England Β· WJEC EduqasSyllabus
English Language syllabus, dot point by dot point
Every dot point in the England English Languagesyllabus, with a focused answer for each one. Click any dot point for a worked explainer, past exam questions, and links to related dot points. Written by Claude Opus 4.8, Anthropic's latest AI.
Component 3: Creative and Critical Use of Language
Module overview β- What genres can you write in for Component 3, and how do you master the conventions and craft of each?Original writing genres and craft (Component 3): the range of forms (article, speech, narrative, travel writing, review, blog, letter), their conventions, and the craft of effective writing (structure, sentence variety, lexical precision, voice and rhetorical technique) within each (AO5).13 min answer β
- How do you respond to a stimulus, adapting and recreating material into new forms, audiences and purposes?Recreative and adaptive writing (Component 3): responding to a stimulus text or prompt, transforming material across forms, audiences and purposes (re-genre-ing), and making deliberate adaptive choices, the stimulus-driven dimension of the original writing (AO5).12 min answer β
- How is the Component 3 exam structured, and how do you manage two original pieces and a commentary under time?The Component 3 exam (Creative and Critical Use of Language): the structure of the 1 hour 45 minute paper, producing two original writing pieces and one reflective commentary from the stimulus, the AO5 and AO1 to AO3 split, and how to plan and manage the time.12 min answer β
- What is the Component 3 reflective commentary, and how do you analyse your own writing choices using linguistic frameworks?The reflective commentary (Component 3): analysing your own original writing, explaining and justifying language choices using linguistic concepts and terminology, linking choices to audience, purpose and form, the critical (AO1, AO2 and AO3) counterpart to the creative writing.13 min answer β
- How do you write original pieces precisely targeted at a purpose and audience, and how do contextual factors shape every choice?Writing for purpose and audience (Component 3): crafting original writing for a specified or chosen purpose, audience, form and context, controlling register, tone and structure, and making deliberate language choices, the foundation of the AO5 original writing.13 min answer β
Exam skills and assessment objectives
Module overview β- How do you analyse an unseen text or transcript under time, from first reading to a structured analytical answer?Analysing unseen texts (exam skill): a repeatable method for analysing any unseen text or transcript under time, establishing context, selecting the frameworks that do real work, moving from feature to effect, and building a structured analytical answer (AO1 and AO3 across the components).13 min answer β
- How do you compare texts effectively for AO4, weaving them together by idea rather than analysing them in turn?Comparing texts for AO4 (exam skill): exploring connections across texts informed by linguistic concepts and methods, structuring comparison by idea or feature rather than text by text, and integrating comparison with analysis, central to the Component 2 change question and any comparative task.12 min answer β
- How do you plan and structure exam answers under time, managing the papers so every task is answered well?Structuring essays and managing time (exam skill): planning analytical and discursive answers, structuring a clear argument under time, allocating time across multi-section papers, and the exam strategy that gets every task answered to its mark scheme across the Eduqas components.12 min answer β
- What are the five assessment objectives, how are they weighted across the components, and how do you write to them?The assessment objectives (AO1 to AO5): what each objective rewards, how they are weighted differently across the four components, and how to write deliberately to the objectives a given task assesses, the framework underlying every mark in Eduqas A700.13 min answer β
Component 4: Language and Identity (NEA)
Module overview β- How do you analyse your data in the investigation, integrating the frameworks, identity concepts and context into a sustained argument?Analysis and frameworks in the NEA (Component 4): applying the linguistic frameworks to your data (AO1), integrating identity concepts, theories and research (AO2), reading context (AO3), and building a sustained, evaluative analysis that answers the research question rather than describing the data.13 min answer β
- How do you choose a language and identity topic and turn it into a focused, answerable research question?Choosing an investigation area (Component 4 NEA): selecting a language and identity topic (self-representation, gender, culture, diversity), narrowing it to a focused, answerable research question, ensuring a workable data set, and the concepts and theories that frame each area.13 min answer β
- How do you collect and prepare data for a language investigation, and how do you write a sound, ethical methodology?Methodology and data collection (Component 4 NEA): selecting and gathering a workable data set, qualitative and quantitative approaches, ethical considerations (consent, anonymity), preparing and presenting data, and writing a transparent methodology that justifies the research design.13 min answer β
- What is the Component 4 Language and Identity investigation, and how is the non-exam assessment structured and assessed?The Language and Identity investigation (Component 4 NEA): the independent 2,500 to 3,500 word language investigation on a language and identity topic, its structure (introduction, methodology, analysis, conclusion), the prescribed areas, and how it is assessed (AO1, AO2 and AO3) and moderated.13 min answer β
- How do you write up the investigation, structure the report, draw evidenced conclusions and reference your sources correctly?Writing up the investigation (Component 4 NEA): structuring the research report, writing in academic register, drawing evidenced conclusions that answer the research question and acknowledge limitations, and referencing sources and data correctly within the 2,500 to 3,500 word limit.12 min answer β
Component 2: Language Change Over Time
Module overview β- What attitudes do people hold towards language change, and how do you argue critically between prescriptivism and descriptivism?Attitudes to language change (Component 2): prescriptivism and descriptivism, the debate over decline and progress, purism and the role of authorities, attitudes in public discourse, and how to argue critically about responses to change with concepts and examples (AO2, with AO1 and AO3).13 min answer β
- Why has English changed over time, and how do you explain the social, technological and cultural causes of change?The contexts and causes of language change (Component 2): the social, political, technological and cultural drivers (contact and trade, empire and migration, science and technology, the printing press, standardisation, education and the media), and how to explain why a change happened when it did (AO2 and AO3).13 min answer β
- What is the English in the Twenty-First Century question, and how do you analyse contemporary and digital language and the forces shaping it now?English in the twenty-first century (Component 2 Section B): the language of digital and online communication, contemporary varieties and global Englishes, the technological and cultural forces shaping present-day English, and how to analyse and discuss current language change with concepts and examples (AO1, AO2 and AO3).14 min answer β
- What are the processes by which English has changed since 1500, and how do you analyse change at the level of lexis, semantics, grammar, spelling and graphology?The processes of language change (Component 2): lexical change (borrowing, coinage, affixation, compounding, blending), semantic change (narrowing, broadening, amelioration, pejoration, semantic shift), grammatical change, and orthographic and graphological change, and how to analyse them in dated texts (AO1 and AO3).14 min answer β
- What is the Component 2 Section A language change question, and how do you analyse dated texts and compare across time under exam conditions?The language change question (Component 2 Section A): analysing dated texts from across the post-1500 period, naming the processes of change, explaining their causes, deploying theory, and comparing across the texts to build an argument about how and why English has changed (AO1, AO2, AO3 and AO4).14 min answer β
- What models and theories explain how and why language changes, and how do you deploy them critically?Theories and models of language change (Component 2): models of how change spreads and why it happens (the wave and S-curve models, random fluctuation, functional theory, substratum theory, lexical gaps, Aitchison's metaphors of damp spoon, crumbling castle and infectious disease), deployed critically with examples (AO2).13 min answer β
Component 1: Language Concepts and Issues
Module overview β- What is the language acquisition topic, and how do you argue critically about how children acquire spoken and written language?Language acquisition (a Component 1 Section B language issues topic): the stages of children's spoken and written development, the major theories (behaviourist, nativist, cognitive, social interactionist), key evidence and concepts, and how children acquire language, argued critically with theory and examples (AO2, with AO1 and AO3).14 min answer β
- What is the language and power topic, and how do you argue critically about how power is created and enacted through language?Language and power (a Component 1 Section B language issues topic): instrumental and influential power, power in occupation and institutions, the concepts (synthetic personalisation, face and politeness, power asymmetry), and how power is constructed and enacted through language, argued critically with examples (AO2, with AO1 and AO3).14 min answer β
- What is the language and situation topic, and how do you argue critically about register, mode and how context shapes language?Language and situation (a Component 1 Section B language issues topic): register and how context shapes language, the field, tenor and mode of discourse, the spoken-written continuum, formality and audience, and how situational factors construct meaning, argued critically with concepts and examples (AO2, with AO1 and AO3).13 min answer β
- What is the standard and non-standard English topic, and how do you argue critically about accent, dialect and attitudes to variation?Standard and non-standard English (a Component 1 Section B language issues topic): Standard English and its history, accent and dialect, regional and social variation, overt and covert prestige, and attitudes to non-standard varieties, argued critically with concepts and examples (AO2, supported by AO1 and AO3).14 min answer β
- How do you write the Component 1 Section B language issues essay, and how do you turn topic knowledge into a critical, evidenced argument?The language issues essay (Component 1 Section B): how to answer the discursive essay from a choice of three across the four topics, building a critical argument (AO2) that deploys concepts and theories and grounds them in examples (AO1 and AO3) under time.13 min answer β
- What is the Component 1 Section A spoken language question, and how do you analyse at least two transcripts across the frameworks under time?The spoken language question (Component 1 Section A): analysing at least two transcriptions of real spoken language across the linguistic frameworks, reading transcript notation, and moving from feature to effect to construct an argument about the talk (AO1 and AO3).14 min answer β
The linguistic frameworks toolkit
Module overview β- How do you analyse a text or transcript at the level of whole-text structure and cohesion, and how do you read the organisation of talk?Discourse: whole-text structure and organisation, cohesion (referencing, conjunction, lexical cohesion), and the structure of spoken interaction (turn-taking, adjacency pairs, openings and closings, repair), and the move from a discourse feature to its effect (AO1 and AO3 across the Eduqas A700 components).13 min answer β
- How do you analyse a text or transcript at the level of grammar, and how do you turn a structural feature into a point about meaning?Grammar (morphology and syntax): word formation and inflection, word classes, phrases and clauses, sentence types and functions, mood and voice, and the move from a grammatical feature to its effect on meaning (AO1 and AO3 across the Eduqas A700 components).14 min answer β
- How do you analyse the visual dimension of a text, and how do you read layout, typography and images alongside the words?Graphology and multimodality: layout, typography, colour and images, the relationship between visual and verbal modes (anchorage, salience, reading paths), and the move from a graphological or multimodal feature to its effect, especially in designed and digital texts (AO1 and AO3 across the Eduqas A700 components).12 min answer β
- How do you analyse a text or transcript at the level of lexis and semantics, and how do you turn word choice into a point about meaning?Lexis and semantics: analysing word choice, word classes, semantic fields, connotation and denotation, formality and register, and the move from a lexical feature to its effect on meaning (AO1 and AO3 across the Eduqas A700 components).13 min answer β
- How do you analyse the sounds of language, and how do you read phonological and prosodic features in a spoken transcript?Phonetics, phonology and prosody: the IPA and speech sounds, phonological patterning (alliteration, sibilance, plosives), accent features, and the prosody of delivery (intonation, stress, pace, pause), and how to read them from a transcript (AO1 and AO3, central to Component 1).13 min answer β
- How do you analyse meaning beyond the literal, and how do you read implicature, politeness and context-dependent meaning in a text or transcript?Pragmatics: implied meaning, Grice's maxims and implicature, speech acts, politeness and face, deixis and shared knowledge, and the move from a pragmatic feature to its effect on meaning (AO1, AO2 and AO3 across the Eduqas A700 components).13 min answer β