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Paper 2 response requirements revision notes
Use these revision notes for Paper 2 response requirements in AQA English Literature B 7717. The page is built from approved learning objectives for this topic and links back to the wider unit, topic hub, and related revision assets.
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Paper 2 response requirements
Revision notes
Paper 2 response requirements revision notes
Paper 2 response requirements
At a glance
Every Paper 2 response applies all five assessment objectives through genre-based literary argument. This revision note follows the approved AQA A-Level English Literature B 7717 curriculum. It uses the updated specification for first assessment in 2027 and does not mix option 1A with 1B, option 2A with 2B, or current text choices with the final 2026 specification version.
Build a literary argument
Begin with a focused, debatable claim that answers the exact task. AO1 rewards an informed response, relevant literary concepts and coherent expression. A paragraph should not begin by retelling events. It should state what the text suggests about the genre, character, relationship, conflict, voice, setting or idea named in the task. Use terminology only when it clarifies the argument; labels without explanation do not create analysis.
Use evidence and analyse methods
Use brief, accurate textual evidence. A short quotation, precise reference or supplied passage detail is enough when it is followed by analysis. AO2 asks how meanings are shaped, so explain how language, form or structure creates the effect. Distinguish the writer from a narrator, and a poet from a speaker. For drama, consider stagecraft, dialogue, entrances, exits, audience knowledge and dramatic structure where relevant. For prose or poetry, choose methods that genuinely fit the evidence instead of forcing a technique checklist.
Use genre as a framework
In Paper 2 response requirements, genre should organise interpretation without becoming a rigid list. Explain how a text uses, varies, omits or subverts a tragic, comic, crime-writing, political-protest or social-protest feature as the approved option requires. A feature matters because of the meaning it creates and the response it invites, not simply because it can be named. Genre awareness should remain tied to the text, its methods and the argument being made.
Handle contexts accurately
AO3 concerns the significance and influence of contexts in which literary texts are written and received. Add context only when it changes the meaning, significance or reception of the evidence. Writer biography is not automatically literary context, and a critical interpretation is not automatically AO3. The strongest contextual sentence returns quickly to the text and explains why a reader or audience may understand the method, genre feature or idea differently.
Connect texts for AO4
AO4 rewards exploration of connections across literary texts. A connected comparison uses both texts inside the same argument. Compare like with like: methods with methods, genre choices with genre choices, contexts with contexts, or interpretations with interpretations. Do not write one complete mini-essay on the first text and another on the second. Use comparative language to show similarity, difference, development or contrast, then explain why the connection matters.
Explore interpretations for AO5
AO5 asks students to explore different interpretations. An interpretation must be supported by the literary text. Present one plausible reading, test it against evidence and method, then consider another reading or critical lens. Critical theory should open a debate rather than predetermine the answer. Avoid critic name-dropping, unsupported personal preference and the claim that every opinion is equally valid. The text remains the evidence against which interpretations are evaluated.
Unseen and NEA safeguards
For unseen work, use only the supplied passage and do not import prepared set-text quotations. Read for voice, genre, method, pattern and tension before deciding the argument. For Theory and independence, keep the conventional essay, re-creative response and critical commentary distinct. A re-creative response still requires a clear relationship to the base text, while the commentary must justify choices through textual evidence and the relevant Critical anthology lens. Follow the recorded word limits and supervision constraints rather than treating NEA as an unrestricted essay.
Common mistakes
Avoid plot summary, invented quotations, unsupported interpretations, biography presented as context, genre treated as a checklist, critic names without analysis, and comparisons that become separate essays. Keep writer and narrator distinct, poet and speaker distinct, AO3 and AO5 distinct, and the approved options distinct. If a paragraph could apply to any text, make it more precise by returning to the evidence, method, genre and task wording.
Exam method
Plan the argument before writing. Decide the central interpretation, select the best evidence, identify the method that shapes meaning, and note where context, comparison or another interpretation genuinely strengthens the response. During the answer, use topic sentences to advance the argument rather than repeat the question. End paragraphs by explaining the significance of the evidence. Leave time to check quotation accuracy, option boundaries, expression and whether each assessment objective has been used for its correct role.
Approved learning objectives
Unseen passage response
Analyse an unseen passage through the selected genre. Build this point as a literary argument rather than a plot summary. Select accurate evidence from the set text or supplied unseen passage, identify a relevant choice in language, form or structure, and explain how that choice shapes meaning within the genre, option or critical lens. Assessment focus: AO1 argument, terminology and expression. Boundary check: unseen passage evidence vs prepared set-text material. Keep the response inside the approved 7717 option and updated 2027 text list; never invent a quotation or use prepared material as if it came from an unseen passage.
Unseen passage response
Use precise textual evidence from the passage to build a literary argument. Build this point as a literary argument rather than a plot summary. Select accurate evidence from the set text or supplied unseen passage, identify a relevant choice in language, form or structure, and explain how that choice shapes meaning within the genre, option or critical lens. Assessment focus: AO1 argument, terminology and expression. Boundary check: unseen passage evidence vs prepared set-text material. Keep the response inside the approved 7717 option and updated 2027 text list; never invent a quotation or use prepared material as if it came from an unseen passage.
Unseen passage response
Apply all five assessment objectives without relying on prepared set-text material. Build this point as a literary argument rather than a plot summary. Select accurate evidence from the set text or supplied unseen passage, identify a relevant choice in language, form or structure, and explain how that choice shapes meaning within the genre, option or critical lens. Assessment focus: AO1 argument, terminology and expression. Boundary check: unseen passage evidence vs prepared set-text material. Keep the response inside the approved 7717 option and updated 2027 text list; never invent a quotation or use prepared material as if it came from an unseen passage.
Single set-text response
Construct a focused essay on one selected set text. Build this point as a literary argument rather than a plot summary. Select accurate evidence from the set text or supplied unseen passage, identify a relevant choice in language, form or structure, and explain how that choice shapes meaning within the genre, option or critical lens. Assessment focus: AO1 argument, terminology and expression. Boundary check: analysis vs plot summary. Keep the response inside the approved 7717 option and updated 2027 text list; never invent a quotation or use prepared material as if it came from an unseen passage.
Single set-text response
Use genre, context, methods and interpretations to develop the argument. Build this point as a literary argument rather than a plot summary. Select accurate evidence from the set text or supplied unseen passage, identify a relevant choice in language, form or structure, and explain how that choice shapes meaning within the genre, option or critical lens. Assessment focus: AO5 different interpretations. Boundary check: supported interpretation vs unsupported opinion. Keep the response inside the approved 7717 option and updated 2027 text list; never invent a quotation or use prepared material as if it came from an unseen passage.
Single set-text response
Support the response with precise references from the open-book text. Build this point as a literary argument rather than a plot summary. Select accurate evidence from the set text or supplied unseen passage, identify a relevant choice in language, form or structure, and explain how that choice shapes meaning within the genre, option or critical lens. Assessment focus: AO1 argument, terminology and expression. Boundary check: analysis vs plot summary. Keep the response inside the approved 7717 option and updated 2027 text list; never invent a quotation or use prepared material as if it came from an unseen passage.
Connected-text response
Compare two selected set texts through the chosen genre. Build this point as a literary argument rather than a plot summary. Select accurate evidence from the set text or supplied unseen passage, identify a relevant choice in language, form or structure, and explain how that choice shapes meaning within the genre, option or critical lens. Assessment focus: AO4 connections across texts. Boundary check: connected comparison vs two separate mini-essays. Keep the response inside the approved 7717 option and updated 2027 text list; never invent a quotation or use prepared material as if it came from an unseen passage.
Connected-text response
Explore significant connections and differences rather than treating each text separately. Build this point as a literary argument rather than a plot summary. Select accurate evidence from the set text or supplied unseen passage, identify a relevant choice in language, form or structure, and explain how that choice shapes meaning within the genre, option or critical lens. Assessment focus: AO4 connections across texts. Boundary check: connected comparison vs two separate mini-essays. Keep the response inside the approved 7717 option and updated 2027 text list; never invent a quotation or use prepared material as if it came from an unseen passage.
Connected-text response
Integrate all five assessment objectives into a connected argument. Build this point as a literary argument rather than a plot summary. Select accurate evidence from the set text or supplied unseen passage, identify a relevant choice in language, form or structure, and explain how that choice shapes meaning within the genre, option or critical lens. Assessment focus: AO1 argument, terminology and expression. Boundary check: analysis vs plot summary. Keep the response inside the approved 7717 option and updated 2027 text list; never invent a quotation or use prepared material as if it came from an unseen passage.
Final check
A secure response can explain the objective in precise literary language, support it with accurate evidence, analyse how meaning is shaped, use context selectively, connect texts directly where required and evaluate interpretations without drifting into opinion. If any step is missing, rebuild the paragraph from claim, evidence, method, meaning and significance.
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