AO5: Creative Prose Writing
The Task
In Component 1, Section B, you write a piece of creative prose (narrative or descriptive). Eduqas typically offers:
- A title or opening line to use as a starting point
- One or two image prompts (a photograph)
- A choice of task type (narrative, description, or your own choice)
You write one extended response. It is marked out of 40 (24 for AO5 + 16 for AO6 — spelling, punctuation and grammar).
What AO5 Tests
AO5 assesses your ability to:
- Communicate clearly, effectively and imaginatively
- Organise information and ideas with an appropriate structure
- Write for a clear purpose (to entertain, move, create atmosphere, tell a story) and audience
- Control form — narrative uses story elements; description uses sensory detail and imagery
The Ingredients of Excellent Creative Writing
1. Voice and Viewpoint
Choose a narrator — first person ("I") for intimacy; third person for flexibility. Maintain it consistently. A distinctive narrative voice is one of the most effective ways to engage the examiner.
2. Structure
Don't just write from start to finish chronologically. Consider:
- Beginning in medias res (in the middle of the action)
- Starting with a striking image or line and returning to it at the end (circular structure)
- Using a twist or revelation near the end
- Controlling pace — slow down for moments of emotional intensity; speed up during action
3. Showing, Not Telling
Tell: "She was nervous." Show: "She picked up the glass, set it down, picked it up again. The surface of the tea didn't still."
Showing through action, dialogue, physical detail and environment is far more powerful than direct statement.
4. Sensory Detail
Engage all five senses — not just sight. The best descriptive writing includes sound, smell, touch and taste. But be selective: not every sentence needs all five senses.
5. Varied Sentence Structures
Vary sentence length for effect:
- Long, flowing sentences: immersion, description, reflection
- Short sentences: impact, shock, emphasis
- One-word sentences (rarely): "Silence."
6. Vocabulary Choice
Choose specific, precise vocabulary. Avoid "nice," "good," "bad," "said" (sometimes). A writer's vocabulary is their toolkit — build yours by reading widely.
7. Figurative Language — Used Deliberately
Use metaphors, similes and personification where they genuinely add something. Avoid clichés ("her heart sank," "pitch black," "crystal clear") — try to create fresh, original images.
Planning — Essential, Brief
Spend 5 minutes planning before writing:
- Who is the narrator and what is their situation?
- What is the core emotion or idea?
- Where does the piece begin and end?
- Three or four key moments/images you want to include
A brief plan prevents wandering and ensures structural coherence.
The Eduqas Mark Scheme for AO5
| Band | Marks | Descriptor |
|---|---|---|
| 4 | 19–24 | Compelling, crafted writing; distinctive voice; sophisticated structure; original and precisely chosen vocabulary; sustains effect throughout |
| 3 | 13–18 | Engaging; clearly organised; effective vocabulary and techniques; mostly sustained |
| 2 | 7–12 | Some engaging moments; attempts organisation; some technique; inconsistent |
| 1 | 1–6 | Limited engagement; little structure; simple vocabulary |
⚠Common mistakes— Common Mistakes in Creative Writing
- Starting with "It was a dark and stormy night" — immediate cliché.
- Telling rather than showing throughout.
- No sense of structure — a string of events with no shape.
- Abandoning voice — inconsistent person/tense.
- Too long a story — plot is not the point; atmosphere, character and language are.
- Not ending deliberately — end with a sentence you have crafted, not when you run out of ideas.
AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-wjec-english-language