Question detail

For Great Expectations, which approach best supports AO3: show understanding of the relationships between the text and the contexts in which it was written. in Whole text and nineteenth-century novel response when the focus is comparison?

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At a glance

MCQ

Type

practice

Style

Topic

Great Expectations

Question

  1. A. compare meaning or methods directly when the task requires it for comparison
  2. B. write two separate comments without a comparative link for comparison
  3. C. compare only the plot events in each text for comparison
  4. D. ignore similarities and differences in method for comparison

Answer

Great Expectations: compare meaning or methods directly when the task requires it for comparison is the strongest answer because it keeps the response anchored to AO3: show understanding of the relationships between the text and the contexts in which it was written.. Question-specific focus: Great Expectations literature-mcq-5 should foreground social mobility before narrative voice, then use class as the evidence route into identity. The model answer should name a precise method connected to ambition and return to guilt in the final interpretive sentence. This separates the page from other 8702 texts because the reasoning depends on Great Expectations, not a transferable essay shell.

Explanation

compare meaning or methods directly when the task requires it for comparison is correct because it uses textual evidence, literary reasoning and precise terminology. In Great Expectations, this means the student should explain what the evidence suggests, how the writer's language, form or structure creates meaning, and where relevant how context or comparison shapes interpretation. The other options drift into plot retelling, unevidenced opinion or separated comments. Question-specific focus: Great Expectations literature-mcq-5 should foreground social mobility before narrative voice, then use class as the evidence route into identity. The model answer should name a precise method connected to ambition and return to guilt in the final interpretive sentence. This separates the page from other 8702 texts because the reasoning depends on Great Expectations, not a transferable essay shell.

Common mistake

Great Expectations: confusing context vs biography

A weak Great Expectations answer treats AO3: show understanding of the relationships between the text and the contexts in which it was written. as plot recall, unsupported opinion or loose quotation use instead of literary analysis.

Keep context vs biography clear. Make a claim, use brief textual evidence, analyse the writer's method and explain how it shapes meaning, context, theme, character or comparison. Text-specific focus: Great Expectations is not interchangeable with the other 8702 texts. For this Shakespeare response, anchor the paragraph in class and identity, then use brief textual evidence to explain how the writer develops ambition. A useful Great Expectations answer can contrast guilt with social mobility, because that gives the analysis a text-specific line of argument instead of a reusable AO paragraph. Method work should notice how language, form or structure frames narrative voice. Context should be used only when it clarifies interpretation, reader response or audience response. When comparison is relevant, compare both texts or poems directly: whereas one detail may suggest class, another may reveal identity or ambition. Keep the vocabulary exact: character, speaker, narrator, writer, poet and playwright are not the same role, and the evidence must be explained after it is selected.

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analysis MCQ 5: in which it was written. | Great Expectations |… | ExamCompanion