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GCSE/English Language/Edexcel

P1.A.AO1AO1 — Identify and interpret explicit and implicit information; select textual evidence

Notes

P1 Reading — AO1 (Paper 1, Section A)

Edexcel Paper 1 is based on a 20th-century fiction source. Section A tests reading (AOs 1, 2 and 4). The first and sometimes second reading question targets AO1: identify and interpret explicit and implicit information.

Paper 1 Section A question style

Edexcel P1 typically opens with a short "list" or "true/false/can't tell" question (4 marks) to warm up AO1. This is the most mechanical of all reading marks — but students still lose them through inattention.

Key techniques

1. Re-read the specified lines only. Edexcel gives line references. Evidence from outside those lines earns nothing.

2. Distinguish explicit from implicit carefully. "The man was tall" = explicit. "He had to stoop under the doorway" = implicit (he is tall).

3. Use the text, not your world knowledge. The question asks what the text says, not what you think is generally true.

4. Four distinct points for 4 marks. Don't write the same idea twice in different words.

Synthesis in Paper 2 vs simple retrieval in Paper 1

Unlike Paper 2 (which demands synthesis across two texts), Paper 1 AO1 questions focus on a single extract — usually a single page of fiction. The task is pure close reading.

Worked example

Extract (abridged): "Eleanor sat by the window, her tea untouched, watching the street below. She had not slept. The envelope lay on the table, unopened."

Q: List four things you learn about Eleanor in this extract. (4 marks)

Answers:

  • Her tea is untouched [explicit]. B1
  • She has not slept [explicit]. B1
  • She is watching the street [explicit]. B1
  • She has received a letter / envelope but has not opened it [explicit]. B1

Reject: "She is worried" (inference not signalled explicitly), "She is lonely" (too speculative).

Common mistakes

  1. Inferring beyond what the text supports ("She is about to leave the country").
  2. Not finding four genuinely different points.
  3. Using evidence from outside the specified lines.

AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-edexcel-english-language

Practice questions

Try each before peeking at the worked solution.

  1. Question 14 marks

    List four things (AO1)

    (P1 Q1, 4 marks) Read the extract and list four things you learn about the character.

    "Thomas had not eaten since yesterday. He counted three shillings in his pocket — enough for bread but not much else. His coat was too thin for November. He walked quickly, head down, avoiding the eyes of the shopkeepers he passed."

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-edexcel-english-language

  2. Question 23 marks

    True / False / Can't Tell

    (3 marks) Using the same extract, state True, False or Can't Tell:

    (a) Thomas has eaten breakfast today.
    (b) Thomas has exactly three shillings.
    (c) Thomas is embarrassed about his poverty.

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-edexcel-english-language

  3. Question 34 marks

    Explicit vs implicit

    (4 marks) From the extract, give one explicit and one implicit piece of information about each of the following:

    (a) Thomas's financial situation
    (b) Thomas's emotional state

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-edexcel-english-language

  4. Question 43 marks

    Inference chain

    (3 marks) Write an inference about the setting of the extract, supported by a quotation and an explanation.

    Format: Inference → Quotation → Explanation.

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-edexcel-english-language

Flashcards

P1.A.AO1 — P1 Reading — AO1: identify and interpret information and ideas

10-card SR deck for Edexcel GCSE English Language P1.A.AO1

10 cards · spaced repetition (SM-2)