Individual Oral - Text Choices

 

One of the key challenges of the Individual Oral assessment is for you to select an extract of one of you literary works and a non-literary text through which a global issue can be explored. Spending some time individually or with classmates trying to pair up works with bodies of work, or selecting extracts from each around different global issues will always be time well-spent.

Assessment for Learning

A great inquiry-based learning activity is to ask you, as students, to find two texts to compare around a hot internationalist topic or global issue. As teachers and examiners, it is something we often do when preparing papers for the mock examinations or other assessments. Here is an example of an extract from the literary work, Top Girls, by Caryl Churchill, and an extract from the columns of Molly Olmstead, a journalist for Slate, this one about protesting President Trump's inauguration in 2016.

 

Example of Text Pairings

TEXT A:

TEXT B:

 

Read those texts and consider the global issue, what you can learn by considering them together, and what you might say about them. Make notes and then compare them to the marking notes below.

Marking Notes

Crucially, most students confuse content and form when seeking ways in which to discuss the texts. You should justify your analytical points by discussing the texts through the lens of the conventions of whatever text type is portrayed, however the comparisons and contrasts should be in terms of thematic content. By all means, you could have a brief section of the oral that explores each text individually in terms of its own meaning and how it is achieved through its conventions, but it is essential in the new Individual Oral assessment that any discussion must be framed around the global issue.

 

The Pair of Texts above:

 

 

​​​​​Now take one of your literary works and one of the non-literary bodies of work you have studied. Select an extract for each, and then prepare a set of marking notes that explains what the global issue might be and what we can learn about it by looking at it through the lenses of these two different works. If you can produce a similar set of marking notes as here, you will be on the right track.

MY PROGRESS

How much of Individual Oral - Text Choices have you understood?