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Written Task #2

Written Task #2. A Guide to the Language & Literature External Assessment. Overview. A minimum of two Written Task #2’s must be completed at the High Level ; we will write more, however. Only one will be submitted for external assessment .

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Written Task #2

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  1. Written Task #2 A Guide to the Language & Literature External Assessment

  2. Overview • A minimum of two Written Task #2’smust be completed at the High Level; we will write more, however. • Only one will be submitted for external assessment. • The written task will carry a value of ten percent of the I.B. mark. • Written Task #2 must answer one of six prescribed questions. • It is written in the format of an essay and, therefore, must include a thesis, an introduction, argumentation supported by textual evidence, and a conclusion. • The written task must include a short outline and must be 800 to 1,000 words in length. • It must include a page of bibliographic information.

  3. Overview • A minimum of two Written Task #2’smust be completed at the High Level; we will write more, however. • Only one will be submitted for external assessment. • The written task will carry a value of ten percent of the I.B. mark. • Written Task #2 must answer one of six prescribed questions. • It is written in the format of an essay and, therefore, must include a thesis, an introduction, argumentation supported by textual evidence, and a conclusion. • The written task must include a short outline and must be 800 to 1,000 words in length. • It must include a page of bibliographic information.

  4. The Rubric

  5. The Prescribed Questions Reader, Culture, and Text • How could the text be read and interpreted differently by two different readers? • If the text had been written in a different time or place or language or for different audience how and why might it differ? Power and Privilege • How and why is a social group represented in a particular way? • Which social groups are marginalized, excluded or silenced within the text? Text and Genre • How does the text conform to, or deviate from, the contentions of particular genre, and for what purpose? • How has the text borrowed from other texts, and with what effects?

  6. Reader, Culture, & TExt How could the text be read and interpreted differently by two different readers? If the text had been written in a different time or place or language or for different audience how and why might it differ?

  7. Reader, Culture, & Text The Prescribed Questions The Focus of Evaluation & Analysis Students are encouraged to consider that a text’s meaning is determined by the reader and by the cultural context. The interpretation of a text is dependent on various factors, including: The Reader and Producer’s Cultural Identity or Identities Age Gender Social Status The Historical and Cultural Settings of the Text and its Production Aspects of Language and Translation • How could the text be read and interpreted differently by two different readers? • If the text had been written in a different time or place or language or for different audience how and why might it differ?

  8. Example Topics Question #1: • The study and analysis of possible readings of the final pages of Part 1 of the novel The Outsider by a French and Algerian reader at the time of the Algerian war of independence. • The study and analysis of possible readings of an extract from the screenplay of La Grande Illusion by a French public in the early 1930s and late 1930s. Question #2: • A comic book or graphic novel for teenagers in the 1950s rewritten for teenagers in the 21st century. • The study and analysis of a literary work on the theme of prejudice that highlights different assumptions about race, religion, and so on.

  9. Power & Privilege How and why is a social group represented in a particular way? Which social groups are marginalized, excluded or silenced within the text?

  10. Power & Privilege The Prescribed Questions The Focus of Evaluation & Analysis Students are encouraged to consider how and why social groups are represented in texts in particular ways. In addition, consideration may be given to who is excluded from or marginalized in a text, or whose views are silenced. Social groups could include: Women Adolescents Senior Citizens Children Immigrants Ethnic minorities Professions • How and why is a social group represented in a particular way? • Which social groups are marginalized, excluded or silenced within the text?

  11. Example Topics Question #1: • The study and analysis of an article in which an urban tribe is represented in a negative way. • The representation of social groups in the novel The YacoubianBuilding by Alaa al Aswany. Question #2: • Chinese fiction in which the figure of the intellectual is either revered or condemned. • Representations of the Roma in the contemporary popular press.

  12. TEXT & Genre How does the text conform to, or deviate from, the contentions of particular genre, and for what purpose? How has the text borrowed from other texts, and with what effects?

  13. Text & Genre The Prescribed Questions The Focus of Evaluation & Analysis Students are encouraged to consider the genre in which a text is placed. Certain textual features belong to a particular genre and can be identified by a particular reader or audience. Writers make use of, or deviate from, particular conventions of genre in order to achieve particular effects. Students may also explore how texts borrow from other texts, and how texts can be re-imagined or reconstructed. Examples of conventions of genre include: Structure& Storyline Characterization& Stylistic Devices Tone, Mood and Atmosphereor Register Visual Images and Layout • How does the text conform to, or deviate from, the contentions of particular genre, and for what purpose? • How has the text borrowed from other texts, and with what effects?

  14. Example Topics Question #1: • • The study and analysis of an author’s reworking of fairy tales. • The study and analysis of media texts with a particular format, style and register. Question #2: • The study and analysis of religious imagery and references in political speeches. • The study and analysis of the use of the courtly love tradition in Romeo and Juliet.

  15. Getting Started: The Outline The outline must include the following: • The prescribed question that has been chosen • The title of the text(s) for analysis • The part of the course to which the task refers • Part I: Language in a Cultural Context • Part II: Language & Mass Communication • Part III: Literature – Texts & Contexts • Part IV: Literature – Cultural Study • Three or four key points that explain the particular focus of the task.

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