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MCQ focus 3 — one selected text was written pre-1900. Which approach keeps the relevant literary boundaries clear when addressing Ensure at least one selected text was written pre-1900?

Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.

At a glance

MCQ

Type

practice

Style

Topic

Independent comparative critical study

Exam-style question

Try this first

MCQ focus 3 — one selected text was written pre-1900. Which approach keeps the relevant literary boundaries clear when addressing Ensure at least one selected text was written pre-1900?.

  1. A.Weigh how methods, contexts, connections and interpretations make the evidence significant to the task.
  2. B.List every feature in the passage without making a judgement.
  3. C.Call the topic significant without explaining why.
  4. D.Use a critic's name as a substitute for textual analysis.

Model answer

What a good answer should say

  • The correct answer is Weigh how methods, contexts, connections and interpretations make the evidence significant to the task.

Explanation

Why this works

The marked option is strongest because it answers the specific Text selection requirements requirement through evidence-led literary reasoning. The distractors weaken the response by substituting summary, feature spotting, invented evidence, option mixing or unsupported opinion for analysis.

For Independent comparative critical study in Non-exam assessment Texts across time, the principal focus is AO1-AO5 literary reasoning. To ensure at least one selected text was written pre-1900, the student must keep the answer anchored to the approved text or supplied passage and make each analytical step explicit.

Students write one extended comparative study of two texts on a theme of their choice. Keep the Text selection requirements strand explicit so the reasoning cannot be transferred unchanged to another 7712 topic.

Check comparative NEA text eligibility, independence, authentication and the pre-1900 requirement before applying prepared material.

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