Learning objective
Produce one extended comparative essay of 2500 words and a bibliography.
Read the explanation, check the common trap, then practise with flashcards and questions.
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Topic
Qualification and assessment structure
Subtopic
Non-exam assessment
Study support
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Quick explanation
Produce one extended comparative essay of 2500 words and a bibliography
- This point belongs to Qualification and assessment structure, especially Non-exam assessment.
- You need to be able to produce one extended comparative essay of 2500 words and a bibliography.
- The key ideas to know are 2500 words and comparative essay.
- Use the linked flashcards and practice questions to check recall, then practise applying the idea in an exam-style answer.
Key concepts
Why it matters
This objective helps connect Non-exam assessment to exam-style questions, flashcards, and revision notes for Qualification and assessment structure.
Quick student answer
How do you build a Literature answer on produce one extended comparative essay of 2500 words and a bibliography?
Direct answer
For English Literature, this page helps you practise produce one extended comparative essay of 2500 words and a bibliography in Qualification and assessment structure. Focus on the writer's methods, relevant quotations, context where it matters, and a clear line of analysis. Key terms to check are comparative essay and 2500 words.
Key terms
- comparative essay: comparative essay is a literary concept used to frame the approved objective "Produce one extended comparative essay of 2500 words and a bibliography.". Define it precisely, then connect it to textual evidence and a writer's choice in language, form or structure rather than using it as a topic label.
- 2500 words: 2500 words is an interpretive or assessment boundary for Non-exam assessment. Use it to distinguish connected comparison from separate essays, literary context from biography, or evidence-supported interpretation from unsupported opinion as the objective requires.
Common trap
Non-exam assessment literary-analysis mistake 1: Make an AO1 claim, use accurate textual evidence, analyse a method for AO2, add relevant AO3 context, connect texts for AO4 and test interpretations for AO5 only where the task requires them.
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Revision notestopic notes
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Open revision notesRelated learning objectives
- Identify this curriculum source as the updated AQA 7712 specification for first assessment in 2027.
Updated specification boundary
- Keep 2027 optional-text additions separate from the final-2026 specification version.
Updated specification boundary
- Distinguish A-level English Literature A 7712 from AS English Literature A 7711.
Updated specification boundary
- Explain the difference between diachronic and synchronic literary study.
Historicist course design
- Connect texts to the contexts in which they are written, received and understood.
Historicist course design
