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GCSE English Language — Generic Topics (All Exam Boards)

Generic Topics & Skills (All Major Exam Boards)

Aligned to the common core across AQA, OCR, Pearson Edexcel, WJEC, and Cambridge IGCSE.

Reading

Comprehension & Interpretation

  • Identify explicit & implicit information
  • Understand main ideas, details, viewpoints
  • Summarise information from one or more texts
Reading

Language Analysis

  • Explore word choice, tone, and connotations
  • Analyse techniques (metaphor, simile, personification, etc.)
  • Evaluate effect on the reader
Reading

Structure & Form

  • Paragraphing, sequencing, cohesion
  • Narrative structure & shifts in focus
  • Viewpoint, perspective, and organisation
Reading

Comparison

  • Compare ideas, attitudes, perspectives
  • Compare writers’ methods and effects
  • Synthesise across multiple unseen texts
Writing

Transactional (Non‑Fiction)

  • Write to inform, explain, describe
  • Write to argue, persuade, advise
  • Reviews, articles, reports, letters, speeches, essays
  • Adapt tone, style & register for audience and purpose
Writing

Creative (Imaginative/Narrative)

  • Descriptive writing with sensory detail
  • Character, setting, atmosphere
  • Narrative techniques (dialogue, flashback, viewpoint)
  • Effective openings & endings
Writing

Technical Accuracy (SPaG)

  • Grammar, punctuation, spelling
  • Sentence variety & control
  • Vocabulary range & precision
  • Paragraphing & cohesion
Speaking

Spoken Language (Endorsement)

  • Plan and deliver a short presentation
  • Use Standard English appropriately
  • Engage the audience; respond to questions
  • Reflect on strengths and areas to improve
Texts Typically Encountered:
  • 19th‑century literary prose (fiction)
  • 20th & 21st‑century fiction and non‑fiction
  • Articles, letters, essays, travel writing, autobiographies, speeches

Assessment focuses include identifying & interpreting information and ideas; analysing how writers use language and structure; comparing perspectives; and communicating clearly and accurately in writing.

© GCSE English Language Overview · Designed for curriculum planning and revision.

A-Level & International English Language

A-Level & International English Language

1. Language and its Structures

a. Language Levels

  • Lexis and semantics (word choice, meaning, connotation)
  • Grammar and syntax (sentence structure and function)
  • Phonology (sound patterns, accent, pronunciation)
  • Morphology (word formation and inflection)
  • Discourse structure (organisation, cohesion, narrative)
  • Pragmatics (context, implied meaning, politeness, speech acts)

b. Language Features

  • Register, tone, and style
  • Field, tenor, and mode
  • Cohesion and coherence
  • Figurative language and imagery

2. Textual Analysis

a. Analysing Meaning and Representation

  • How language constructs identity, power, and relationships
  • Bias, ideology, and perspective
  • Audience, purpose, and genre conventions

b. Comparing Texts

  • Comparing texts across modes (spoken vs. written)
  • Exploring how context shapes meaning
  • Evaluating techniques and effects

3. Language in Context

a. Language and Identity

  • Gender and language use
  • Ethnicity and multicultural varieties
  • Social class, region, and accent/dialect

b. Language and Power

  • Institutional and political discourse
  • Media representation and influence
  • Persuasive and rhetorical techniques

c. Language and Technology

  • Language in social media, texting, and digital spaces
  • Multimodal communication (text, image, sound)
  • Evolution of online language forms

d. Language Change

  • Historical development of English
  • Key periods: Old, Middle, Early Modern, Contemporary
  • Causes of change (globalisation, technology, cultural exchange)

4. Original Writing / Creative Production

  • Writing for specific audiences and purposes
  • Imitation and transformation tasks
  • Commentaries reflecting linguistic choices
  • Short stories, articles, blogs, speeches, and scripts

5. Language Investigation / Independent Research

  • Selecting a topic for linguistic inquiry
  • Formulating hypotheses and research questions
  • Collecting, analysing, and interpreting data
  • Using linguistic frameworks and critical methodology
  • Drawing conclusions and reflecting on findings
Example Research Topics:
  • Gender representation in advertising
  • Accent and identity in regional speech
  • Language use in political speeches
  • Online discourse and community identity

6. Global English / World Englishes

  • Varieties of English worldwide
  • Standard and non-standard forms
  • Pidgins, creoles, and second-language Englishes
  • Cultural influence on English development

7. Spoken Language Analysis

  • Conversational analysis (turn-taking, adjacency pairs, repair strategies)
  • Speech features (fillers, pauses, overlaps)
  • Spoken vs. written discourse distinctions
  • Formal and informal speech patterns

8. Critical Theory and Frameworks

  • Grice’s Maxims and implicature
  • Speech act theory
  • Accommodation theory (Giles)
  • Gender theories (Tannen, Lakoff, Cameron)
  • Power and discourse (Fairclough, Foucault)
  • Stylistics and narratology

9. Assessment Skills

  • Apply linguistic frameworks accurately
  • Analyse and compare texts insightfully
  • Write with technical precision and stylistic awareness
  • Research and reference sources effectively
  • Produce coherent, well-argued essays

© A-Level & International English Language · Designed for advanced English studies.

a_level_and_international_english_language_topics (1).html Displaying a_level_and_international_english_language_topics (1).html. A-Level & International English Language

A-Level & International English Language

1. Language and its Structures

a. Language Levels

  • Lexis and semantics (word choice, meaning, connotation)
  • Grammar and syntax (sentence structure and function)
  • Phonology (sound patterns, accent, pronunciation)
  • Morphology (word formation and inflection)
  • Discourse structure (organisation, cohesion, narrative)
  • Pragmatics (context, implied meaning, politeness, speech acts)

b. Language Features

  • Register, tone, and style
  • Field, tenor, and mode
  • Cohesion and coherence
  • Figurative language and imagery

2. Textual Analysis

a. Analysing Meaning and Representation

  • How language constructs identity, power, and relationships
  • Bias, ideology, and perspective
  • Audience, purpose, and genre conventions

b. Comparing Texts

  • Comparing texts across modes (spoken vs. written)
  • Exploring how context shapes meaning
  • Evaluating techniques and effects

3. Language in Context

a. Language and Identity

  • Gender and language use
  • Ethnicity and multicultural varieties
  • Social class, region, and accent/dialect

b. Language and Power

  • Institutional and political discourse
  • Media representation and influence
  • Persuasive and rhetorical techniques

c. Language and Technology

  • Language in social media, texting, and digital spaces
  • Multimodal communication (text, image, sound)
  • Evolution of online language forms

d. Language Change

  • Historical development of English
  • Key periods: Old, Middle, Early Modern, Contemporary
  • Causes of change (globalisation, technology, cultural exchange)

4. Original Writing / Creative Production

  • Writing for specific audiences and purposes
  • Imitation and transformation tasks
  • Commentaries reflecting linguistic choices
  • Short stories, articles, blogs, speeches, and scripts

5. Language Investigation / Independent Research

  • Selecting a topic for linguistic inquiry
  • Formulating hypotheses and research questions
  • Collecting, analysing, and interpreting data
  • Using linguistic frameworks and critical methodology
  • Drawing conclusions and reflecting on findings
Example Research Topics:
  • Gender representation in advertising
  • Accent and identity in regional speech
  • Language use in political speeches
  • Online discourse and community identity

6. Global English / World Englishes

  • Varieties of English worldwide
  • Standard and non-standard forms
  • Pidgins, creoles, and second-language Englishes
  • Cultural influence on English development

7. Spoken Language Analysis

  • Conversational analysis (turn-taking, adjacency pairs, repair strategies)
  • Speech features (fillers, pauses, overlaps)
  • Spoken vs. written discourse distinctions
  • Formal and informal speech patterns

8. Critical Theory and Frameworks

  • Grice’s Maxims and implicature
  • Speech act theory
  • Accommodation theory (Giles)
  • Gender theories (Tannen, Lakoff, Cameron)
  • Power and discourse (Fairclough, Foucault)
  • Stylistics and narratology

9. Assessment Skills

  • Apply linguistic frameworks accurately
  • Analyse and compare texts insightfully
  • Write with technical precision and stylistic awareness
  • Research and reference sources effectively
  • Produce coherent, well-argued essays

© A-Level & International English Language · Designed for advanced English studies.

Primary English (Years 1–6) — Topics Overview
Primary · Years 1–6

Primary English (Years 1–6)

A clear breakdown of the key areas taught in Primary English across Years 1 to 6, aligned to the National Curriculum strands of Reading, Writing, and Spoken Language.

Year 1 (Ages 5–6)

1Reading
  • Phonics-based decoding (systematic synthetic phonics).
  • Common exception words (e.g., the, said, one).
  • Read simple sentences aloud with accuracy.
  • Enjoyment of stories, rhymes, and poems; retelling.
1Writing
  • Compose simple sentences orally before writing.
  • Basic punctuation: capital letters, full stops, question marks.
  • Spell common words and simple phoneme–grapheme patterns.
  • Letter formation: correct size and orientation.
1Spoken Language
  • Listen and respond appropriately.
  • Use new vocabulary from class texts.
  • Speak in full sentences; retell simple stories.

Year 2 (Ages 6–7)

2Reading
  • Consolidate phonics; improve fluency and expression.
  • Make simple inferences about characters/events.
  • Discuss favourite books; predict outcomes.
2Writing
  • Narratives, recounts, simple poetry.
  • Expanded noun phrases; conjunctions (and, but, because).
  • Punctuation: commas in lists; apostrophes (possession/omission).
  • Consistent letter sizing; begin joined handwriting.
2Spoken Language
  • Discuss texts and express opinions.
  • Perform simple poems/stories aloud.
  • Ask and answer questions clearly.

Year 3 (Ages 7–8)

3Reading
  • Read more complex texts; recognise themes.
  • Use dictionaries to check meanings.
  • Identify fiction/non‑fiction features; summarise key points.
  • Infer meaning and support with evidence.
3Writing
  • Organise writing into paragraphs.
  • Dialogue with accurate speech punctuation.
  • Extend sentences with adverbs, prepositions, conjunctions.
  • Plan, draft, and edit; prefixes/suffixes.
3Spoken Language
  • Explain ideas clearly in more detail.
  • Listen for key points; take conversational turns.
  • Present short talks confidently.

Year 4 (Ages 8–9)

4Reading
  • Increase fluency and expression.
  • Identify themes, setting, character motivation.
  • Compare texts; discuss author choices.
  • Summarise key ideas within paragraphs.
4Writing
  • Write stories, reports, letters, explanations.
  • Use fronted adverbials; secure speech punctuation.
  • Logical paragraphing; consistent handwriting.
  • Develop cohesion across sections.
4Spoken Language
  • Participate in discussions and light debates.
  • Give reasoned answers; perform plays/poems.
  • Use intonation for clarity and effect.

Year 5 (Ages 9–10)

5Reading
  • Read longer, challenging texts independently.
  • Analyse author’s language, tone, and viewpoint.
  • Compare genres and themes across texts.
  • Make detailed inferences using evidence.
5Writing
  • Write for varied audiences: narrative, persuasive, reports, argument.
  • Use modal verbs, relative clauses, and advanced cohesion.
  • Punctuation: brackets, dashes, commas for clauses.
  • Edit and redraft with increasing independence.
5Spoken Language
  • Build arguments; justify opinions with evidence.
  • Shift appropriately between formal and informal language.
  • Perform poetry/prose with control and confidence.

Year 6 (Ages 10–11)

6Reading
  • Analyse a broad range of fiction, non‑fiction, and poetry.
  • Evaluate author techniques and their impact.
  • Compare and synthesise information across sources.
  • Prepare for secondary‑level comprehension/inference.
6Writing
  • Write fluently for diverse purposes and audiences.
  • Adapt tone and style; manage complex sentences.
  • Punctuation: colons, semicolons, hyphens; secure cohesion.
  • Produce extended independent pieces with accuracy and flair.
6Spoken Language
  • Deliver presentations using Standard English.
  • Debate and respond thoughtfully to others.
  • Perform/read aloud with confidence and expression.
Progression Summary (Years 1–6)
Strand Focus in Early Years Development Through KS1 Mastery by KS2 End
Reading Phonics and decoding Fluency and basic comprehension Analysis and critical interpretation
Writing Letter formation and simple sentences Grammar, punctuation, varied text types Confident composition and stylistic control
Spoken Language Listening and responding Expressing ideas clearly Presenting and debating using formal English

© Primary English Overview · Designed for curriculum planning and parent communication.

Our Tutors

Our English Tutors — MyLearningLab

Our English Tutors

Expert teachers who build powerful skills in reading, writing, language and literature from KS2 to GCSE/IGCSE and A-Level.

Specialist Teachers with Proven Experience

Our English tutors are qualified teachers with strong classroom track records. We model high-quality writing, demonstrate close reading, and tackle misconceptions (e.g., analysis vs description, inference vs retrieval, theme vs motif) before they stall progress.

  • Clear exemplars for top-band responses.
  • Think-aloud modelling of planning and structure.
  • Targeted practice for specific exam boards and texts.
  • Sentence-level craft and cohesion techniques.
  • Precise feedback that moves writing forward.
  • Confidence-building routines and reflection.

Sequencing Learning for Long-Term Success

We build skills in layers — vocabulary → sentence craft → paragraph control → whole-text structure and argument. Interleaving reading with writing practice makes learning durable.

  • Micro to macro: from clause control to argument flow.
  • Deliberate practice: short, focused drills that transfer to longer tasks.
  • Retrieval & review: regular recall of high-value techniques.

Personalised Support & Diagnostic Feedback

We start with diagnostics to identify strengths, gaps and goals. Then we design a pathway with milestones, exemplars and practice sets. Feedback is timely, specific and actionable.

  • Baseline reading/writing audit and goal setting.
  • Marking with success criteria and model responses.
  • Progress snapshots you can actually use.

Focusing on What Matters Most

Reading

  • Active reading habits; annotation and questioning.
  • Analysis of language, structure, tone and perspective.
  • Comparative skills and synthesis of ideas.
  • Critical viewpoints and evaluation.

Writing

  • Sentence variety, control and rhythm.
  • Paragraph cohesion; logical development of ideas.
  • Audience & purpose; argument, narrative and description.
  • Editing, redrafting and style refinement.

Literature

  • Shakespeare, 19th-century prose, modern drama and poetry.
  • Theme, character, context and form.
  • Unseen poetry; comparative essays.

Exam Craft

  • Planning under time pressure; structure and concision.
  • Command words mastery and high-band criteria.
  • Self-assessment using checklists and model answers.

Using Technology to Enhance Learning

  • Live annotation on digital whiteboards for texts and models.
  • Shared documents for drafting and feedback cycles.
  • Quick retrieval quizzes and vocabulary decks.

Building Confidence and Motivation

We turn “I don’t know what to write” into “I know how to start and finish well.” Explicit modelling, scaffolded practice and visible progress build genuine confidence.

Helping Every Learner Fulfil Their Potential

With expert teaching, thoughtful sequencing and personalised feedback, students move from uncertainty to clarity — and from clarity to excellence in reading, writing and critical thinking.

FAQs

  • Do you teach KS2, KS3, GCSE/IGCSE and A-Level? Yes — tailored to each board and text set.
  • Will you set homework? Purposeful practice with models and checklists is built in.
  • Do you support SEND/ELL? Yes — we adapt inputs, scaffolds and assessment to need.
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