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ENGB1 Section A - Text Varieties - A Student’s Guide to Analysing and Grouping Unseen Texts

Steve Campsall | Friday July 02, 2010

Categories: Courses, A Level, AQA A Level, AQA A Level English Language B, ENGB1, Hot Entries

Click on the link immediately below to download our Text Analysis & Grouping Grid.

ENGB1a_-_Analytical__Grouping_Texts.doc

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  • Unfortunately, it’s not possible to learn by rote a fixed set of categories into which a set of unseen texts can be ‘grouped’ – but there are some central linguistic ideas to have ready in your head to apply on the big day.
  • Whichever categories you eventually choose to use on exam day (and typically, you’ll choose four different categories or grouping), the key is to discuss the variability of each text within your chosen grouping. This is very important as this is where the marks will come from.
  • You will need to discuss succinctly how your chosen particular grouping parameter is useful but also distinctly ‘problematic’ in the sense that each text within it lies not exclusively at the extremes of the grouping but somewhere along a ‘continuum’ between the extremes (e.g. very few written texts are wholly formal and often contain a greater or lesser degree of conversational lexis or grammar; similarly, spoken texts are rarely ‘wholly spontaneous’ or ‘wholly planned’ and lie somewhere along this continuum, between these extremes).
  • Don’t worry if you don’t discuss every text in the selection you get in the exam – your marks will come from the subtlety and depth of your response not the...

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