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Ten things to remember for English 1119 Paper 1 Section

A
1. Section A contains tasks where the essay is usually a letter, report, talk, speech or article. All these types of
writing tasks have formats; make sure you know them.

2. Use all the given notes. Do not write too much. One elaboration per point and one additional point of your own
is usually sufficient.

3. Spend a maximum of 45 minutes. Do not waste too much time here.

4. Reports, articles and formal letters require formal language. Do not use slang or ‘buddy’ language.

5. 250 words should be sufficient.

6. Many of the writing tasks require the past tense. Know when to use them.

7. Language carries 20 marks; keep your sentences short, clear and accurate. Spelling is crucial.

8. Addresses and names can be fictitious. Don’t worry too much about them.

9. Some of the reports, formal letters and articles need the writer’s name and position, if any. Reports and formal
letters must be signed.

10. Here is a simple time schedule:

 15 mins to plan and write your draft

 10 mins to edit

 15 mins to rewrite

 5 mins to check grammar and spelling

Important: Please do not submit a blank piece of paper. Any attempt however small, garners marks.
Please do not write more than the necessary in this section; many students do and find themselves
short of time in section B. The ideal length is about 250 words or so.

The writing tasks in Paper 1 Section B comes in five choices: narrative or descriptive, expository,
argumentative, imaginative and now, a new type that has replaced the one word essay – proverb or
idiomatic expression. The last one often comes with a given situation (this makes it easier!).
Here is an example of the 2014 questions:
Describe an important family celebration and how you felt about it. (Descriptive)

There is a lack of freedom given to teenagers today. Do you agree? (Argumentative)

Why are animals important to human beings? (Expository)

Write a story about a fisherman beginning with: “The wind blew strongly. Out at sea, …”
(Imaginative)

‘A friend in need is a friend indeed.’ Describe how a friend helped you in difficult time. (Proverb)

Ten things to remember for English 1119 Paper 1 Section B


1. Underline key words in the question and read it several times.

2. Use a mind map before starting. Each point should be followed by an elaboration and an example.

3. Try to add facts and figures where necessary. Refer to newspaper articles regarding people, places and events.

4. Keep a scrap book to read these articles before the exam.

5. Keep sentences simple and vary them with long and short sentences. Use paragraphs to introduce new ideas
and points.

6. The word limit is a minimum of 350 words. A rough guide would be: introductory paragraph – 25 words;
conclusion – 25 words; and six paragraphs of 50 words each for the body.

7. Don’t write too much. This could cost you language points if you make grammatical and spelling errors.

8. Try to be cheerful and positive in your writing. Sad essays may seem unappealing.

9. Try practising for at least three essay types. Do not limit your choice to one essay type.

10. Here is a sample time schedule for this essay task:

 5-10 mins for the mind map/outline

 10 mins to draft

 20-30 mins to write

 5-10 mins to check


Ten things to remember for Paper 2
1. Section A – 15 marks. The objective questions are tricky. Read them at least twice underlining
key words in the question and answers.
2. Read the cloze passage once in questions 9-15. They usually deal with tenses (simple
present/past, present/past perfect tenses), articles (a, an, the), determiners (the, this, that),
prepositions (in, on, of, for, at), pronouns (his, hers, its, their, our) – Write the answers in the
blanks before deciding.
3. Section B – 10 marks. The answers are usually short and precise. Do not put two answers in one
blank. Answers that are copied directly from the source text will not gain marks.
4. Section C – Answers for the comprehension task are usually short and precise. Lifting the entire
sentence can result in errors. Underline main points as you read. Each paragraph has at least two
points that you need for the summary. Keep the summary within the 130 word limit. Use the 10
words given. Connect each sentence with a sentence or sequence connector.
5. Section D – Question 32 is on one of the poems you learnt. This section involves at least two
questions that require you to quote lines from the poem and one personal response from you. Pay
attention in class and you will be all right.
6. Question 33 is about the novel you studied. Have quotations ready for each character in the story.
Quote what they said to support your point.
7. There must be an introduction, three points with elaboration and evidence from the text in three
distinct paragraphs followed by a summing up or conclusion based on the question.
8. The questions are on Theme, Characterization (like/dislike), Moral Values, Lessons and your
personal response or evaluation of the novel, plot or storyline.
9. The time and setting of the novel are as important as the author and his/her views. Read up on it.
10. Never use a revision book as a substitute for reading the novel

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