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GCSE/English Literature/WJEC

C2.C.SK1Skill: analyse a previously unstudied poem (typically 20th–21st century) for AO1 and AO2

Notes

Unseen poetry analysis — WJEC Eduqas GCSE English Literature

What the question tests

Component 2 Section C opens with a single unseen poem (typically 20th–21st century) and asks one question worth 15 marks — assessed on AO1 (understanding and textual reference) and AO2 (analysis of language, form, structure and effect). No AO3 (context) is required for the unseen, which is liberating: examiners want close reading, not biography.

A 4-step method that earns marks under timed conditions

  1. Read for the literal sense first. Who is speaking? To whom? About what event or feeling? If you cannot summarise the poem in one sentence, you cannot analyse it.
  2. Identify the central feeling and its journey. Most unseens move — from comfort to threat, from grief to acceptance, from confidence to doubt. Locate the volta (turn).
  3. Choose 3–4 features for AO2. Pick the most distinctive — not every device. A single striking metaphor analysed in depth scores higher than five techniques labelled. Useful angles: extended metaphor, semantic field, sound (assonance, sibilance, plosives), enjambment vs end-stopping, stanza/line-length pattern, rhyme scheme, person and tense.
  4. Link form to feeling. Why does the poet break the line here? Why couplets and not free verse? Sustained "method-then-effect-then-feeling" reasoning is what separates Band 4 from Band 5.

Write structurally, not feature-by-feature

A clear template for 30-minute timed answers: an opening sentence that names the poem's central feeling, three analytical paragraphs each anchored on one well-chosen quotation, and a single closing sentence that names the shift across the whole poem. Avoid retelling — the examiner has the poem in front of them.

Eduqas band 5 demands

Band 5 (13–15 marks) requires perceptive, conceptualised analysis. "Conceptualised" means your essay has a controlling idea about the poem — not a list of techniques. Lead with that idea in the first sentence.

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Practice questions

Try each before peeking at the worked solution.

  1. Question 115 marks

    Unseen poem — single 15-mark response

    Component 2, Section C — Question 1 (15 marks)

    Read the unseen poem provided in the exam. Write about how the poet presents (theme stated in question, e.g. loss, childhood, place). (15 marks)

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-wjec-english-literature-leaves

  2. Question 28 marks

    Skill drill — write the opening paragraph

    Skill drill (8 marks — internal practice)

    Read the unseen poem in your exam pack. Write only the opening paragraph (3–5 sentences) of your 15-mark answer. It should: (a) name the poem's central feeling, (b) identify the journey of that feeling across the poem, (c) signal the three features you will analyse.

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  3. Question 312 marks

    Skill drill — method, effect, feeling (MEF) paragraphs

    Skill drill (12 marks — internal practice)

    Choose three quotations from the unseen poem. For each, write a paragraph that follows the method → effect → feeling structure:

    • Method: name the technique precisely (verb tense, consonant cluster, internal rhyme — not just "technique").
    • Effect: explain how the method shapes meaning or sound for the reader.
    • Feeling: explain how the effect contributes to the poem's emotional arc.
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Flashcards

C2.C.SK1 — Skill — analyse an unseen 20th–21st century poem (AO1 + AO2)

7-card SR deck for WJEC Eduqas GCSE English Literature — Leaves Batch 1 topic C2.C.SK1

7 cards · spaced repetition (SM-2)