Back to Topic 4.2 — Writing skills
4.2.1Spanish B SL14 flashcards

Planning your answer

Practice Flashcards

Flip to reveal answers
Card 1 of 144.2.1
4.2.1
Question

el plan

Click to reveal answer

Track your progress — Sign up free to save your progress and get smart review reminders based on spaced repetition.

All 14 Flashcards — Planning your answer

Sign up free to track progress and get spaced-repetition review schedules.

Card 1definition

Question

el plan

Answer

the plan — your quick outline before writing

Card 2definition

Question

el guion

Answer

the outline / running order of your text

Card 3definition

Question

la idea clave

Answer

a key idea — one of the points you develop

Card 4definition

Question

el gancho

Answer

the hook — an opening line that grabs the reader

Card 5definition

Question

la despedida

Answer

the sign-off / closing line

Card 6definition

Question

el conector

Answer

a connector / linking word (además, por eso…)

Card 7definition

Question

desarrollar una idea

Answer

to develop an idea (with detail and examples)

Card 8definition

Question

¿Qué elementos lleva un buen plan?

Answer

Tipo de texto, 2–3 ideas clave, un gancho, una despedida y vocabulario/conectores útiles.

Card 9definition

Question

¿Cuánto tiempo dedicas a planificar el Paper 1?

Answer

Unos dos minutos antes de empezar a escribir.

Card 10concept

Question

What are the four planning moves?

Answer

Decode → Brainstorm → Order → Note vocab.

Card 11concept

Question

Which criterion does a clear plan help most?

Answer

Criterion B (Message) — it gives an organised, well-developed answer.

Card 12concept

Question

Why develop only 2–3 points rather than many?

Answer

Depth with examples beats a long list of shallow points — undeveloped ideas lose Criterion B.

Card 13concept

Question

Should you write your plan in full sentences?

Answer

No — note form, five short lines; the plan is scaffolding for you, not text for the examiner.

Card 14concept

Question

Why order your points before writing?

Answer

A clear order keeps the reader following you from opening to close, protecting Criterion B.

Track your progress with spaced repetition

Sign up free — Aimnova tells you exactly which cards to review and when, so you remember everything before your IB exam.

Start Free