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What is analysis in English A?
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1.1.111 cards
What is analysis in English A?
Explaining how a writer's choices create meaning and affect the reader — not what the text says.
What are the three steps of the analysis move?
Name the CHOICE → explain the EFFECT on the reader → link to MEANING/purpose.
Summary vs analysis?
Summary = what a text says; analysis = how a choice works and why (the so-what).
What is a 'choice' (technique)?
Anything the writer decided — a word, image, sentence shape, layout or structure.
What is 'effect'?
What a choice does to the reader — how it makes them think or feel.
Which step holds most of the marks?
The effect (and the link to meaning) — not naming the technique.
What is feature-spotting?
Naming a device without explaining its effect — it scores almost nothing.
What does asking 'so what?' do?
Pushes you past describing a choice into explaining its meaning — real analysis.
Coverage or depth — which scores better?
Depth: one choice explained fully beats five just named.
Which criterion rewards analysis?
Criterion B — Analysis and evaluation.
Turn 'the writer uses a short sentence' into analysis.
The short sentence feels abrupt and final, making the warning sound urgent (choice → effect → meaning).
1.1.210 cards
What are the four steps of the analysis process?
Read (twice) → TAP (Type, Audience, Purpose) → Hunt (underline choices) → Explain (choice → effect → meaning).
What does TAP stand for?
Type, Audience, Purpose.
Why read the text twice?
First read = the gist; second read = notice detail without missing the point.
What is the memory hook for the process?
Read · TAP · Hunt · Explain.
What does 'Hunt' mean?
Underline the choices that stand out — your evidence.
What is the 'Explain' step?
Turn each choice into a point: choice → effect → meaning.
Which two steps do students most often skip?
TAP, and the effect part of Explain.
Why do TAP early?
It keeps your whole analysis focused on what the text is for.
What is a text's 'purpose'?
Why it was made — to persuade, inform, entertain, warn, and so on.
Should you write as you first read?
No — read for the gist first, or you grab the wrong details and miss the point.
1.1.310 cards
What is context?
The situation a text comes from — who made it, when, where and why.
Why does context matter?
The same words mean different things in different situations — context shapes meaning.
Give an example of context changing meaning.
'This place changed my life' = a sales pitch in a gym advert, but heartfelt in a personal blog.
What is a source line?
The short note giving a text's type, origin and date.
Where do you find context on an unseen text?
The source line you're given, plus clues inside the text.
What is an internal clue?
Something inside the text (a name, place, reference or slang) that hints at time, place or audience.
What is the golden rule of context?
Use only context you are given or can see — never invent it.
Why is invented context dangerous?
It's worse than none — it sends your whole analysis off course.
Should context replace analysis?
No — context sharpens the reading of purpose and audience; it doesn't replace choice → effect → meaning.
What should you read first in a Paper 1 text?
The source line — it's free context about type, origin and date.
1.1.410 cards
What is purpose?
The job a text is trying to do — persuade, inform, instruct, entertain, warn or reflect.
Name three common purposes.
Any of: persuade/sell, inform, instruct, entertain, reflect, warn.
Why name the purpose early?
It gives your analysis a target — read every choice as serving that job.
What's the key question to ask of each choice?
'Why did the writer do this — how does it help the job?'
Can a text have more than one purpose?
Yes — one main purpose, often a secondary one that helps it (e.g. humour to persuade).
What is the main purpose of an advert?
To persuade / sell.
What is the purpose of a recipe or safety notice?
To instruct.
How does knowing purpose help your marks?
Every point ties back to the job, so your analysis is focused (Criterion C) and about effect (Criterion B).
A funny advert: what is its main purpose?
To persuade — the humour is a secondary purpose serving it.
Should you name the purpose, then forget it?
No — link each choice back to the purpose as you go.
1.1.510 cards
What is audience?
The people a text is written for.
Name four clues to the audience.
Vocabulary, references, tone/register, and what the writer assumes you already know.
What does simple vocabulary suggest about audience?
A wide or young audience.
What does jargon suggest about audience?
Experts or fans who already know the terms.
What is register?
How formal or informal the language is.
What does 'linking a choice to the audience' look like?
'This slang suits a teenage audience, making them feel the brand is one of them.'
Why is 'the audience is everyone' weak?
It's too vague — name the specific group so you can explain the choices.
Can a text have two audiences?
Yes — e.g. a children's leaflet that also speaks to parents.
What is 'what's assumed' as an audience clue?
Whatever the writer doesn't explain — they expect the audience to know it already.
Which letter of TAP is audience?
The A — Type, Audience, Purpose.
1.1.610 cards
What is a theme?
The broad topic a text is about — a word or two (e.g. freedom, technology).
What is a message?
The specific point or opinion a text makes about its theme — a full sentence.
What's the quick test to tell theme from message?
One or two words = theme; a sentence with an opinion = message.
Give a theme and a matching message.
Theme: courage. Message: 'Real courage is being scared and acting anyway.'
What question finds the theme?
'What is this mostly about?'
What question finds the message?
'What does the writer want me to think or feel about it?'
How do you check something is a message, not a topic?
See if you could argue with it — a real message can be disagreed with.
Why isn't naming the theme enough for marks?
The credit comes from the message and from showing how choices build it.
Is 'technology' a theme or a message?
A theme — it's a one-word topic.
What builds the message in a text?
The writer's choices — the analysis shows how they create the point.
1.1.710 cards
What is a global issue?
A real-world concern that is significant, transnational and locally felt.
What are the three properties of a global issue?
Significant (wide impact), transnational (crosses borders), locally felt (seen in everyday life).
Name the five fields of inquiry.
Culture/identity/community; Beliefs/values/education; Politics/power/justice; Art/creativity/imagination; Science/technology/environment.
How is a global issue different from a theme?
A theme is a topic (a word); a global issue is a sharp, wide real-world concern.
What does 'transnational' mean here?
Felt across borders — in more than one country or culture.
What does 'locally felt' mean?
You can see it in the specific everyday detail of a real text.
Why must a global issue be narrow?
A broad topic can't be explored in depth; a narrow focus keeps the Oral clear.
Which assessment uses a global issue?
The Individual Oral — you examine one global issue across two works.
Turn 'war' into a good global issue.
e.g. 'how war forces children to grow up too fast' — narrow and specific.
Give the chain from theme to global issue.
Theme (topic) → message (the point) → global issue (a wide real-world concern the message speaks to).
Topic 1.1 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Understanding Analysis
English A Lang & Lit exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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