Just a little reminder....
YOUR EXAM IS ON 16th MAY!!!!!!
ARE YOU READY?
x
Welcome to the Literature As Stoodle
You will find lots of links to resources, lessons and suggestions for wider reading on this blog. Check the recommended reading bar to the right. Wider Reading is very important for your exam question, Section A: Contextual linking. This is where you will be given an extract to analyse and link to your wider reading on the Struggle for Identity.
The Struggle for Identity areas are : Gender, Class, Political, Social, Indidividual, religious and sexual.
One very, very useful text is the New Oxford Student Text which contains extracts of prose, drama and poetry as well as useful comments.
To get the best out of this Blog, click on the labels to the right which will group posts on the same topic. Also click on the links to other sites to improve your studies. You can download resources and save them to your own computers. You might even want to keep your own Blog.
Enjoy your course and check in regularly.
Mrs Sims
x
The Struggle for Identity areas are : Gender, Class, Political, Social, Indidividual, religious and sexual.
One very, very useful text is the New Oxford Student Text which contains extracts of prose, drama and poetry as well as useful comments.
To get the best out of this Blog, click on the labels to the right which will group posts on the same topic. Also click on the links to other sites to improve your studies. You can download resources and save them to your own computers. You might even want to keep your own Blog.
Enjoy your course and check in regularly.
Mrs Sims
x
Friday, 13 April 2012
Wednesday, 11 April 2012
REVISION TASKS
Try a few of these tasks to prepare for the exam. Hope you did some wider reading during the Easter holiday?
1.
Re-read
the poems.
2.
Mindmap
each poem. You could use language,
structure, form, content, themes and Carol Ann Duffy’s concerns as your
skeleton map.
3.
Choose
three images / phrases in each poem you think are particularly effective. Make some notes that you could use to help
explain in detail what you find
interesting about them.
4.
Select
a theme or concern from Carol Ann Duffy’s work and list all the other poems
that also touch on this area.
5.
Choose
a motif / recurring image. Find three
poems in which it occurs. Explain in
detail why Carol Ann Duffy uses it in each context.
6.
Choose
a really difficult poem that you struggle with and discuss it with someone
else. Read it with them. Try to explain it to them. Get them to ask you questions about it.
7.
Go
through the vocabulary appropriate to use when discussing Carol Ann Duffy’s
poetry. Write any unfamiliar words and
their meanings on post-its. Put these
somewhere you will see them and remove them as you learn them.
8.
Write
down ten things you know about Carol Ann Duffy and her life. Try to connect each of these points to a different
poem.
9.
Choose
a poem and identify one feature of language, one of structure and one of form
that you think are particularly significant about your poem. Explain your choices.
10. Read each poem’s
title. Think about why it was chosen. Consider what you would write in an essay to
explain Carol Ann Duffy’s possible reasons for choosing the title.
11.
Choose
two past questions; write an essay plan for each. Try replacing the suggested poems with others
that could have been used for these questions.
12. Practise writing an
essay to time. Check the introduction,
topic sentences and conclusion are clearly focused on the assessment objectives
and examination question.
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