Question detail
For Section A Reading non-fiction and literary non-fiction, which option best applies structural development to this objective: Avoid treating each source separately when the task requires comparison.
Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.
At a glance
MCQ
Type
practice
Style
Topic
Section A Reading non-fiction and literary non-fiction
Question
- A. Track the opening, shift, focus or ending and explain how the structure guides the reader for Avoid treating each source separately
- B. Treat structure as a single adjective in Comparing writers' methods and perspectives
- C. Ignore sequence, pace and paragraph focus for Avoid treating each source separately
- D. Only describe what happens in the text in Section A Reading non-fiction and literary non-fiction
Answer
Avoid treating each source separately answer: Track the opening, shift, focus or ending and explain how the structure guides the reader for Avoid treating each source separately.
Explanation
Avoid treating each source separately uses Track the opening, shift, focus or ending and explain how the structure guides the reader for Avoid treating each source separately because it matches the structural development focus for Comparing writers' methods and perspectives. It separates the skill from weaker choices and keeps the response tied to the exact objective. Use AO2 structure: track focus, opening, ending, shift, pace or sequence, then explain how the reader is guided through the text. Section A Reading non-fiction and literary non-fiction should compare both sources by naming similar and different ideas rather than treating them separately. Comparing writers' methods and perspectives should plan audience, purpose, form, tone, viewpoint, content and structure before drafting.
Common mistake
comparison: summary instead of analysis
Students sometimes summarise Comparing writers' methods and perspectives instead of explaining how the objective works in the answer.
Correct this by selecting a brief detail, explaining its effect, and linking the point back to "Avoid treating each source separately when the task requires comparison."
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