new GCSE English Language & English Literature Grading 1-9 AQA English Language (8700) Paper 1: Paper 2: Explorations in Creative Reading and Writing Writers' Viewpoints and Perspectives What's assessed What's assessed Section A: Reading Section A: Reading one literature fiction text one non-fiction text and one literary non-fiction text Section B: Writing Section B: Writing descriptive or narrative writing writing to present a viewpoint Assessed written exam: 1 hour 45 minutes Assessed written exam: 1 hour 45 minutes 80 marks 80 marks 50% of GCSE 50% of GCSE Questions Questions Reading (40 marks) (25%)– one single text Reading (40 marks) (25%) – two linked texts 1 short form question (1 x 4 marks) 1 short form question (1 x 4 marks) 2 longer form questions (2 x 8 marks) 2 longer form questions (1 x 8, 1 x 12 marks) 1 extended question (1 x 20 marks) 1 extended question (1 x 16 marks) Writing (40 marks) (25%) 1 extended writing question (24 marks for content, Writing (40 marks) (25%) 1 extended writing question (24 marks for content, 16 marks for technical accuracy) 16 marks for technical accuracy) Non-examination Assessment: Spoken Language What's assessed (AO7–AO9) Presenting responding to questions and feedback Assessed teacher set throughout course marked by teacher separate endorsement (0% weighting of GCSE) use of Standard English AQA English Language Subject content Students will draw upon a range of texts as reading stimulus and engage with creative as well as real and relevant contexts. They will have opportunities to develop higher-order reading and critical thinking skills that encourage genuine enquiry into different topics and themes. For GCSE English Language students should: read fluently, and with good understanding, a wide range of texts from the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries, including literature and literary non-fiction as well as other writing such as reviews and journalism read and evaluate texts critically and make comparisons between texts summarise and synthesise information or ideas from texts use knowledge gained from wide reading to inform and improve their own writing write effectively and coherently using Standard English appropriately use grammar correctly and punctuate and spell accurately acquire and apply a wide vocabulary, alongside a knowledge and understanding of grammatical terminology, and linguistic conventions for reading, writing and spoken language listen to and understand spoken language and use spoken Standard English effectively. Suggested work and Revision Texts AQA GCSE English Language and English Literature: All-inOne Revision and Practice New GCSE English Language AQA Revision Guide - for the Grade 9-1 Course New GCSE English Language and Literature Revision Guide - for the Grade 9-1 New GCSE English Language AQA Workbook - for the Grade 9-1 Course (includes AQA English Literature (8702) Paper 1 Paper 2 Shakespeare and the 19th-century novel Modern texts and poetry What's assessed Shakespeare plays What's assessed Modern prose or drama texts The 19th-century novel The poetry anthology Unseen poetry How it's assessed written exam: 1 hour 45 minutes 64 marks 40% of GCSE How it's assessed written exam: 2 hour 15 minutes 96 marks 60% of GCSE Questions Questions Section A Shakespeare: students will answer one question on their play of choice. They will be required to write in detail about an extract from the play and then to write about the play as a whole. Section A Modern texts: students will answer one essay question from a choice of two on their studied modern prose or drama text. Section B Poetry: students will answer one comparative question on one named poem printed on the paper and one other poem from their chosen anthology cluster. Section B The 19th-century novel: students will answer one question on their novel of choice. They will be required to write in detail about an extract from the novel and then to write about the novel as a whole. Section C Unseen poetry: Students will answer one question on one unseen poem and one question comparing this poem with a second unseen poem. Texts Studied Macbeth– William Shakespeare The Strange Case Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde– Robert Louis Stevenson Or A Christmas Carol– Charles Dickens Texts Studied A: Animal Farm George Orwell or Blood Brothers Willy Russel or Lord of the Flies William Golding or An Inspector Calls J B Priestly (Revision books to be confirmed) B: Power and Conflict Poetry Suggested work and Revision GCSE English Literature for AQA Macbeth Student Book GCSE English Literature for AQA The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde Student Book Macbeth: York Notes for GCSE (9-1) 2015 Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde: York Notes for GCSE 2015 GCSE English Literature for AQA A Christmas Carol Student Book A Christmas Carol: York Notes for GCSE 2015 GCSE English AQA Unseen Poetry Study & Exam Practice Book New GCSE English Literature AQA Poetry Guide: Power & Conflict Anthology GCSE English Literature for AQA Poetry Student Book Reading Programme Reading is a fundamental requirement of a successful student, and we launched our ’16by16′ reading programme to support this. Students will be expected to read a collection of these books by the time they finish Year 11, thereby ensuring that they are well-read individuals who have the ability to discuss great writing. The Knife of Never Letting Go – Patrick Ness The Northern Lights – Phillip Pullman The Diary of a Young Girl – Anne Frank The Book Thief – Markus Zusak Never Let Me Go – Kazuo Ishiguro The Life of Pi The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn – Mark Twain The Bell Jar – Sylvia Plath Othello – William Shakespeare – Yann Martel Reading Programme One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest – Ken Kesey The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night Time – Mark Haddon The Great Gatsby – F. Scott Fitzgerald 1984 – George Orwell Wall and Piece – Banksy The Perks of Being a Wallflower – Stephen Chbosky The Catcher in the Rye – JD Salinger Wuthering Heights – Emily Bronte Philomena – Martin Sixmith Reading Programme Emma – Jane Austen Little Women – Louisa May Alcott Watchmen The Lord of the Flies – Alan Moore – William Golding To Kill A Mockingbird – Harper Lee How I Live Now – Meg Rosoff Other lists for reading suggestions The best young adult books of 2015 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/books/young-adult-books/best-of-2015/ Young Adults' Choices Reading List http://www.literacyworldwide.org/get-resources/reading-lists/young-adults-choicesreading-list