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GCSE/English Language/WJEC

C1.A.AO1AO1 — Identify explicit and implicit information from the prose fiction extract

Notes

AO1: Reading for Explicit and Implicit Information

What the Examiner Is Testing

In Component 1, Section A, you will read an extract from 20th-century literary prose fiction (novel or short story). The AO1 questions test whether you can:

  • Identify explicit information — facts and details that are directly stated
  • Identify implicit information — meanings, feelings and ideas that are suggested but not directly stated
  • Select relevant evidence — choose quotations or details that support your answer

Explicit vs Implicit: The Key Distinction

Explicit information is on the surface:

"The house had three bedrooms and a garden." Explicit: the house has three bedrooms and a garden. This is directly stated.

Implicit information is below the surface:

"She locked the door twice and checked it a third time before turning away." Implicit: she is anxious, fearful, or feels unsafe — the text never says "she was scared," but the repeated checking implies it.

Eduqas Component 1: The AO1 Question

This question typically asks you to:

  • Find a certain number of details from a specific section of the extract
  • Summarise or list what you can learn about a character, place or event

Common question formats:

  1. "What do you learn about [character/place] in lines 1–10?" (list/find questions)
  2. "What can you infer about..." (inference questions)
  3. "Summarise what the narrator/character feels about..." (summary questions)

Worked example

Extract (fictional):

Marcus arrived at the cottage and stood at the gate. The paint was peeling; a window shutter hung at an angle; knee-high grass had swallowed the path. He pushed the gate, which groaned in protest, and stepped forward. Inside, the rooms smelled of damp and something older, something he couldn't name. He had not been here in twelve years.

Question: What do you learn about the state of the cottage? (4 marks)

Weak response: "The cottage is old and not looked after." (1 mark — too vague)

Strong response:

  • "The paint was peeling" — the exterior surfaces have deteriorated.
  • "A window shutter hung at an angle" — structural elements are damaged.
  • "Knee-high grass had swallowed the path" — the garden is completely overgrown, suggesting long neglect.
  • "The rooms smelled of damp and something older" — the interior is damp and there are unidentifiable odours suggesting decay. (4 marks — four distinct, specific points)

Implicit Inference: Going Deeper

For implicit information questions, use this structure:

  1. State what you infer
  2. Quote the evidence
  3. Explain the implication

"The detail that Marcus 'had not been here in twelve years' implies the cottage holds painful or difficult memories — otherwise, why avoid it for so long? The sense of reluctance in 'stood at the gate' rather than entering confidently supports this reading."

The WJEC Mark Scheme Pattern

MarksDescriptor
4Four specific, relevant details; some implicit inference shown
3Three specific details or two with some development
2Two relevant points; mostly explicit
1One relevant point or very vague

Top tip: When asked to find n things, aim for n+1 — one is bound to be slightly wrong and the mark scheme rewards the best n.

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

Practice questions

Try each before peeking at the worked solution.

  1. Question 14 marks

    Find explicit details about a setting

    Question 1 (4 marks)

    Read the following extract.

    The station was vast and echoey, a cathedral of steel and glass. Trains arrived and departed with a mechanical indifference, hissing and grumbling as they pulled in. The platform was packed — commuters in dark coats, tourists dragging bright suitcases, a child crying somewhere in the crowd. Overhead, the departures board flickered and changed, letters tumbling into new words every few minutes.

    List four things you learn about the station from this extract.

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

  2. Question 25 marks

    Implicit inference — character

    Question 2 (5 marks)

    Read the extract.

    He had rehearsed the conversation a hundred times on the train. He knew what he would say — the exact words, the tone of voice, even the pauses. But standing outside her door, his hand raised to knock, he found he couldn't move. He stood there for a full minute. Then he turned and walked away.

    What can you infer about the character's feelings? Use evidence from the extract to support your answer. (5 marks)

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

  3. Question 36 marks

    Identifying implicit meaning in a description

    Question 3 (6 marks)

    Read the extract.

    The old woman sat at the kitchen table, both hands wrapped around a mug of tea that had long since gone cold. The house around her was full of photographs — on the mantelpiece, up the stairs, crowded onto every shelf. Faces smiled out from silver frames: a man in uniform, two children at a beach, a wedding, a christening, Christmas after Christmas. She didn't look at them. She had stopped looking years ago.

    What do you learn, both explicitly and implicitly, about the old woman and her life? (6 marks)

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

  4. Question 45 marks

    Summarise what you learn about a character

    Question 4 (5 marks)

    Read the extract below and summarise what you learn about the character of the teacher.

    Mr Harding entered the room without looking up from his papers. He set them down on the desk with a sharp crack and surveyed the class over the rim of his glasses. The room, which had been noisy, went silent in under three seconds. He said nothing for a long moment. When he finally spoke, it was quietly, which was worse than shouting.

    Summarise what you learn about Mr Harding. (5 marks)

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

  5. Question 58 marks

    Finding information across a longer passage

    Question 5 (8 marks)

    Read the following extract (lines 1–20 of the passage provided).

    [Students should use the actual Component 1 extract provided in the exam — this question models the format.]

    Describe what you learn about the narrator's relationship with the sea from the whole extract. Include both explicit details and implicit meanings. (8 marks)

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

Flashcards

C1.A.AO1 — AO1 — Identify explicit and implicit information from prose fiction

10-card SR deck for WJEC Eduqas GCSE English Language topic C1.A.AO1

10 cards · spaced repetition (SM-2)