Question 1: Model Answer (Edexcel IGCSE English Language A)
Revision Note
Written by: Deb Orrock
Reviewed by: Kate Lee
Question 1: Model Answer
For Question 1, you will be given one of the ten texts from the Pearson Edexcel IGCSE English Anthology printed on the exam paper (or in a source booklet) and one question to answer about it. You will need to demonstrate your understanding of and engagement with the themes and ideas in the poem or text, as relevant to the focus of the question.
The following guide will demonstrate how to answer a Question 1 task. The question itself is taken from a past exam paper. It includes:
Question breakdown
Planning your response
Question 1 model answer with annotations
Question breakdown
The following example question is taken from the January 2022 exam paper, and is about the poem ‘Disabled’ by Wilfred Owen. This is an example of how you should approach Question 1 and your response, regardless of the text you are given in the exam.
You should begin by reading the question carefully:
You should then re-read the text carefully with the specific focus of the question in mind.
Planning your response
It is important not just to write down everything you have learnt about the poem or prose text in your response, or just describe what is happening. When you go back to re-read the text in the exam, you should annotate in the margins anything directly relevant to the focus of the question and the bullet points.
For example:
Use these annotations to create the points you are going to make in your answer.
Question 1 model answer with annotations
Based on the above question, the following model answer demonstrates how to write your response in order to achieve the full 30 marks:
The writer creates sympathy for the soldier in ‘Disabled’ by contrasting the soldier’s current helpless and dependent situation with his youth, when he was full of life and vitality. The poet therefore creates a melancholic and wistful tone, with elements of irony and bitterness in the passive report of the soldier’s thoughts and feelings. [Marking comment] The poem opens by giving the reader a sense of how cold, unhappy and lonely the soldier is, sitting in his “wheeled chair” as he “shivered”, waiting for darkness. The cyclical structure of the poem means Owen returns to the same idea at the end, with the soldier wondering how “cold and late it is”. This suggests that the man is actually waiting not only for the night, but for death to relieve him of his suffering. [Marking comment] The man is described as wearing a “ghastly suit of grey”, and colour symbolism is used throughout the poem as a metaphor for strength and life, with the “dark” equating to death. This man has lost his colour, and therefore has also lost his strength and passion for life. [Marking comment]
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