Year 13 – English Literature

Head of Subject: Mrs H Lloyd


Intended Outcomes

The English Literature course has an historicist approach to the study of literature, which rests upon reading texts within a shared context; the course encourages students to explore the relationships that exist between texts and the contexts within which they are written, received and understood; students continue their A Level study of elements of both exam papers – Love Through the Ages and Modern Texts, and complete the Non-Exam Assessment (NEA or Coursework). 

  • Course Implementation

    Love Through the Ages: Unseen Poetry Comparison 

    Love Through the Ages encourages students to explore aspects of a central literary theme as seen over time, using unseen material and set textsStudents hone the skills they have developed for poetry analysis and comparison whilst studying other texts last year, to enable them to evaluate and compare a pair of unseen poems in detailContext focuses more closely on the typicality of representations seen in love poems. Following benchmark assessment in Year 12 summer exams, 1 practice exam question in November trial exams; practice questions and essay exercises in lessons throughout the year. 

    Modern Texts: Unseen Prose Evaluation 

    Modern Texts aims to encourage students to explore aspects of literature connected through a period of time, from 1945 onwardsFollowing their study of a Twentieth Century play and a Twentieth Century classic novel, students examine a variety of extracts from modern novels they have not studied in depth, to evaluate how writers present similar issues and themes to those seen in set texts. One practice exam question on November trial examsOngoing practice and skills development during study, plus additional practice assessments in lesson as needed. 

    Modern Texts: Modern Poetry Study (may be commenced early in year 12) 

    Following their study other pre-9900 poems and other modern Literature, students study a collection of modern poems by a single writer, written post 2000: in addition to skills honed in other units they consider the development and placement of themes and perspectives in the collection, as a whole and in parts. One practice exam question on November trial examsOngoing practice and skills development during study, plus additional practice assessments in lesson as needed. 

    NEA (Coursework) 

    NEA enables students to delve further into a pair of texts of specific interest to them, exploring themes, ideas, contexts and readings. Having researched and explored chosen texts over the summer, students draft and present their NEA coursework essay, closely monitored by teaching staff, for the first half term from SeptemberEach student has an English ‘tutor’ who gives them detailed feedback once each week; there are also 2 further lessons a week working on essays, with English staff available for further general questions. Draft of NEA is given feedback in October; students then improve their work at home for final submission in DecemberMarks are submitted to the exam board in March; students are allowed to know their mark prior to submission in case of appeal.    

    Revision of Set Texts studied in Year 12:  Love Through the Ages and Modern Texts 

    Students re-visit and revise all set texts from year 12, exploring meanings at a deeper levelIn particular, critical and alternative interpretations of these texts are explored. Complete Paper 1 or 2 in November trial exams, depending on performance in Year 12 exam questionsComplete Paper 1 or 2 in March trial exams: the alternative from the November exams is attemptedOngoing practice assessments in lessons as neededStudents are also encouraged to attempt questions at home, for evaluation and feedback by class teachers. 

Learning Impact

Whilst different texts and units focus on different key skills, all units and texts are assessed for AQA Literature’s Assessment Objectives, with all work and exam answers being graded using centralised departmental assessment grids and exam board mark schemes, which are returned to students with detailed feedbackResults of key assessments are included in subject data feedback and an annual report.   

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