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Practice practice 1 — Apply ideas from the narrative theory section to a chosen literary text.: which method best develops an evidence-led argument for Narrative theory? Focus: AO5 different interpretations.

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

At a glance

MCQ

Type

practice

Style

Topic

AQA Critical anthology approaches

Exam-style question

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Practice practice 1 — Apply ideas from the narrative theory section to a chosen literary text.: which method best develops an evidence-led argument for Narrative theory? Focus: AO5 different interpretations.

  1. A.Make a focused claim about Apply ideas from the narrative theory section to a chosen literary text., support it with accurate textual evidence, and analyse how a writer's method shapes meaning.
  2. B.Retell the plot in chronological order and leave the evidence unexplained.
  3. C.Invent a memorable quotation so the paragraph sounds specific.
  4. D.Name language, form and structure without explaining any effect.

Model answer

What a good answer should say

  • The correct answer is Make a focused claim about Apply ideas from the narrative theory section to a chosen literary text., support it with accurate textual evidence, and analyse how a writer's method shapes meaning.

Explanation

Why this works

Make a focused claim about Apply ideas from the narrative theory section to a chosen literary text., support it with accurate textual evidence, and analyse how a writer's method shapes meaning. This is correct because it combines AO1 argument with AO2 analysis instead of substituting summary or technique spotting for literary reasoning.

It supports the approved objective "Apply ideas from the narrative theory section to a chosen literary text." while avoiding invented quotations, plot summary, option mixing and unsupported interpretation.

Common mistake

Narrative theory literary-analysis mistake 1

Treating Apply ideas from the narrative theory section to a chosen literary text. as plot summary, unsupported opinion or a place to invent quotations, while blurring supported interpretation vs unsupported opinion.

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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