Consider the attitude displayed by each writer Identify key areas of agreement and disagreement in their points of view You should support your answer by referring to important ideas in the passages ID: 749347
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Slide1
Comparison QuestionSlide2
The Final Question on two passages - what will this question look like?
Consider the attitude displayed by each writer. Identify
key areas of agreement and disagreement
in their points of view.
You should support your answer by referring to important ideas in the passages.
You may present your answer to this question in continuous prose or in a series of developed bullet points.
Or
key areas of agreement
Or
key areas of disagreementSlide3
Read the question properly
Agreement?
Disagreement?
Agreement and disagreement?
Agreement or disagreement?
5 marksSlide4
How many areas?
Between 4 and 5
You will get marks for correctly identifying the key areas, and marks for supporting your answers by referring to the passage
Bullet point the key areasSlide5
How to get 5 marks
5 marks
identification of essential areas (4 or 5), with an intelligent use of supporting evidence (quotations and explanations for each one)
4 marks
identification of essential areas, with sound use of supporting evidence
3 marks
identification of essential areas, with some supporting evidence
2 marks
identification of only one essential area with reasonable supporting evidence
1 mark
identification of only one essential area with minimal or no supporting evidence
0 marks
failure to identify any essential area and/or complete misunderstanding of the task
Rule of thumb: one key area of agreement and one key area of disagreement (if the question asks you to look at both – otherwise two key areas of one or the other) + reference to the passages = 3 marksSlide6
Example bullet point
One key agreement is…
For example, passage one stated that … “…” and passage two suggested that… “…” From these it is clear…
Another key agreement is…
However the writers disagree on … For the writer of passage one states that …. And this is clear when they say “…” yet the writer of passage two disagrees and suggests that … “…”Slide7
You must…
Know passage 1 really well already
Read passage 2 very carefully
Identify areas on which the two writers agree and disagree
Refer in detail to both passages to give evidence supporting these areas of agreement and
diasgreementSlide8
You can, or might…
Make notes as you read passage 2
Underline parts of passage 2
Highlight sections of passage 2
Answer in continuous prose or a series of developed bullet pointsSlide9
Both writers consider the application of the
Blechdel
test to films. Identify the areas on which they agree, and those on which they disagree. In your answer, you should refer in detail to both passages.Slide10
Agreement
Note down 3 areas of agreement
Both writers agree that very few films pass the
Blechdel
test
Check your partners list. Can you add any moreSlide11
Diagreement
Try to write at least 2 areas of disagreement between the two passages
Slide12
Supporting evidence
Once you have identified the main areas of agreement and disagreement you are ready to support these points with detailed reference to the text
The best way is to set out your point and then quote your supporting evidence below.Slide13
Example
Both writers agree that very few films pass the
Blechdel
test
Passage 1 lists the fact that “The entire Lord of the Rings trilogy, all Star Wars movies, The Social Network, Pulp Fiction and all but one of the Harry Potter movies fail the test”
Passage 2 mentions that “the only film that the character who proposed the theory saw as qualifying was Ridley Scott’s Alien, which was already five or six years old”
The emphasis on the difficulty in finding a film to pass the test reiterates that the vast majority of films, including blockbusters fail the
Blechdel
test. Slide14
Your answer
Look back at the areas of agreement and disagreement that you identified
Select at least 3 points (e.g. 2 agreements and 1 disagreement or vice versa)
Create a developed bullet point for each idea.
These answers will need to be handed in at the end of
the lesson.Slide15
What is
Word
Choice?
When we talk about
word choice
as a technique, we mean that certain words have been deliberately chosen to obtain particular effects or to suggest particular meanings.
Denotations
- actual meaning of the word
Connotations
- the ideas that a word suggests to us.Slide16
What the examiner is looking for
1. Quote the word.
2. Say what the connotations of that word are.
3. Explain how the connotations of the word help achieve a particular effect.
NOTE
: All WC questions ask you to comment on how a word does a specific thing.
E.g. Comment on how the WC suggests/gives the impression/creates
X
.
You must focus your answer around X.
Don’t just say what the word means on its own.Slide17
Examples
Denotation
Connotation
Gobbled
- desperate hunger, selfish greed, poor table manners.
Gobbled
- to consume food by putting it in your mouth.
Nibbled
- to consume food by putting it in your mouth.
Nibbled
- to eat delicately or nervously.Slide18
Example
“One Less Pig Perfect Justice.” Shocking enough by itself as a slogan to all right thinking people, but half an hour after the tragic shooting of two female police officers? This is offensive enough to earn the wearer, Barry Thew, four months in jail. Some would have liked it to be longer. But this distasteful incident has sparked the debate over the rights we have in Britain when it comes to expressing our opinion.
Q. Show how the writer’s word choice indicates that she may agree with the sentence handed down to the criminal.Slide19
Answer
“One Less Pig Perfect Justice.” Shocking enough by itself as a slogan to all right thinking people, but half an hour after the tragic shooting of two female police officers? This is offensive enough to earn the wearer, Barry Thew, four months in jail. Some would have liked it to be longer. But this distasteful incident has sparked the debate over the rights we have in Britain when it comes to expressing our opinion.
“tragic” shows how devastating the situation was and therefore how extreme Thew’s insult was.
“earn” suggests the sentence was fully deserved, he deserved or intentionally asked for what he got.
“distasteful” - shows the writer disapproves of what Thew did and suggests he had a lack of sympathy.Slide20
Linking Questions
UnderstandingSlide21
What the examiner is looking for
You have to show how one sentence provides a link in the passage.
The link will join one idea to the next.
The link sentence will often stand at the beginning of a paragraph.
Usually the first part of the sentence refers back to the previous topic and another part of the sentence will introduce the new topic.
Usually worth 2 marks - 1 for each identification of the part of the sentence and comment on the topic it links to.Slide22
Method - 4 parts
1 - Quote the part of the link sentence which links back to the earlier topic.
2 - State what the topic is that it links back to.
3 - Quote the part that links forward to the next topic.
4 - State what that next topic is.
If the sentence begins with a word like ‘but’ or ‘however’ which points to a change in topic, you should highlight this too.Slide23
Example
“Around the world William Shakespeare is one of the best loved of all playwrights. Most people can name at least one of his plays, and lines from his work are ingrained into our psyche and language.
However, despite our familiarity with his work, we know relatively little of the man himself.
We do not know when or why he became an actor, we know nothing of his life in London, and almost nothing of his personal concerns.”
Q. Show how the third sentence acts as a link in the paragraph. (2 marks)Slide24
Answer
The phrase “our familiarity with his work” looks back at the topic of how widely known Shakespeare’s work is.
(1 mark)
The conjunction “however” which begins the sentence suggests a contrasting idea to follow. The second part of the sentence, “we know relatively little of the man himself”, introduces the new topic, namely the things that are not known about Shakespeare
(1 mark)
, and a list of these follows this “link” sentence.Slide25
Sentence Structure
AnalysisSlide26
Types of sentence
Statements - ‘John is sitting down.’ - stating fact.
Questions - ‘Is John sitting down?’ - making the reader question something or if rhetorical, making it clear that no answer is required.
Exclamations - ‘John is sitting down!’ - used to convey a tone of amazement, shock or strong emotion.
Command - ‘Sit down, John.’ - used to persuade
Minor/short sentences - used to create impact, suspense or urgency.
Lists - used to emphasise the sheer amount of things.Slide27
Other things to look
for
Inversion
- The change of word order. “Flames leapt up and up.” = “Up and up leapt the flames.” Used to alter the emphasis in a sentence
Repetition
- “We shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the street, we shall fight in the hills. We shall never surrender.” - highlights determination to never give up their efforts.Slide28
Punctuation
A
colon
(:) usually introduces a quotation, a list or an explanation or expansion of the previous statement.
A
semi-colon
(;) usually comes between two statements which are closely connected, or which balance or contrast one another. Often used in lists, instead of commas.
A
single dash
(-) can be used to add an extra piece of information. It can also indicate the breaking off of a sentence or a pause in the sentence.
Two dashes
(-words here-) or ‘parenthesis’ is used to add an extra piece of information which may not be considered too important.Slide29
1.
I
dentify
the feature of sentence structure.
2. Comment on the
effect
it has. Why has it been used?
Depending on how many marks the question is worth, you must provide one feature/effect for each mark.
What the examiner is looking forSlide30
Example
Q. Discuss the effectiveness of the sentence structure in this extract.
Fog everywhere. Fog up the river, where it flows among green airs and meadows; fog down the river, where it rolls defiled among the tiers of shipping, and the waterside pollutions of a great (and dirty) city. Fog on the Essex marshes, fog on the Kentish heights. Fog creeping into the cabooses of collier-brigs; fog lying out on the yards, and hovering in the rigging of great ships; fog drooping on the gunwales of barges and small boats.Slide31
Imagery Questions
Analysis
Similes
MetaphorsSlide32
To acquire all of the marks in an imagery question you must ask yourself:
What is being compared to what?
In what respects are the two similar?
How does the comparison help you to visualise the subject better?
What
the examiner is looking
forSlide33
Example
“The lake was a silver mirror flawlessly
reflecting the sky.”
Explain how effective you find this metaphor. (2 marks)Slide34
Alliteration
- a series of words in which the same letter is repeated.
Onomatopoeia
- a word which imitates the sound it’s describing.
Hyperbole
- deliberate over-exaggeration to
emphasise
the point.
Other things to
look for...
Q. Comment on the effectiveness of...Slide35
Litotes
- deliberate understatement used to take emphasis off something
Euphemism
- a milder way of saying something unpleasant (e.g. He’s passed away)
Oxymoron
- two opposites placed beside each other to emphasise the difference (e.g dark light, alone together, painfully beautiful...)
Juxtaposition
- placing side by side
Other
things to look for...Slide36
Tone
Analysis
Serious or Humorous?Slide37
1 - Identify the tone.
2 - Quote the words or phrase which helped you work out the tone.
3 - How did this help you work out the tone? Did they use any techniques to do this? (metaphor, simile, hyperbole, repetition, word choice etc...)
What the examiner is looking forSlide38
Flippant
- when the author is shows a careless/disrespectful attitude towards something which is normally taken seriously (e.g. some brass and stuff, up at the holy end).
Conversational
- when the writer is chatty and friendly, as if confiding in a friend.
Ironic
- when the author is saying the opposite of what they mean for either humorous effect or to express their feeling forcefully.
Serious
- used for serious purposes - usually uses formal, pompous or ponderous words.
Different kinds of toneSlide39
Tongue-in-cheek
- when the writer sounds serious but is actually poking fun at the subject.
Satirical
- when a writer is funny but in a more savage way - they hold up a subject to ridicule in order to attack it.
Emotive
- when the writer aims to stir up emotions in the reader by shocking, angering or disturbing them. This is done by using words or expressions expressing extreme emotions.
Remember
: A question on tone is asking you what the writer’s choice of words reveals about his
feelings
or his
attitude
to his subject.
Different kinds of toneSlide40
Example
Nowhere else on the planet do footballers perform in front of vast crowds so full of bile, hatred and bigotry. I have yet to find another place on the planet where a sporting occasion includes a ritual of singing of some ditty celebrating a distant battle which took place 307 years ago.
Explain how the writer feels towards the what happened at the Ranger/Celtic match. How does his tone help convey this? (4 marks)Slide41
Answer
The writer uses an
emotive tone
here
(1 mark)
. He clearly disapproves of the hostility at the football match and struggles to understand why they are behaving that way
(1 mark)
. He uses
repetition
of ‘on the planet’ to hint that they are the only people who act like that and should be able to control themselves
(1 mark).
This is also a
hyperbole
as the writer hasn’t actually searched the whole planet but is
singling them out
(1 mark)
. The writer also uses emotive language to convey strong emotions like ‘bile’, ‘hatred’ and ‘bigotry’. His
choice of the word ‘ditty
’ also implies a sense of
contempt
.
(1 mark)Slide42
RUAE skills
Bullet point how you would answer the following questions
Own words
Link
Imagery
Sentence structure
Context
Evaluation
Comparison