Learning objective

AO1: read, understand and respond to the text, maintaining a critical style and an informed personal response.

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At a glance

5

Flashcards

8

Questions

Topic

Jane Eyre

Subtopic

Whole text and nineteenth-century novel response

AQA GCSE English LiteratureShakespeare and the 19th-century novel

Study support

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Short explanation

Jane Eyre Critical Response pathway 9: this objective asks you to read, understand and respond to the text while maintaining a critical style and an informed personal response. Begin with a clear judgement about Jane Eyre, then support it with brief evidence and writer's methods. Use the evidence bank Jane Rochester Bertha St John Helen Lowood Thornfield Ferndean Gateshead independence morality gender religion fire voice. Explain language, form or structure before context, and keep character, speaker, narrator, writer, poet and playwright roles distinct. Avoid plot retelling and generic AO wording. Approved objective wording: AO1: read, understand and respond to the text, maintaining a critical style and an informed personal response..

Key concepts

Jane Eyre evidence chainJane Eyre concept boundary

Why it matters

This objective helps connect Whole text and nineteenth-century novel response to exam-style questions, flashcards, and revision notes for Jane Eyre.

Common mistakes

1 linked
  • Jane Eyre: confusing language vs form vs structure: Keep language vs form vs structure 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: Jane Eyre is not interchangeable with the other 8702 texts. For this Shakespeare response, anchor the paragraph in independence and morality, then use brief textual evidence to explain how the writer develops gender. A useful Jane Eyre answer can contrast religion with self-respect, 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 first-person narration. 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 independence, another may reveal morality or gender. 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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Related learning objectives

Jane Eyre Critical Response Revision | AQA Lit 8702 | ExamCompanion