Inspire English Year 8 Workbook Answer Key
Inspire English Year 8 Workbook Answer Key
Inspire English Year 8 Workbook Answer Key
1a Because Eurystheus has promised the goddess Hera that he will defeat Heracles by making sure
that Heracles fails a task and either dies or becomes his slave forever.
1b Heracles has easily completed the tasks so far.
1c The new task is for Heracles to bring back Cerberus, the guard dog of the underworld.
3 Hera feels animosity towards Heracles, as shown by the writer describing Heracles as Hera’s
‘enemy’ and explaining that she would be ‘delighted’ if he were to die or be enslaved for life.
4a–c Students’ own answers. The answers to a and b should be written in the first person and the
active voice.
5a Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but students should support their choice of what
makes a good opening.
5b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Extract A provides more information. The writer has
done this so that the reader fully understands the background to the story.
5c Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Extract B creates the strongest sense of atmosphere.
The writer has achieved this by focusing on descriptions of the ‘darkness’ and the ‘dank’, ‘cold’,
‘ancient’ setting and by showing Heracles’ reaction to it, for example, ‘he shivered’.
5d Students’ own answers. Suggested answer:
Key differences Key similarities
The extracts begin at different points in the story Impressions of Cerberus as terrifying
Extract A presents information, whereas Extract B Impression of the task as impossible
creates tension and mood
In Extract A, Heracles doesn’t hesitate, whereas Both contain information about what
Extract B presents him as nervous Heracles is doing in the underworld
5e Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but students will probably mostly identify Extract B as
the more exciting opening, and reasons could include:
• more description of mood/atmosphere
• more immediate sense of threat
• Heracles presented as more human.
6a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but Heracles should come across as brave and
fearless in a.
6c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be justified, explaining what the writer has
done to make their selected opening more effective.
1a Possible answers: ‘It did occur to me’; ‘I can SHOW you the reason, if you like’; ‘My life hung by a
thread, and I knew it’; ‘Wait a little.’
1b Students’ own answers. Suggested answers:
(i) The writer presents Walter as brave when Count Fosco asks, threateningly, whether Walter knew
that he, Count Fosco, ‘was not the sort of man you could trifle with’. Walter simply replies, ‘It did
occur to me,’ which shows that Walter knows he is taking a risk.
(ii) Walter knows that he is in danger because he thinks to himself, ‘My life hung by a thread’.
2a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: “You can threaten me if you like, but you will not stop
me from doing what I came here to do.”
2b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: ‘I took a step towards Count Fosco, my arms resting
at my sides, coolly holding his gaze.’
2c Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: My favourite option is the alternative ending from 2b
because the behaviour strongly implies that Walter is brave and determined not to let Count Fosco
have the advantage, yet he remains calm.
3a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include details of villains from stories
or films.
5a–d Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts.
6a–b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should demonstrate the skill of showing that the
character is a villain through what they say and do, rather than simply telling the reader that the
character is evil.
Section 3 Creating danger: Lesson 5
2 Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The writer creates a sense of danger by describing the
violence of Alex’s physical sensations and his suffering. For example, his body is ‘caught in a massive
shock wave’ when the crane picks up the car, and he suffers a ‘bone-shattering crash’ when the car
is thrown into the crusher. Danger is also created by the fact that Alex is powerless to escape the
situation, when the writer describes that ‘he couldn’t move’ and ‘he could feel nothing’. Finally, the
writer describes Alex’s fear through physical sensations, such as ‘his stomach lurched’.
3a–c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should focus on emotions and physical
sensations.
5a ‘bone-shattering’; ‘coffin-shaped’
5b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The writer’s choice of adjectives in paragraph 5 of the
extract creates a sense of danger by emphasising Alex’s injuries, with the description of the ‘bone-
shattering’ crash and how close Alex is to death, when the car nears the ‘coffin-shaped’ trough.
6a–e Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts.
7a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should reflect careful vocabulary choices
made to create the sense of danger.
2a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The tiger suggests immediate danger, creating
tension. The existence of the tiger poses the question: why is it there?
2b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer:
How can Justin sense the tiger?
Why do the Baxters behave strangely?
Will Justin survive the walk home?
2c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but students should refer to one of their questions
from 2b.
3a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include a response to a story opening
supported by quotations.
4a I can hear the wolves’ feet behind me now. It won’t be long. I run on blindly, and then a low snarl
sends shockwaves down my spine. I stumble and fall to the ground, wet leaves filling my mouth.
4b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The first person, present tense is a more engaging
way of presenting this moment of fear because ‘I’ and ‘now’ place the reader at the heart of the
action, as if it is happening directly to them as they read.
5a–c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts.
6 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should draw on what has been learned about how
to engage the reader in the opening paragraphs of a story.
1 The narrator doesn’t like the old man’s eye and doesn’t want to see it anymore.
2 The narrator repeatedly states that he is not mad and tries to prove it: ‘Would a madman have
been so wise as this?’
3 The writer intends the reader to believe that the narrator is mad, even if he doesn’t know
it himself.
4 Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The old man is described as harmless by the narrator:
‘He had never wronged me’. He is probably quite wealthy because the narrator says, ‘For his gold I
had no desire’. We are also told that the narrator ‘loved the old man’. Taken together, everything we
are told suggests that the old man is an innocent victim who does not deserve the fate that is about
to befall him.
2a Everard invites Marshall because he wants to kill him and inherit the money.
2b The writer has Everard tell Marshall that it would be dangerous to enter the room with the cat.
2c This makes the moment in which Marshall is locked in with the cat even more tense.
2d Marshall’s main feeling about Everard is that he hopes he can borrow money from him.
2e Students’ own answers. Suggested answers:
Everard’s wife wants Marshall to go home.
Everard does not want to lend money to Marshall.
Everard tries to kill Marshall to prevent him from inheriting money.
3a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: As he travels to Everard’s house, Marshall might be
feeling excited at the prospect of borrowing money from his cousin, or he might be nervous at the
prospect of his cousin not wanting to lend him money. He might be thinking of ways that he can
bond with his cousin, and make him like him, or perhaps of other ways that he can convince his
cousin to lend him some money.
3b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: If Marshall already had plenty of money, he might
simply be thinking about the visit and how it will go, or more mundane things such as how long the
journey is taking. He would probably be feeling relaxed as he wouldn’t have any reason to be
nervous about the visit with his cousin.
3c–d Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but students should note that without money
problems the central character would have no problem to overcome and therefore would be a less
interesting central character.
4
Exposition The mouse goes for a walk to look for food.
Conflict The mouse meets various creatures who want to eat it.
The mouse tricks the creatures by pretending to be friends with a monster.
Climax The mouse meets the monster and is very nearly eaten.
Resolution The mouse persuades the monster to walk back home with him and, on
the way, he finds some food.
5 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should show understanding of what the conflict and
resolution parts of a story are meant to achieve.
6a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include all parts of the story
structure given in the prompts.
1a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should provide a clear ending to the story.
4a
(i) The young man moves to the countryside: he wants to grow flowers.
(ii) The plan goes wrong, and the flowers shrivel and die.
4b
(i) The old man does not like the young man: he does not like people from the city.
(ii) The young man dies; the old man learns the young man was his long-lost son.
5a–e Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should explore different types of story endings.
6 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include explanations of different story
endings and how these can make the reader feel.
2 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be written from Josefa’s point of view.
3a Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should explore what the characters see, say, do
and think or feel.
3b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary. Students may observe that by telling the story from
Josefa’s point of view we learn more about her thoughts and feelings, and what she sees, but that
we also learn more about what Givens does and says because we are observing those elements
through Josefa’s eyes.
5a–e Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts.
6a Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should suggest setting, action, speech and
thoughts.
6b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should describe the scene using action, speech and
thoughts.
Section 9 Structuring sentences: Lesson 16
1a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The short, sharp sentences suggest that the words are
spoken quickly as part of a tense exchange.
1b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The short sentences suggest that Henrietta is rude
and bossy. We get the impression that she cannot be bothered to explain herself at all, let alone in
detail.
1c Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Version (i) more effectively creates the sense that
Henrietta doesn’t care because it gives an abrupt tone to her speech. Version (ii) states explicitly
that Henrietta’s laugh is nasty and suggests that she thinks the whole thing is a joke, however, these
things are implicit in the shorter original version and do not need stating.
2 Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: She chained her arms around the rider’s waist. After
some restraint, she grabbed hold of the controls. Then she steered the bike down the street.
3a Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include long sentences and lots of
descriptive detail.
3b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Longer sentences have the advantage of slowing
down the pace of the action, and they allow writers to include information about the setting or the
thoughts and feelings of the characters that are helpful to explain elements of the story, or build
empathy with the characters.
3c Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Short sentences are useful in a tense conversation
because they create an abrupt, snappy tone and move the action along quickly. This reflects the
tone of the characters themselves and helps the writer to build tension.
4a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: I got dressed. Then I packed my bags. Finally, I waved
goodbye to my parents.
4b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The water was cold. Nevertheless, I really wanted to
get in and join my friends.
5a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: I screamed, raced downstairs and tore open the front
door.
5b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: I screamed, then raced downstairs before tearing
open the front door.
6a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: I gripped the branch tightly, walked my feet up the
trunk and pulled myself up onto the next branch. I realised I was high enough off the ground to
break a leg if I fell just as it started to rain and, as the branch was really slippery, I started to panic.
6b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: I gripped the branch tightly as I walked my feet up the
trunk. When I pulled myself up onto the next branch, I realised I was high enough off the ground to
break a leg if I fell. It started to rain. The branch was really slippery, so I started to panic.
7a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts and include
links between sentences and paragraphs, using a variety of short and longer sentences.
1a I’ll have too of the red ones please, and too of the green ones too.
1b Their it is! That’s their car!
1c No, no, no! You can’t do that, you no.
1d If you stand over hear by the window you can hear the birds.
6 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include key points from each section.
1a–b Mrs Gory had a nasty look. Her dog looks nasty as well. It had saliva dripping out of its nasty
mouth and it looked at me like it wants to eat me because it probably does.
She was angry because my football had gone in her garden. She says she saw me climbing over the
fence to get it. Last time she warned me. She says shed set the dog on me if I do it again
so here we are on the street outside her house and I’ve got my football under my arm and she had
the dog with her.
I find a stick on the ground so I give it to the dog before she can let it go and the dog chews on it. I
tell her goodbye and walk away and she shouts at me.
When I looked back down the street shes gone away so that was good
[underlined = spelling or punctuation mistake] [shaded = verbs that are in the wrong tense]
1c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but vocabulary could be improved by:
• removing repetition of ‘nasty’ in second and third sentences
• more powerful verbs and adjectives to make Mrs Gory and the dog seem more menacing
• more description of how the narrator feels, using powerful verbs and adjectives.
1d Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but sentence structure could be improved by:
• breaking up rambling sentences, for example: ‘It had saliva …’ and ‘so here we are …’
• using some short punchy sentences for impact and to create moments of tension, for
example in the first paragraph: ‘Saliva dripped from its jaws.’ ‘It probably did.’
1e Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but other suggested improvements could include:
• doing more to show that Mrs Gory is a villain
• using dialogue and thoughts as well as action and description
• showing the reader more elements of the narrator’s personality
• following the four-part story structure. The sample response does not really have a
climax or resolution and there is not much tension as a result. The conflict and
tension should build towards a climax.
• ending with a cliffhanger, for example after a more frightening
confrontation/conflict with Mrs Gory and the dog, the narrator tricks them, runs and
hides, then loses sight of them for a few moments. When he re-emerges, they have
vanished.
4a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include several benefits of eating
more fruit and vegetables.
5a Hurry up!
5b Call an ambulance!
5c Go to school!
6 Possible answers:
a Positive vocabulary: ‘The best source of water is your tap.’ OR ‘Tap water contains useful
minerals …’
b Negative vocabulary: ‘Bottled waters are unlikely to be better for you than tap water.’
c An imperative verb: ‘Drink at least 2 pints of water every day.’ OR ‘Drink more when it’s hot …’
1
7
Nouns Adjectives Verbs
drinks isotonic are
fizzes sports contain
water fancy do
sugar good damage
teeth much eating
enamel very
acid
8a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should reflect care in selecting the most
persuasive reasons, and should include appropriate positive and negative vocabulary and imperative
verbs.
4a–c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should contain negative warnings about what
not to do and a comparison of the rewritten text to the original.
2
Section 2 Persuasive vocabulary: Lesson 4
5a
Positive connotations Negative connotations
attractive suffer
healthy wrong
smile bad
boost stained
confidence decay
help disease
good loss
erosion
5b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: My chosen word is ‘healthy’. This has connotations of
being active, successful and happy.
5c Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: My chosen word is ‘disease’. This has connotations of
being unhealthy, unhappy and in pain.
6a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should suggest the appropriate
connotations.
7a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should reflect careful choice of vocabulary
with appropriate connotations to make the text more persuasive.
3a–c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should reflect an understanding of the
perspective of the intended audience.
3
Section 3 Responding to a text: Lesson 6
4a The writer says that there are often age restrictions: ‘you need to be at least 13 to sign up’.
4b The writer suggests that ‘if you are being bullied you should report it’.
4c The writer states that you should stay away from social media sites until you know how to use
them ‘safely’.
6 Students’ own answer. Suggested answer: The writer recommends that you learn how to use
‘privacy’ settings online and only share with people that you ‘trust’.
7a–d Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should demonstrate understanding of the skills
covered in this section by identifying the writer’s intention and commenting on how they have
achieved it, using relevant embedded quotations.
7e Students’ own corrected mistakes.
1 Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The purpose or intention of the webpage is to warn
parents about hazards in their homes that could cause injury to their children.
2a falls
2b burns
2c choking
4
4 Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The writer of the article is intending to offer
parents/guardians of young children practical advice that they can follow to minimise the risks to
their children. The writer separates out the advice into bullet points under clear subheadings
focusing on the main risk areas. Imperative verbs are used to make the advice clear to follow, such
as: ‘Watch out for small objects on the floor that could be choking hazards.’
5a–e Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts.
6 Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The writer of the webpage uses statistics as a
persuasive tool to emphasise the dangers of hazards in the home. For example, the writer states
that a child can ‘squeeze through openings of 15 centimetres’ and that a hot drink can burn an
infant’s skin ’15 minutes after it was made’. This is an effective way of convincing readers of the
seriousness of these dangers as it demonstrates that a small oversight (such as leaving a window
open 15 centimetres) can lead to large and potentially tragic consequences for the child and the
child’s family. The use of statistics makes the dangers seem much more real and would encourage
the reader to take positive steps to avoid them.
7a Possible answers: ‘hazards’; ‘injured’; ‘seriously’; ‘curious’; ‘explore’; ‘protect’; ‘care’; ‘extremely’;
‘dangerous’; ‘dangers’; ‘safer’; ‘little ones’
7b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but perhaps the most obvious answer would be
‘danger’, supported by the explanation that the writer intends to grab readers’ attention and make
them aware of hazards in the home.
8 Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Using emotive vocabulary such as ‘protect’, ‘care’ and
‘extremely dangerous’, the writer intends to engage parents who want to keep their children safe
from hazards around the home.
1 Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Parents are the intended audience. The writer
addresses parents directly, for example, ‘there are real dangers for you and your children to be
aware of’.
3 Inflatable dinghies and floats are dangerous because the tide can carry them out to sea, causing
lots of people to drown.
5
4 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but students could refer to language relating to care for
the family, such as ‘help you and your loved ones stay safe’, which evokes a positive response from
the reader to protect their family, or they could refer to language relating to danger, for example
‘real dangers’ and ‘lose their lives’, which frighten the reader to provoke them to take action.
1
The response begins Students’ own answers. Sample improved response:
with a clear statement In this poster, the writer intends to inform parents of the
explaining what the writer risks associated with swimming in the sea, and to persuade
is trying to persuade the
them to take certain precautions to minimise the danger.1
reader to do.
2 .
Persuasive techniques
The writer uses lots of emotive language to emphasise the
such as emotive language,
as well as supporting dangers.2 For example, inflatables can ‘kill you’, cold water
facts and examples, ‘can be deadly’ and rip tides are ‘lethal’.3 The writer also
are explored. uses language to appeal to parents’ desire to protect their
3
Quotations from the children, such as ‘help you and your loved ones stay safe’.
poster are used This language is very persuasive as it connects directly with
as evidence. parents’ concerns.
6
b The writer has not included examples because this is the conclusion – a summary of what the
writer is trying to persuade the reader to do. The evidence has been provided earlier in the
webpage.
3 Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The writer states his own opinion most persuasively in
the final section of the article, where he uses an exclamation mark to indicate his shock at the fact
that some people ‘tell others on social media that the real news is actually fake news!’ He concludes
with a reminder that a lot of news stories online are fake, and gives recommendations for what
readers should do ‘in order to identify the real news stories’.
4 Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: I agree with statement B because the key points,
evidence, examples and suggestions required in a persuasive text should be present across the
whole text but not necessarily in every paragraph.
5a Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but each section should include a combination of key
points, examples and evidence.
5b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should show awareness of what makes a good
persuasive text.
6a
(i) swimming
(ii) my sister
6b
(i) Max is a dog. He is really energetic.
(ii) You must wear a bike helmet. It will keep you safe.
7a Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include notes for all three elements.
7b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include:
• one key point
• evidence or examples
• suggestions about how readers should change their opinions or actions
• imperative verbs.
8a Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts.
8b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should demonstrate all the skills and conventions
covered in this section including:
• an attention-grabbing opening that makes the intention and audience clear
• key points
• evidence/examples
• suggestions for actions including imperative verbs.
7
Section 7 Persuasive structures: Lesson 12
1a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Your mental wellbeing is how positive you’re feeling
and how readily you can deal with the stresses of everyday life.
1b Possible answers: feel confident; have self-esteem; experience a range of emotions; maintain
relationships; engage with the outside world; work; deal with stress; manage change
3a–f Student’s own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts.
4a A woman stood up. She (or The woman) walked to the front of the bus.
4b Cats and dogs are popular pets. These animals do not always feel comfortable around each other.
4c A man bought some new shoes. His (or The man’s) old shoes had holes in them.
8
5a Students’ own answers. Possible answers:
Positive language Negative language Imperative verbs
confident stresses Think about…
build loss Make time…
maintain loneliness Join…
good problems Talk…
engaged guilty Learn…
productively Do…
adapt
manage
connecting
belonging
strengthen
listened to
supported
resilient
boost
achievement
enjoy
5b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but each paragraph should follow the key point,
evidence, explanation model. Students may note that:
• positive language is used to persuade readers of the benefits of paying attention to mental
health, and the benefits of following the suggestions offered
• negative language is used to persuade readers of the dangers of ignoring the advice
• imperative verbs are used to persuade readers to take action and follow the suggestions.
9
Section 8 Exploring the writer’s choices: Lesson 14
3a Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include powerful emotive language in every
possible sentence.
3b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should show awareness of the aims of a
persuasive text.
5 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should follow the prompts.
6a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include a full response to the
questions and use quotations, key points and explanations.
10
Section 9 Rhetorical devices: Lesson 16
Repetition Use your eyes, use your ears, use your brain!
1b Students’ own answers. Possible answers: Why not take up cycling?; Are you tired of traffic jams?
2 Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Direct address allows the writer to appeal to the
reader directly and to make their points relevant to them. This is likely to have a greater impact on
the reader, who is more likely to be persuaded to change their actions or opinions if spoken to
directly.
3a–d Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts.
5a–e Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but students should clearly draw on the notes they
made in answer to Activity 3.
11
6 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should use the full range of rhetorical devices
explored in this section, namely:
• rhetorical question
• triple structure
• repetition
• lists
• direct address.
1a
• heading ✓
• introduction ✓
• subheadings
• paragraphs ✓
• bulleted list ✓
1b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The bulleted list helps the writer to explain the risks
most powerfully as he uses a bullet to highlight and describe each of the three biggest dangers.
1c Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The introduction establishes the target audience
(parents and guardians) and the writer’s intention to persuade parents/guardians of the risks of
swimming in the sea and to take sensible precautions to protect themselves and their children.
2a Possible answers: ‘real dangers’; ‘they can kill you’; ‘deadly’; ‘lethal’.
2b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The writer is trying to grab the reader’s attention and
to make it very clear how real and significant the dangers are.
2c Possible answers: ‘fun for all the family’; ‘help you and your loved ones stay safe’.
2d Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The writer is trying to appeal to the instincts of
parents and guardians to protect their children.
3a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should explore how structure and
vocabulary help the writer achieve their intention.
12
Section 10 Getting ready to respond: Lesson 19
Repetition The word ‘play’ in ‘Play hard, play happy, play safe!’
‘So remember to be really careful with inflatables, cold water and rip
List
tides’
‘If you use these in the open sea’ (there are examples of direct address
Direct address
throughout the text)
6 Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: I found the triple structure of ‘SUN, SEA, SAFETY’ to be
the most powerful as it is catchy and sticks in the reader’s mind. It is also very simple and effectively
enforces the poster’s message that safety should be as important as having fun at the beach.
13
Section 11 Assessment: Lesson 20
1a and b
This text was about how standing up was impourtant and better for you than siting down. Their
were lots of reesons why sitting down is bad for you like it can gave you hart disease and other
things because of not standing up enouh and we should all do more exercise witch is really
important. We can do more standing up by doing things like walking to school and standing up in
lesons. I think its really impourtant we all do this and then we can live longer because its easy to
change our lives and stand up more and sit down less.
[underlining = spelling or punctuation mistake] [shading = verbs that are in the wrong tense]
14
2 Students’ own answers. Sample improved response:
1
The first paragraph introduces The writer of this extract explains the problems
the topic of the answer
associated with sitting down too much and provides
more clearly.
achievable recommendations of ways to stand up more in
order to persuade readers to change their habits and
tackle this problem.1
5
Direct address is used throughout so that the reader feels
The effects of direct address
that they are being given personal instructions about how
are described.
to improve their lifestyle.5
15
Unit 3 A Perfect World
Section 1 Exploring a fictional future: Lesson 1
1a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Aircraft probably don’t exist anymore; knights are
well-equipped and ride horses; young knights are taken away from their families; there is a class of
people called Commoners; justice is more important than feeling; only those who show wisdom and
logic attain positions of power; acquiring any luxury item is a crime punishable by imprisonment.
1b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: In the New Society, it is illegal to own luxury items
because in the past such greed caused environmental disaster. Knights of the New Society, chosen
for their strength in logic, administer justice by imprisoning any Commoner who breaks this law.
2a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: ‘an achievement he wore with pride.’; ‘feeling and
emotion should be ignored’; ‘The world was better now.’
2b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should broadly state that Marco feels positive
about the New Society, while other people may not.
3a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on ideas inferred from
characters from the extract.
6a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts and express
the point of view of the character in the question.
5 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should represent the side of the argument that is
chosen.
6 Students’ own answers. Suggested answer:
What is the problem?
School uniforms get lost all the time.
Why is it a problem?
Time is wasted looking for the uniform.
Parents have to pay to replace lost items.
Arguments arise when students believe someone else has hidden their school uniform.
What should we do about it?
We should allow students to wear their own clothes to school.
We should insist on a certain dress code to ensure that students look smart.
We should make this an opportunity to reinforce that the school is inclusive and values diversity.
7a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but both articles must follow the
problem/explanation/solution model that has been practised and must contain convincing
arguments.
3a
(i) Cats are very independent. STATED
(ii) Cats tend to spend time alone and can hunt birds and mice. IMPLIED
(iii) We believe more could be done. IMPLIED
(iv) Not enough is being done. STATED
3b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer:
(i) After doing exercise, you may find that you are in a happier mood.
(ii) Your phone may be great, but is it more important than your education?
4a–c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but must focus on clearly conveying core values.
Section 3 Choosing vocabulary 1: Lesson 6
6a–d Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include positive nouns and verbs and
benefits.
7a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but must include a clear structure explaining the
problem as well as the benefits of the new facility. Positive verbs and nouns should be carefully
chosen throughout.
1a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Orangutans break branches and create holes in the
forest canopy allowing light in and encouraging natural regrowth on the rainforest floor. Rainforest
regrowth is essential for the health of the planet. Therefore, orangutans are important for the health
of the planet.
1b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The writer does this because linking the protection of
orangutans to the health of the world makes this cause directly relevant to readers, therefore they
are more likely to take action.
2 The adjectives ‘gentle’ and ‘intelligent’ are intended to make the reader feel that orangutans
should be respected and protected. The adjective ‘gentle’ makes orangutans seem vulnerable, and
the adjective ‘intelligent’ makes them seem valuable to the planet.
3a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The threat is described as ‘urgent’ and ‘ever-growing’,
creating a sense of a huge problem that is quickly getting worse and worse.
3b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: ‘Rainforests play a vital role in keeping our whole
planet healthy.’ The adjective ‘vital’ emphasises how essential rainforests are to the planet and the
adjective ‘healthy’ suggests that the earth needs rainforests to survive, highlighting their importance
to the reader.
4a–c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts.
5 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include evidence of verbs, adverbs and noun
phrases carefully chosen to create the desired response.
Section 4 Choosing vocabulary 2: Lesson 8
6a I have had a definite intrest in famly history ever since my grandmother, one memorable
afternoon, showed me a box of jewelry that she kept seperate from the rest of her things.
[shaded = spelling mistake] [Note: ‘jewelry’ is the American English spelling, but is not the preferred
spelling in British English.]
6b I have had a definite interest in family history ever since my grandmother, one memorable
afternoon, showed me a box of jewellery that she kept separate from the rest of her things.
3 Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: This extract implies that eBooks cannot replicate the
social interaction created when an adult reads a toddler a printed book.
4a Students’ own answers. Suggested advice could include:
• check for spelling, punctuation and grammar mistakes
• address how the writer presents a persuasive argument, not simply what the argument is
• use quotations from the article to support the points made.
4b Students’ own answers. Sample improved response:
1
The response begins with
a clear statement of how The writer presents a persuasive argument very clearly.1
effective the argument in The title states the problem: ‘Libraries are in crisis’ and
the article is. the first sentence explains2 that they are being
2
The structure of the article ‘forced to close in record numbers’3. The opening
is explored. paragraph briefly explains why this matters: ‘fewer people
3
Quotations from the read, and fewer children do well at school’.
article are used
as evidence.
The following paragraph states clearly what the writer
4
The intended response wants to be done about the problem: ‘urging the
from the target audience government to make more funds available’, while the final
is explored.
bulleted list of the article is a call to action, explaining
The whole article is much how we can all help4: ‘Sign our petition…’, ‘Write to your
more accurate in terms local politician…’, ‘Join our peaceful march…’.
of spelling, grammar
and punctuation.
1a Paragraphs 6 and 7
1b Scientific research and statistics
1c IQ scores rose in most industrialised countries by about three points every decade.
3a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include benefits of bicycles, and
supporting facts and statistics.
Section 6 Supporting key points: Lesson 11
4a
Which sentence states the point?
‘Libraries are in crisis!’
Which sentence provides the example or evidence?
‘Local libraries across the country are being forced to close in record numbers.’
Which sentence contains a comment expressing a point of view?
‘But libraries have been an important part of local life for over a hundred years.’
5 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but must include a point, an example and a comment.
7a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but article should include three paragraphs.
Each paragraph should include a main point, an example, and an explanation that links the example
to the point. Well-written answers will include adverbials that link sentences.
3 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include one long and one short sentence.
4a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include sentences of different
lengths.
Section 7 Structuring sentences: Lesson 13
5a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: I choose not to fly; I prefer the train.
5b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: You couldn’t outrun a tiger – tigers are much faster
than humans.
6a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Plastic is bad for the environment so don’t throw
plastic in the bin but recycle it.
6b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Don’t throw plastic in the bin because plastic is bad
for the environment so recycle it.
6c Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Don’t throw plastic in the bin. Plastic is bad for the
environment so recycle it.
6d Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Don’t throw plastic in the bin; plastic is bad for the
environment so recycle it.
7 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include only single-clause sentences.
8a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but well-written articles will reflect what has
been learned in this section, including:
• shorter sentences for emphasis
• semi-colons, colons or dashes where appropriate
• clauses placed at the end of sentences for emphasis.
3a Isn’t it strange? C
3b Who’s going to do more? C
3c Children’s happiness is important. P
3d China’s best kept secret. P
6 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on one of the sentences from
Activity 5.
7a–c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but articles should make clear points with evidence
in each paragraph and include a wide range of rhetorical devices.
2a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but sentences should include a surprising fact or
opinion to engage the reader.
3a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should all use the techniques explored so far
to engage the reader including:
• a familiar example
• a surprising fact or statistic
• a dramatic, surprising opinion
• a rhetorical question.
4a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: ‘AI will have an extraordinary impact on our lives, from
self-driving cars to robot surgeons, but we would be foolish to allow ourselves to become too reliant
on them.’
4b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: ‘we would be foolish to allow ourselves to become too
reliant on them’
4c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should explain students’ thoughts and feelings.
5a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should summarise key ideas and views, and
aim to leave the reader thinking about the topic.
6 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include all the elements suggested by the
prompts.
3a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should follow the advice for improvements
that the student identified in Activity 2.
[underlining = error]
1a and b
If we wont have mobile phones then we could all save monny because their expensive and anyway
we didn’t really need them because weve got computers and email and we could use landlines for
phones. Also because some people have mobiles and some people dont that’s not realy fare so we
should make it that nobody has them. And mobile phones can be a problem because somtimes
people used them to much which can be bad for sleeping and can stop you talking to other people
face to face and everybody is always checking their social media and things and getting worried
about it.
[underlined = spelling or punctuation mistake] [shaded = verbs that are in the wrong tense]
1a
(i) preschool
(ii) forgiveness
1b Students’ own answers. Possible answers:
Prefix Suffix
preview kindness
preface thoughtfulness
predict goodness
prepare freshness
prevent darkness
2a awful
2b confused
3 Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: People played cricket in many parts of the world and
the sport became popular with wealthy and poor people alike. People became increasingly
competitive when playing the sport, leading to rules being introduced in the 18th century to regulate
the sport.
4a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include facts from research about the
history of a sport and address the question.
6a–d Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts.
3a–e Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include five sports and address the
question words: what, when, where, who and how.
5a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The writer's intention is to make us laugh, by
describing a very serious reaction from the woman, who doesn’t realise she is wearing the ‘I’m a
fluffy unicorn’ sticker.
5b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The writer's intention is to make us feel scared by
using emotive language such as ‘prickled’ and ‘torn’ and a short, suspenseful sentence: ‘I froze’.
5c Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The writer's intention is to make us feel sympathy for
this character, by describing him as vulnerable and upset: ‘slumped’, ‘tear-stained’.
5d Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The writer's intention is to make us pay attention to
the dangers using imperative verbs: ‘take care’ and emotive language: ‘freezing’, ‘dead’.
5e Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The writer's intention is to engage us and make us
feel happy for the character by describing how she ‘tore open the letter’ and her eyes were
‘sparkling’.
6a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include relevant information and
descriptive details.
1a The writer states that sepak takraw players must use their feet rather than hands, which ‘requires
amazing athleticism’.
1b The ball is made from rattan.
1c Sepak takraw was originally an ‘opportunity for players to demonstrate their skills by passing the
ball’.
1d The third paragraph
1e The court is the size of a double badminton court, with a net between 1.4 and 1.5 metres long;
there are three players per team; points are scored by forcing the opposing team to commit a fault –
these faults can include the ball failing to cross the net, landing outside the court boundaries, or
touching the ground, ceiling or another object; there are 21 points per set; a team must have won
two sets to win.
2a ‘difficult to imagine’
2b ‘breathtaking agility and strength’
3a–g Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include words or phrases that create a
particular effect.
4a
(i) one
(ii) three
(iii) one
(iv) one
4b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: In 1933, a net was introduced. In the following twenty
years, the competitive version of the game spread rapidly across Southeast Asia. Formal rules were
introduced.
5a ‘amazing athleticism’
5b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The writer states that players have ‘amazing
athleticism’.
6a Possible answers: ‘The beautiful movements are also one of the main attractions in sepak takraw,
with players demonstrating breathtaking agility and strength: leaping, twisting and kicking to get the
ball past their opponents.’ OR ‘However, as the use of hands is forbidden in chinlone and sepak
takraw, players are required to perform spectacular somersaults to get their feet above the net,
turning their whole bodies elegantly in the air then quickly landing, or occasionally crashing, to the
ground.’
6b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The writer suggests that chinlone players are very
impressive to watch, noting that they ‘perform spectacular somersaults’.
7a–d Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should contain key differences, words and
phrases, and evidence from the article extract.
1a Jacob de Groot
1b ‘far leap’
1c There are around 600.
1d Holland, USA, Japan
5a
(i) I (informal)
(ii) F (formal)
(iii) F (formal)
(iv) I (informal)
(v) F (formal)
5b Students’ own answers. Suggested answers:
(i) The weather is sunny, with no wind, and it promises to be an excellent day.
(ii) After the race she mingled with her fans.
6a ‘waved flags’; ‘wore colourful T-shirts’; ‘took selfies’; ‘musical backdrop’; ‘fun’; ‘entertain’
6b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The writer has chosen the words ‘entertain’ and ‘fun’,
and described the experience of the crowd, ‘waving flags’ and a ‘musical backdrop’ to show that the
sport is also about interacting with the audience, not just about winning.
7b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The word ‘lurches’ gives the impression of something
out of control, and contributes to a sense of the sport being dangerous.
7c Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The use of the word ‘lurches’ contributes to the
writer’s intention by making the sport seem thrilling and entertaining to watch.
8a–c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should show how the vocabulary used expresses
the way people feel while watching fierljeppen.
Section 5 Writing a response: Lesson 9
3a–d Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include descriptions of a dangerous
extreme sport.
4a
(i) Main clause: The skeleton is the most frightening
Subordinating conjunction: because
Subordinate clause: your face is so close to the ice.
(ii) Main clause: The bobsleigh has brakes
Subordinating conjunction: although
Subordinate clause: they cannot be used until the end of the run.
4b
(i) Because your face is so close to the ice, the skeleton is the most frightening.
(ii) Although they cannot be used until the end of the run, the bobsleigh has brakes.
5a–c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but the paragraph should include a key point,
quotations as evidence and comments on the writer’s language.
2 Paragraph 2
3 control the horse with only his legs; hit a target with an arrow despite moving at a full gallop
5 Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The rules of the sport and the way the riders are
equipped and dressed has not changed for centuries. Riders take part for honour, never for money.
6 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but key points should include:
• what yabusame is
• what it is like as a spectacle
• how it links to Japanese values.
3
The impact of vocabulary The writer goes on to explain the simple rules of the sport.
choices on the impression Despite the simplicity, the riders require ‘extraordinary
created of yabusame
skill’, which gives the impression that participants are well
is explored.
trained, well respected and very dedicated.3
4
The answer is broken into
paragraphs to make it In the final paragraph4, the author explains how yabusame
clearer to read. It also is rooted in Japanese culture. He or she states that the
follows the structure of sport has ‘not changed since the twelfth century’ and that
the extract. riders participate ‘simply for the honour of taking part’. The
use of the word ‘honour’ here links back to the Japanese
values of ‘discipline and honour’ mentioned earlier, which
reinforces the connection between the sport and
Japanese traditions.3
1a rugby
1b Japan
1c It was banned because it could get violent, and people and property were damaged.
1d In the nineteenth century
2 Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: ‘as long ago as 2500 BCE’
4a–e Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include research and be based on the
prompts.
Section 7 Structuring an information text: Lesson 13
7 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include subheadings and summaries.
2a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The writer describes the distances travelled and
efforts made by parents and children to reach games, some of whom ‘start walking their children to
Hanuabada at 5.30 in the morning’ in order to participate.
2b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The writer states that the village is important to
cricket in Papua New Guinea by stating that this is the location where many of the national team’s
players ‘have honed their skills for decades’. He also describes the high frequency of games played
there: ‘as many as 50 teams’ play per day.
3 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include words or phrases that create
particular impressions.
4a Down by the water, the houses are built on stilts. They reach a hundred metres out into the
ocean.
4b Cricket is a way of life here and the kids love it.
4c These new cricket stars are not the product of an English village green or a sunbaked sporting
ground in Australia. They are the product of a single coastal village with a pitch on the main street.
7a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts and explain
how the writer has created an impression.
Section 9 Planning a critical response: Lesson 16
2 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should explore the structure of texts studied.
3a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should compare two sports and include
similarities and differences.
5a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The history of the game is covered in some depth in
the article extract about sepak takraw, whilst Extract B covers the origins of volleyball only very
briefly in the final paragraph; the rules of the sports are covered clearly and thoroughly in both texts.
5b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Both writers intend to inform the reader about the
rules of the sports, both intend to make the sports sound exciting to play and both intend to make
the sports sound like exciting spectacles to watch. However, the writer of the sepak takraw article
provides more vivid description to emphasise this impression than the writer of Extract B.
5c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should cover some of the points in Activities 4a
and 4b, backed up by short quotations.
1a and b
Water polo is in a swimming pool and its a bit like football because there is too goals and you had to
score by getting the ball into the goal and theirs a goalkeeper. There was 32 minutes in a game
which is quite short compared to football and some other sports and theirs some different rules like
you only have 30 seconds to score and then you’ve got to give the ball to the other team and then
they have a go at scoring. To take a shot you have to kick up out of the pool to get higher up which is
hard and it makes it easier to shoot. Its really tiring because players had to swim about two miles in
a game.
1c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but vocabulary could be improved by using more of
the terminology covered in this unit, for example: writer’s intention, impression, key points,
sentence structure.
1d Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but structure could be improved by:
• writing one or two key points as short sentences for impact. For example, ‘Water polo is
exhausting.’
• breaking up the over-long, rambling second sentence
• using paragraphs to cover different topics. For example, one paragraph covering rules,
another on the experience of playing.
1e Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but suggested improvements could include:
• Address the question: what impression is created?
• Analyse how the impression is created.
• Use short quotations as evidence to support points made.
• Analyse language choices.
• Organise the answer with paragraphs.
2 Students’ own answers. Sample improved response:
2 The repeated description: ‘hair tied back in a loose ponytail’. Students’ own explanations. Answers
will vary, but might refer to the way this repeated detail serves to highlight the extent to which other
parts of his life have changed.
3a Possible answers: I feel like crying; I’m perfectly happy; Terror seizes me; I want to give up;
I am happy to be alive.
3b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer:
The writer’s emotions change dramatically as he recalls various memories in the extract. His first
memory of being in a strange room accompanies a very distressing emotion for him: ‘I feel like
crying’. Then, he remembers a blissful scene on a beach with his family in which he feels calm and
relaxed: ‘I’m perfectly happy’. This is followed by his memory of his accident, which is accompanied
by a feeling of fear: ‘Terror seizes me’. His next memory, of his rehabilitation after the accident, is
attached to an emotion of despair and hopelessness: ‘I want to give up’. The writer’s final memory in
the extract, after the accident and his rehabilitation, contains a more positive feeling where the
writer describes that he is ‘happy to be alive.’
4a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but the rewritten version should contain the
same contents as the Student Book extract, written in chronological order and in the past tense.
5 Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: He has a memory in which he and his parents are very
happy at the beach for his fifth birthday.
6a Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but examples should be powerful sentences in the
present tense.
6b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but students may note that the description in the
present tense matches the experience of memory, in which we relive the past, and that it places the
reader in the moment of the experience, creating a greater impact.
7a Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but examples should describe memories linked to
physical sensations.
7b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but students may note that physical sensations are
often the most powerful aspects of memory and thus the focus on this area in the writing conveys
the feeling of remembering, as well as the feelings the narrator is remembering, very effectively.
8a–d Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts and combine
facts, senses, emotions and dialogue.
3 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts.
4 Meanwhile, the divemaster signalled to them to mingle with the sharks. He was surprised at this.
He had thought they would just be onlookers, but now they joined the circus. He dared himself to
reach up and touch one, gingerly reaching out, worrying that it would turn and snap at his fingers. Its
white underbelly was soft and silky, its nonchalance proof that the divers were about as interesting
to them as the rocks on the seabed. From time to time they bumped into him, like a powerful
underwater battering ram, knocking the breath from his body.
6a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts and include
negative and positive feelings.
2 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should follow the four-part narrative structure.
3a–f Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should follow the questions to structure ideas.
4a engage; inform.
4b Students’ own answers. Suggested answers:
(i) ‘A lump, almost a sphere rolled briefly along the dry, stony ground. A head – a human head!’
‘It was 1974, in China, and the farmers were facing a serious drought.’
(ii) ‘what Zhifa and his family had discovered was a vast model army that was over 2,200 years
old: the Terracotta Army.’
‘Qin She Huang, First Emperor of what we now call China, was buried near the well in 210 BCE.’
4c Students’ own answers. Suggested answers:
(i) The writer’s intention in the article was to engage by using emotive language and short sentence
structures for suspense when describing Zhifa’s discovery: ‘A head – a human head!’ The writer
encourages the reader to sympathise with the brothers who made the discovery, by describing their
difficult situation and the fact they were ‘facing a drought’.
(ii) The writer’s intention in the article was to inform, using some longer, detailed sentences to
describe the discoveries. Facts and dates, such as that the Terracotta Army ‘was over 2,200 years
old’ and that Qin She Huang was buried ‘in 210 BCE’, are also prominent throughout.
5a Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should present events in chronological order.
5b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should reflect an understanding of the kind of
event or information that poses questions in the reader’s mind.
6a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should begin with a surprising or mysterious
event.
2a–f Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts.
3 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should draw on the notes made for Activity 2.
Section 4 Choosing precise vocabulary: Lesson 8
2 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should refer to the way this dramatic moment of
‘total panic’ engages the reader at the beginning.
4 Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: ‘delighted’; ‘whizzing’; ‘breezy rush of freedom’
1 The
This is an autobiographical extract describing a dramatic
response begins with a clear
statement of how effectively the accident, which engages the reader’s attention
extract engages the reader. throughout1.
2 The structure of the extract is The writer uses a non-chronological structure2, grabbing
explored and analysed.
the reader's attention very effectively with an opening that
describes an imminent collision on a bicycle, and the
3 Quotations from the extract 'total panic'3 of that moment. The next few paragraphs
are used as evidence to
support points. outline the parents' 'sink or swim'3 approach to parenting,
giving various examples of times when the writer was
expected to figure things out for himself, for example in the
absence of stair gates. At the end of the extract, the writer
returns to the imminent collision, and finishes with the very
dramatic statement, 'everything went black'3.
2a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The writer’s mother comforted the writer when he
fell and explained what he should do to avoid the accident happening again. She encouraged the
writer to try again when he failed so that he could learn through trying. This suggests that she cared
for the writer and wanted him to learn to be self-sufficient as she thought this was the best for him.
2b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: I think the writer wants the reader to respond
positively to his mother as she thought she was doing what was best for her son and she obviously
loved and cared for him. However, the depictions of his various accidents as a child are intentionally
shocking, making the reader feel that perhaps the writer’s mother could have done more to protect
him.
6 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should follow the four-part narrative structure.
7a–c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include implied emotions and follow the
four-part narrative structure.
3a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include information about the
Northern Lights gathered by research.
4 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but answers in relation to paragraph 3 should refer to
change of time, and those with respect to paragraph 4 should refer to change of time and topic in
the sense that a final explanation is offered.
5 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should identify the key points and supporting
information for each paragraph.
6 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include descriptions and explanations of the
Northern Lights, and be written in paragraphs with key points and supporting information.
2a Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should refer to either or both of the following:
• The longer sentence describes the longer process; the shorter sentence describes the idea of
a shorter process.
• The purpose of the article is to dispel the misconception of the ‘lightbulb moment’, so
ending with a short, impactful sentence that addresses that idea directly makes sense.
2b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer:
The topics and lengths of the sentences have been reversed.
2c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but may refer to the idea that it makes more sense to
end with a short, impactful sentence about the truth – inventions take a long time – rather than the
misconception of the lightbulb moment.
3a–i Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, following the example provided.
Section 8 Experimenting with sentences: Lesson 15
7a–d Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should describe actions and feelings, and should
include a mixture of single- and multi-clause sentences.
2a-e Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts.
Section 9 Experimenting with openings: Lesson 17
5a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should extend openings in an engaging way.
2a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but final paragraphs should conclude the story
in a satisfactory way.
Section 10 Experimenting with endings: Lesson 19
3a Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts.
3b and c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include appropriate openings and
endings to the story.
4 Students’ own notes, including the key points from each section.
1a and b
I am going to describe how I learned to stand up on a surf bored. Its really difficult because its really
wobbly in the water and you keep falling off especially because there are waves all the time. The
first time I tryed it I thought it will be easy but it isnt. I keep falling over and sometimes it hurt quite
a lot because you can bang into the surf board. And one of the difficult things is getting the surf
board threw all the waves that have already broken and their pushing you back towards the beach.
Anyway youve got to get threw all the broken waves and then ly on top of the surf board and waite
for a good wave to come along and then youve got to point the bored towords the beach and start
paddling and kicking and then when the wave gets to you youve got to try and stand up at just the
rite time when the wave started pushing you so if you got the timing wrong you miss the wave and
then youve got to start all over again. In the end I did it but only after lots of falling off.
1c-f Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but could include:
Vocabulary could be improved with:
• more dramatic verbs and adjectives to describe the waves
• more powerful language to suggest the physical sensations and emotions you are
experiencing
• adverbs of time to guide the reader through the sequence of events.
Sentence structure could be improved by:
• using some shorter sentences for impact, for example: Sometimes it was very painful.
• breaking up the very long sentence beginning ‘Anyway youve got to get threw’.
2 Students’ own answers. Sample improved response:
1 Theopening sentence is far more I was cold, wet and tired, but I wasn’t going to give up.1
engaging as the reader wants to This grey mountain of water2 rushing towards me would
find out what the writer won’t
give up on. be the one.
2 Dramatic rhetorical devices are
used to describe the waves. Summer after summer I’d watched with a mixture of awe
and envy as the older kids slid gracefully along the perfect
3 Powerful language expresses
the writer’s feelings effectively. rollers3, and I’d sworn that by the end of this summer I
would be one of them.
4 Shorter sentences are followed My brother had tried to teach me. We’d started on dry
by longer ones to convey
information before giving land, lying on our boards then springing up into a silly,
descriptions. crouching ‘surfer-dude’ position, arms outstretched. But if
that felt silly it was nothing compared to the
embarrassment of being utterly rubbish when I got in the
water.
1a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: It suggests that Terry climbed the pylon because he
felt scared of / pressured by / wanted to impress the gang.
1b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Sammy warns Terry not to climb the pylon but
Sammy is not willing to climb it in his place.
1c Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: It suggests that Pete ‘egged on’ the gang, which
indicates that he is leading the effort to force Terry to climb, and perhaps enjoying the boy’s
discomfort.
2a Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should point to the fact that the two are working
as a team to pressurise Terry into climbing, which, given that we learn Stubbs is the gang leader (in
the opening stage direction), suggests that Pete is his second in command.
2b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but could argue that Stubbs, Pete and the gang all try
to pressure Terry into climbing, and that whilst Sammy tries to persuade Terry not to climb, he does
not take action to stop him.
2c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary.
3 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include inference from the extract and use
of imagination to describe characters and setting.
4a–e Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be written as dialogue and convey
powerful emotions.
5a–c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts.
1a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The setting is a classroom; the characters are students
in uniform; a teacher enters the room; the students, apart from Liam, sit and fall quiet, responding
as if the teacher is taking names to check attendance.
1b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: As Liam does not stop talking, this suggests that he is
either rebellious or that he is easily distracted and does not notice what is going on around him.
2a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer:
‘Me, sir? I wasn’t talking, sir.’ This line suggests that Liam is a confident character who is used to
getting in trouble and is good at talking himself out of difficult situations.
2b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: I disagree with this statement because the
atmosphere created by the writer is not particularly joyous. The description of the students ‘sitting
on their desks or standing around, talking’ seems similar to a typical school scene. Other than Liam
chatting energetically to Darren throughout the script, the students are just responding to their
names to check attendance, which is quite a mundane and routine activity in a classroom.
3a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts and express
a mood of extreme tension and anxiety.
5a The playwright intends to create a scene that is very familiar to the audience.
5b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: This scene will be familiar to anyone who attends or
has attended school. A classroom in the morning, complete with school desks, falls mostly silent
when a teacher walks in and takes the register. One student seems to ignore the teacher and makes
an amusing attempt to pretend he was talking about maths when told to stop talking.
6 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include descriptions of characters including
names, ages and personalities.
7a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should contain information about where the
characters are, what they are doing, the mood of the scene and the personalities of the characters.
Section 3 From page to stage: Lesson 5
3a Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should reflect understanding that physical images
are seen rather than described on stage.
3b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: It may be difficult in performance for one character to
lift another and place them on a prop.
4 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the example provided.
5a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Pip seems fearful of the man in the playscript extract.
We get this impression from his dialogue rather than the stage directions. Pip’s lines are mainly
short and emphatic, reflecting how insecure and desperate he feels: ‘Please don’t cut my throat, sir.
Please!’
5b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: When reading the novel extract, our impression is
slightly different as we get a stronger impression of Pip’s thoughts and feelings about the man. For
example, Pip is clearly fearful when asking the man not to cut his throat: ‘I pleaded in terror’. He is
also described as holding tightly to the tombstone ‘partly, to keep myself from crying’.
5c Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: In the playscript, the man behaves violently towards
Pip, saying ‘Keep still or I’ll cut your throat!’ and he turns Pip upside down and steals his bread.
However, we get the impression that the man softens towards Pip at the end of the extract when he
asks him ‘Oh, and is that your father too, buried there?’
5d Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: In the novel, we get exactly the same impression of
the man’s feelings and behaviour towards Pip.
5e Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The novel extract gives a stronger impression that Pip
is in real danger because we are given detailed descriptions of how strong and terrifying the man is,
and of Pip’s fearful reactions to the man. We are also given more description of the setting and how
isolated it is, so Pip would not be able to call for help.
5f Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: I would advise the character playing the man to speak
with a growling, angry voice and to move powerfully, displaying the man’s strength, to make him
seem as threatening as possible.
5g Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: To make the character of the man seem less of a
threat, I would advise the actor to make his voice loud, rather than angry, perhaps with a cheeky
smile to indicate that the man wants Pip to be afraid but doesn’t intend to harm him. I would
suggest his movements be that of an old, weak man, rather than someone strong and powerful, to
show that Pip could run away easily if needed.
6a–c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include impressions of characters and
their relationships, say what will be covered by dialogue and stage directions, and follow the
conventions of how a playscript is written.
1a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The brother and sister might feel angry that he has
created conflict between them. OR They might feel angry that he is making them choose.
1b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: He might feel angry that she is seen as a victim, when
all he has done is make a choice as his father instructed. OR He might feel angry because he feels she
has shown herself to be a better person than him by choosing her father’s blessing over his
possessions.
1c Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: She might feel angry that he is getting annoyed with
her, when all she has done is make a choice and allowed him to inherit all their father’s possessions.
OR She might feel angry that he does not give her more of their father’s possessions.
1d Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The neighbours are shocked that the brother does
not give more of their father’s possessions to his sister. This makes the brother angry, because he
does not like being disapproved of and because both he and his sister were given a clear choice.
2a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: He is annoyed with the neighbours for interfering and
wants ‘to prove that I'm a fair-minded man and to shut up the lot of you’.
2b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: He seems not to feel much towards his sister beyond
wanting to make sure that she doesn’t get her hands on his inheritance: ‘she's entitled to nothing’.
3a–f Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the examples of conflict.
4 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should describe a plot in which selfish characters
are punished and selfless characters are rewarded.
5a–g Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts.
6 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on notes from Activity 5 and follow
the conventions of a playscript.
1a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Flora might be thinking ‘I’m not selling my garden.
Who does he think he is? He’s underestimating me.’
1b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: She is trying to reject Max’s attempts to persuade her
to sell part of her garden.
1c Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: She never really answers any of his points about
selling part of the garden or moving into the home. She uses short, sharp sentences that indicate she
does not want to engage in the conversation.
1d Students’ own answers. Possible answer: single-minded; clever; independent
1e Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, depending on responses to Activity 1d.
2a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Max wants to persuade Flora to sell part of her
garden and to move into the new home, whereas Flora does not want to do either of those things
and wants to end the conversation.
2b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but the playwright clearly wants us to sympathise with
the intelligent elderly woman who, without being rude, is standing up to the salesman.
3a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include inferred and imagined
descriptions of the characters of Flora and Max.
5a–c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but could refer to:
• the persuasive language Max uses
• his persistence
• how we feel about Max in light of our sympathy for Flora.
2 They could buy a lifetime’s supply of sweets; buy a car; Taj could buy some new shoes; Taj could
pay for his dad’s operation.
4 They still attend school and are probably secondary school age as Ali is interested in buying a car.
However, they are probably not old enough to drive as Taj says, ‘We can’t drive!’
5 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but could include the implication that Taj’s family don’t
have much money, and certainly don’t have enough to pay for the operation that his dad needs.
2a Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should demonstrate that students understand
Goneril is motivated by greed – wanting to inherit the most.
2b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should demonstrate that students understand Lear
is motivated by vanity – wanting to be told how much his daughters love him.
2c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should demonstrate that students understand
Cordelia is motivated by her real love for her father, and wants to be honest with him.
3 Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: He means that if you say nothing, you will get nothing.
4 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the dialogue in the extract.
5 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the characters in the extract
and students’ own imaginations.
7 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should reflect the change in King Lear’s tone from
grand and benevolent to abrupt and angry.
8 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should describe the three characters as they have
been introduced in the activity.
9a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include notes on how characters will
speak and what they will do, to help form clear impressions of each of them.
Section 8 Performing: Lesson 14
1a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Queen Gertrude seems to feel frustrated with
Hamlet, while Hamlet feels deeply resentful of his mother.
1b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Queen Gertrude is annoyed with Hamlet because he
has been rude to his uncle, her husband.
1c Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Hamlet is angry that his mother has married his
father’s brother. He feels it is offensive to his father’s memory.
3 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include descriptions of how the lines should
be spoken.
1a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Macbeth tells Lady Macbeth that he no longer wants
to kill the king and she tries to persuade him to continue with the plan. Macbeth continues to
express doubts about the plan, so Lady Macbeth tries to convince him that it will not fail.
1b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but students might infer that Lady Macbeth is
extremely power hungry and wants her husband to become King so that she too gains power.
1c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but students could infer that as Lady Macbeth appears
to wield so much power over her husband, he will end up doing as she wishes.
3a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should be based on the prompts and explain
the reasons for students’ suggestions.
4a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: The fact that Macbeth originally planned to kill the
king shows that he is ambitious and power hungry, but ultimately he does not have the courage to
act on his ambition – he does not want to risk everything he has for more power.
4b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Lady Macbeth clearly believes that they should stop
at nothing, not even murder, in their quest to become as powerful as possible.
4c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should note that Lady Macbeth calls her husband a
coward and questions his bravery.
4d Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should note that Macbeth begins by asserting his
will, then shifts to begging his wife to stop, and finally tries to reason with her by expressing his fear
of the risks: ‘If we should fail?’
5 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should use sentence structure to make meaning
clear.
6a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should address the question and include key
points and evidence gathered throughout the section.
1a Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Lady Macbeth has the impression that Macbeth is
losing his mind as he describes hearing voices in his head because he feels guilty about killing the
king: ‘Methought I heard a voice cry, Sleep no more!’
1b Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Lady Macbeth mocks Macbeth by calling him weak
and cowardly, saying he is scared like a child: ‘tis the eye of childhood / That fears a painted devil.’
2a Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include that Lady Macbeth thinks her
husband is losing his mind, that he is childlike and not a real man, and that she is totally lacking in
compassion. She comes across as cold and uncaring.
2b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should include that she tries to persuade him to
take control of his fear and be less weak. This suggests she does care for him, but she still seems
more concerned with ambition.
2c Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: Lady Macbeth plans to return to the scene of the
crime, leave the daggers there, and smear blood on the sleeping servants to incriminate them, which
reinforces the impression that she is ruthless and unprincipled.
3a–c Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should respond to the task and be written in
paragraphs that include key points, evidence and explanations.
4 Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should link to the response written for Activity 3a.
5a Macbeth is weak character. He seems to be losing his mind after killing the king, which he only
did because his wife told to. Lady Macbeth tries persuade him to snap out of it but he cannot and
she announces she take the daggers herself.
6 Students’ own answers. Suggested answer: When she realises that Macbeth is losing his mind,
Lady Macbeth is worried. She tries to talk him to his senses but he is too shaken to go back with the
daggers so she decides to do it for him.
7a and b Students’ own answers. Answers will vary, but should sum up the response and conclude
by saying how the characters impact on the audience.
1a and b
Lady Macbeth is trying to tell everyone not to pay much attention to Macbeths strange behavier.
Then she is quite anoyed and tells his he is not a man and that hes making things up and he isn’t
really scared of them because its like a silly story told by a grandmother. She said he should be
ashamed and to stop making a fuss and that all he could see is a stool so she doesnt believe him. But
Macbeth is really scarred because he has seen the ghost.