GCSE English Literature
GCSE English Literature
GCSE English Literature is a compulsory qualification across all major examination boards in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. The course requires students to study a substantial body of Literary texts spanning from the late sixteenth century to the present day, and to demonstrate the Ability to read critically, analyse language and form, and construct sustained, well-evidenced Arguments in written prose.
The subject is assessed entirely through terminal written examinations. There is no coursework Component on any of the four main boards, although some legacy specifications retain controlled Assessment in Wales. All examinations are closed-book on AQA and Edexcel, meaning students must Memorise quotations; OCR and WJEC/Eduqas permit the use of clean copies of the texts in the Examination hall.
Board Coverage
| Board | Paper 1 | Paper 2 | Open/Closed Book |
|---|---|---|---|
| AQA (8702) | Shakespeare and the 19th-Century Novel | Modern Texts and Poetry | Closed |
| Edexcel (1ET0) | Shakespeare and Post-1914 Play or Novel | 19th-Century Novel and Poetry (Conflict & Power or Comedy & Genre) | Closed |
| OCR (J352) | Shakespeare and Poetry Pre-1900 | Modern Texts and 19th-Century Novel | Open |
| WJEC/Eduqas (9-1 7222) | Shakespeare (with Welsh Poetry anthology for WJEC) | Post-1914 Drama/Novel and Poetry Anthology | Open |
:::info The broad content — Shakespeare, a 19th-century novel, modern drama or prose, and poetry — Is common to all boards. Differences lie in the arrangement of texts across papers, the presence or Absence of an anthology, and whether texts may be taken into the examination.
Assessment Objectives
All four boards assess students against versions of the same four assessment objectives. These are The lens through which every essay is marked, and students must understand them before attempting Any examination response.
AO1 — Read, understand, and respond to texts. This objective rewards clear, accurate Comprehension of the text and the ability to maintain a coherent, relevant argument throughout a Response. It also assesses the quality of written expression: spelling, punctuation, grammar, and The use of appropriate literary terminology.
AO2 — Analyse the language, form, and structure used by a writer to create meanings and Effects. This is the core analytical objective. It requires students to engage with how a text is Constructed — the specific word choices (diction), sentence structures (syntax), figurative Language, narrative perspective, dramatic devices, and structural patterns that produce meaning.
AO3 — Show understanding of the relationships between texts and the contexts in which they were Written. This objective demands that students situate texts within their historical, cultural, Social, and literary contexts. It is not enough to write about Victorian poverty in the abstract; The contextual point must be linked to a specific moment in the text.
AO4 — Use a range of vocabulary and sentence structures for clarity, purpose, and effect, with Accurate spelling and punctuation. On some boards this is integrated into AO1; on others it is Assessed separately. In all cases, the quality of written communication affects the overall mark.
The weighting of these objectives varies by board and by question. For detailed breakdowns, consult The individual board specification documents.
Paper 1: Shakespeare and the 19th-Century Novel
This paper (or its equivalent across boards) tests students on two literary heritage texts. The Shakespeare component requires an essay on either a whole play or a specified extract plus The play as a whole. The 19th-century novel component follows a similar pattern: an extract-based Question or a whole-text question, depending on the board.
The skills assessed are close reading of literary language, sustained argument, and the integration Of contextual knowledge into literary analysis. See the dedicated guides on Shakespeare and the 19th-Century Novel for detailed treatment Of these components.
Paper 2: Modern Texts and Poetry
This paper covers post-1914 drama or prose, an examined poetry anthology (where applicable), and Unseen poetry. The unseen poetry component is a distinctive feature of GCSE English Literature: it Requires students to apply their analytical skills to a poem they have not studied, demonstrating That their critical abilities are transferable rather than rote-learned.
The poetry anthology varies by board. AQA requires study of 15 poems from the “Power and Conflict” Or “Love and Relationships” clusters. Edexcel specifies a collection organised by theme. OCR Prescribes a pre-1900 poetry anthology studied alongside Shakespeare in Paper 1. WJEC/Eduqas has its Own anthology of Welsh and English-language poetry.
See the guide on Modern Texts and Poetry for full coverage.
Key Skills
Close Reading
Close reading is the foundation of all literary analysis. It means attending to the specific choices A writer has made at the level of the word, the sentence, and the structural unit, and explaining What effects those choices produce. A close reading response does not merely paraphrase what Happens; it explains how the text communicates its meanings.
Essay Writing
GCSE English Literature demands sustained, discursive essays. Students must construct an argument With a clear thesis, support it with precisely chosen textual evidence, and analyse that evidence Using appropriate literary terminology. The Essay Writing guide provides Comprehensive frameworks for structuring and writing examination essays.
Comparison
Comparison is assessed on every board, most commonly in the poetry section. Effective comparison Requires students to identify points of similarity and difference between texts, and to evaluate the Significance of those connections. It is not sufficient to write about one text and then the other; Comparative points must be integrated throughout the response.
Context
Contextual knowledge must be specific, relevant, and integrated into analysis. Students should avoid Undifferentiated “context dumps” — long paragraphs of historical information unconnected to the Text. The strongest responses weave contextual understanding into the fabric of their argument, Showing how a writer’s historical circumstances shaped specific literary choices.
Examination Structure Summary
| Component | Typical Duration | Marks | Weighting |
|---|---|---|---|
| Paper 1: Shakespeare and 19th-Century Novel | 1 hr 45 min — 1 hr 50 min | 64 — 96 | 40% — 50% |
| Paper 2: Modern Texts and Poetry | 2 hrs 15 min — 2 hrs 30 min | 96 — 112 | 50% — 60% |
Exact timings, mark allocations, and weightings differ by board. Students should consult their own Specification for precise details.
Topics
- Shakespeare — Context, language, key plays, critical approaches, and analysis frameworks
- The 19th-Century Novel — Genre, context, narrative technique, characterisation, and set texts
- Modern Texts and Poetry — Modern drama and prose, poetic technique, anthology poetry, and unseen poetry
- Essay Writing — Paragraph structures, assessment objectives, timing strategies, and worked examples
Common Pitfalls
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Summarising the plot instead of exploring themes, characterisation, or narrative structure.
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Using vague analytical terminology — be specific about the technique (e.g., ‘sibilance’ not ‘sound effects’).
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Ignoring context — always consider the social, historical, and literary context of the text.
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Describing the content of a text without analysing the language techniques the writer uses.
Worked Examples
Worked examples demonstrating the application of key concepts are covered in the detailed sub-pages linked above.
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