Exam-style question
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Exam task 1 — context without importing prepared set-text quotations. Construct an evidence-led paragraph that addresses this wording directly: Connect the extract to the selected shared context without importing prepared set-text quotations.
Model answer
What a good answer should say
- Start with a clear AO1 argument about Connect the extract to the selected shared context without importing prepared set-text quotations..
- Select brief, accurate textual evidence or a detail from the supplied unseen text, then use AO2 to explain how language, form or structure shapes meaning.
- Use AO3 when literary context changes significance or reception.
- If comparison is required, use AO4 to connect both texts inside the same line of argument.
Explanation
Why this works
A high-quality response should begin with a claim that answers the wording, select brief and accurate textual evidence, analyse how language, form or structure shapes meaning and then explain the significance of that evidence. Context, comparison and alternative interpretations should be used only when they advance the same line of argument.
For Shared-context method in Paper 2 Texts in shared contexts, the principal focus is AO2 method analysis, AO3 historicist significance, AO4 textual connections. To connect the extract to the selected shared context without importing prepared set-text quotations, the student must keep the answer anchored to the approved text or supplied passage and make each analytical step explicit.
Students study literature within one clearly defined period and connect texts through its social, political, personal and literary contexts. Keep the Unseen prose contextual linking strand explicit so the reasoning cannot be transferred unchanged to another 7712 topic.
Use only evidence available in the supplied passage for unseen work and never invent or import a quotation.
Common mistake
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