Language Paper 1 Study Guide
Language Paper 1 Study Guide
Booklet
1. Read around the word for hints in the sentence usually you can have a
general idea of its meaning
2. Chunk the word – is there a part of the word that you already know?
4. Skip over the word and continue reading until the end of the sentence;
now go back to the beginning of the sentence and start again.
• The writer depicts/conveys/presents ___ as… • This is an effective opening/climax/conclusion to the novel because …
Question 4: Evaluation Question
• The overall mood created is…
• I partly agree…
Introduce Evidence • I somewhat agree…
• The use of… suggests… • One could argue that…
• The writer deliberately uses… • This (method) clearly shows that…
• With…. The writer shows… • By using this (method) the writer has managed to …
+5
Step By Step: Q4 Success Criteria:
1. Read the question and put a box ❑ Agree with statement (fully or partially)
around the section the question ❑ A range of specific examples – from selected area
states. ❑ Technical terminology used
2. Underline the key ideas in the ❑ Why has the writer used it?
❑ Develop with a link to the reader
statement.
3. Find evidence that supports the
ideas in the statement. Make Focus on the second part of the source,
sure you are looking for from lines 22-40.
methods!
4. Decide on your stance on the ‘The reader feels more sympathy for the
statement. death of White Fang than the death of Jim
5. Write your response – detailed Hall’
paragraphs focusing on method
s and effects. To what extent do you agree?
Quick plan
Sympathy for white fang
• eyelids drooped and went shut’ – the slow death of White Fang
• ‘perceptibly agitated’ – ideas of pain and suffering
• The text ends with the death of White Fang not Jim Hall – less description
of Jim Hall’s death
• ‘grumbled an acknowledging growl’ – love for family
I wholeheartedly agree with the student who suggested that readers do feel
more sympathy for White Fang because we see an emotive description of his
bravery and eventual death which builds sympathy for this dog. Also, yes it is
evident that the writer intends for readers to care less about Jim Hall as we
become champions for the dog in the struggle and little focus is given to the
death of the intruder.
Firstly, the writer certainly builds pity for this heroic dog in the extract as….
Clearly… Evidentially… Poignantly…
The use of (violent imagery, adjectives, phrases, emotive, pathos, verb choices)
Also the description of…. Suggests….
Ultimately, White Fang is pitied because…
Secondly, Jim Hall is not presented in a pitiful way as he seems to be the antagonist
of the story.
The writer describes with…..
Firstly…However….Perhaps
The use of (lack of name, ambiguous language, symbolism of darkness) show…
In summary, I fully agree because…
AO5: Content and
Section B: Writing Organisation
AO6: Technical Accuracy
Key Headlines
Exposition The sky was tinted a bleak shade of grey. Warm and humid, the smell of
1 establishing
setting, mood
and character
rain lingered in the air around her. It was presumably the crack of dawn yet
the temperature felt as high as the peak of a southern heatwave, a familiar
yet insufferable sensation to recall. Wind swept the sand and soil towards
situation ( best
the building she stood next to, ceaseless lines of miserable people wrapped
around the corner of it. A dozen white trucks were lined up at the barbwire
in present fencing, separated by steel barricades like the women and the children
tense if you were. She stood in the middle of one of these lines and clutched at her
want to show chest pocket. The outline of a miniature rag doll, one her son graciously
off past tense made of her, comforted her deeply during times like this. She had worked
in the shift) tirelessly to root herself in American soil, but none of it mattered.
Thick clouds now circulated the parking lot, predatorially. Tempestuous and
Shorter unrelenting, the prospect of heavy rainfall was not unlikely. She felt
2 paragraph
developing
character
tentative droplets struck her temples and roll down the curves of her
cheeks. Half-hearted drizzling soon turned to raging downpour; her curls
matted onto her forehead and her clothes were soaked through. The lack of
provided shelter made the process evermore chaotic and frustrating for the
situation whilst
women surrounding her. She focused on the gradual darkening of the soil-
sustaining/ the vast, ceaseless, unforgiving stretch on either side of the fencing that
enhancing mood determined her fate. She was ushered into a truck soon enough, surrounded
by 10 or 20 other drenched and shivering women. She swiftly cowered into a
dark corner, reaching for the ragdoll once again. Holding the worn artefact
One sentence close to her chest, she stole one final glance at the sandstone soil before
3
the doors of the truck-container were slammed shut.
paragraph
introducing a The very same sandstone soil she treaded along as she entered the Land of
shift in time and the Free, the Home of the Brave…
mood
She remembered he memories of her liberation- her utter fearlessness- still
lingered in the hills and valleys of her mind; she remembered smelling fresh
grass being mowed along her neighbour’s lawn while lounging on her patio,
Recount the in the morning sunshine; she remembered the birth of her first child,
4 memory with a
distinctive mood
shift (
naming him ‘Carlos’ meaning ‘free man’; she remembered her first pay-
check, and her last one, both gifted to her parents as a symbol of her
gratitude. Mostly, she remembered the soaring, towering, boundless skies
above her humble town in south-western Texas.
could be a tense
shift, too, if you Now, as the sky seemed to close further and further in on her every day,
started in she thought of Carlos. It had been months since she had held him in her
present tense)
arms. She tightened her grip on the ragdoll; a pathetically inadequate
substitute for her son’s embrace. The petty, soiled figurine was barely
distinguishable in the darkness that now engulfed the truck. As she heard
Try for a the engine start, she felt the woman next to her recoil into herself, shaking
complex list if tumultuously. The majority of the women in the container were sobbing
you can quietly, some of them paralysed-still with pure misery. She wondered what
each of these women did to end up here; whether they had lived America
all their lives, migrated when they were young or old, were born in
Resume the
5
America, or Mexico, or somewhere entirely different. They were all the
mood you same in the eyes of the law because of the blood that ran through their
opened your veins.
text with.
Circular She had worked tirelessly to root herself in American soil, but none of it
structure mattered.
sentence
Language Paper 1- Question 5 When planning your story use a range of vocabulary
including exciting verb choice to set mood.
Language Paper 1- Question 5 Ranging your sentence types will also elevate your
response.
want to show off past • Nostalgic and wistful, his minded drifted to another tine…
tense in the shift)
• Desperate and alone, one lone tear trickled down her face…
Shorter paragraph
• This moment was unique and she would remember it forever!
2 developing character
situation whilst sustaining/
enhancing mood
• Her mind was racing, racing towards the dream she had always
had…
• The more she stared out into the sunset, the more she nostalgic she
One sentence paragraph
became…
With a misty look in her eye, she remembered that day: she
remembered….; she remembered…; she remembered (weather
Shorter paragraph developing shift)… Most of all, she remembered….
2 character situation whilst
sustaining/ enhancing mood
The deep recesses of his memory recalled the pain of that day: he
remembered the wreckage of the car surrounding him; he
remembered the guttural sob his mother let out as she saw his
injuries for the first time; he remembered the searing pain up is
leg which crippled him for days. Most of all, he remembered the
fear which engulfed when he heard the prognosis.
Paragraph 5 – Return to original place with a change of time
Exposition establishing Model:
2 developing character
situation whilst sustaining/
enhancing mood
Verbs
• Walk: Stride, Stroll, Pace, Saunter, Meander, Strut
• Run: Dash, Sprint, Ride, Course, Surge, Hurry
• Pour: Drizzle, Drip, Empty, Hail, Volley, Burst, Torrent, Rupture, Thrash
One sentence paragraph • Shine: Glow, Sparkle, Burn, illuminate, irradiate
Self assessment
Even Better If (EBI) - Re-read your work and look below at your target, is there any improvements you
can notice already?
AO5 (Content and Organisation) AO6 (Technical Accuracy)
T1: Formal register with ambitious vocabulary T5: Secure use of sentences for clarity
T2: Used a range of methods to set and shift mood T6:Wide range of punctuation used accurately
(pathetic fallacy, metaphors, imagery, senses)
T7: Variation of simple, compound and complex
T3: Followed planned structure to show inventive sentences and a range of sentence starters
structure (mood change, flashback, motifs)
T8: Standard English used with correct grammar and
T4: Clear paragraphs with linked ideas and discourse tense
markers
T9: Accurate spelling
How do I make my plan fit the question?