In a nutshell: Deliver the IO by speaking from notes, not a script: steady pace, clear signposting, and analytical phrasing — so you sound like someone thinking, not reciting.
How you say it shapes how much of your analysis lands — and the goal is controlled, not word-perfect.
🎤 Work from brief bullet notes, not a full written-out speech (a memorised script sounds flat and derails if you lose your place). Speak at a steady pace, signpost each move (‘Turning to the advert…’), use analytical language (‘this suggests’, ‘the effect is’), and let small pauses do their work. You're demonstrating thinking, not performing a monologue.
How to deliver
Notes, not a script
Speak from brief bullet points — a memorised speech sounds flat and is fragile.
Steady pace + pauses
Don't rush; a short pause before a key point gives it weight.
Signpost
Announce each move: ‘Turning now to…’, ‘This connects to the novel because…’.
Analytical phrasing
‘This suggests’, ‘the effect is’, ‘the writer's choice here…’ — sound like a critic.
The key move: Speak from notes, at a steady pace, signposting and using analytical phrasing — deliver thinking, not a recited script.
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Why it matters in the exam: Delivery supports Criterion D (language) and C (organisation): clear, controlled, signposted speech makes your analysis easy to follow and sound authoritative. A flat, memorised recital hides good ideas and collapses if you lose your place.
A student plans to write out their whole IO word for word and memorise it. Why is this risky, and how should they deliver it instead?
Model answer plan
See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.
Watch out: Don't memorise a word-for-word script — it sounds flat and derails if you slip. And don't just READ your notes in a monotone. Speak from bullets, with pace and signposting, as if thinking aloud.