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https://ofqual.blog.gov.uk/2015/03/18/gcse-english-literature-learning-and-understanding-not-memory/

GCSE English literature - learning and understanding, not memory

Posted by: , Posted on: - Categories: A levels and GCSEs

I am sure many of you will have seen comments in the media over the past few days about the benefits or costs, practicalities or need for students to memorise poetry as part of their secondary school education. This debate appears to have grown from a misunderstanding about the assessment requirements of the reformed GCSE English literature exam. So let me take a moment to set the record straight so that the debate can continue in a more informed way.

Some commentators are arguing that students will need to learn poems by heart to succeed in the reformed exam, but that is simply not true. Rather, it is a deep understanding and breadth of reading that will get students good marks.

The content requirements produced and published by the Department for Education require that students’ study ‘whole texts’. These can range from an anthology of poetry to lengthy novels. The Department also requires students be able to critically compare these texts using ‘relevant quotation and detailed textual references’.

In order to access higher grades students will therefore need to be able to show that they are familiar with the texts - that they have studied them – and their understanding be sufficiently developed to be able to compare them with other texts that might be presented. But there is no expectation that students should have to regurgitate paragraphs of text in the exam. Assessment is about learning and understanding, not memory.

Glenys Stacey
Chief Regulator

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25 comments

  1. Comment by Abigail Day posted on

    You argue that 'there is no expectation that students should have to regurgitate paragraphs of text' and yet ‘relevant quotation and detailed textual references’ are imperative to get a good mark. This seems a little contradictory. I don't see why clean copies of the text are not allowed in exams - it will still be abundantly clear whether the student is familiar with the text or not from their analysis! There is no way of getting around the fact that this will ALWAYS be a memory test until students have the texts with them to refer to.

    • Replies to Abigail Day>

      Comment by Heather Jones posted on

      Abigail Day is completely correct in what she says and it is alarming that the Chief Regulator is unable to spot the contradictions within her own statement. I feel saddened and angry that any child with an excellent and well developed understanding of literature may be unable to show this in an English Literature exam because, under exam conditions and time frames, he or she is unable to recall the exact quote or detailed text required to prove a point. In what sense is this a test of understanding rather than of memory?

    • Replies to Abigail Day>

      Comment by jo bloggs posted on

      these new exams are ridiculous i know 2 friends who are currently sitting there exams at home due to the stress of learning the quotes etc
      this not only costs a large amount of tax and mental problems please change for future generation

  2. Comment by Joshua Turner posted on

    Earlier this year I started a petition asking that GCSE English literature students be allowed the blank texts in their exams. So far, it has received over 18,000 signatures- showing that this is not my individual opinion, but that of many across the country. The government response, and this blog, clearly states that students are not required to know word for word the poems and plays we have studied. However, both the response and your blog also state that, in depth and sophisticated textual references will be required in order for candidates to achieve the top grades. Surely, the candidates memory is being tested if they must remember the "textual references" they are required to include in their answers. If the purpose of the GCSE English literature and language exams are not to test ones memory, then what is the intention in not giving students the texts they must refer to.

    • Replies to Joshua Turner>

      Comment by Francesca Gillard posted on

      On behalf of my entire school, thank you

  3. Comment by Francesca Gillard posted on

    I'm sorry but that's completely wrong. In order to get the high marks yes you do need to be familiar with the text and understand it but you ALSO have to learn hundreds of quotes for people and themes. No matter what you say it IS a memory test because although you are given an extract of the text, you also have to write about the ENTIRE text as a whole and select parts which aren't in the tiny extract. To get grade 7 and above (A and above) you must insert quotes from the text into your writing, hence the "textual references" asked for in the mark scheme. Those then have to be analysed. Please, stop writing around what the problem actually is and just accept the fact that children are getting severe mental issues from the pressure of these exams. If we, the students, are asking for open book exams, its not because we're lazy, it's because it is needed. It shows a problem when the country's leaders aren't listening to the people who actually matter in this issue. YOU aren't the ones taking this exam WE are. I am a 15 year old student, terrified about my future because the government can't be bothered to take the time to think and come up with a decent response to this issue. I acknowledge that if something does change, it will probably be implemented for my year, but I don't want the younger years to have to go through this

  4. Comment by Lucy posted on

    I personally think this is unacceptable because it's us who has to go through the pain of learning all the poems and books off by heart. This was the technique used decades ago and why bring it back? This world is only becoming more modern and developed so why bring back the rules which were placed years ago? You complain about how England's GCSE students are getting low grades but have you considered that it's the government's fault to why we are at this place. You can be there at the parliament and discuss about our countries problems and how to change it but you never consider that it's us who has to put up with your stupid and irresponsible decisions. Absolutely appalling.

    • Replies to Lucy>

      Comment by Yumna posted on

      I totally agree with you, this government is rubbish in the terms of not listening to the people who actually matter, and who are actually bothered to voice their opinions

  5. Comment by Abbaas Shakil posted on

    Even if the exam boards compromise and let us have the poem anthology while we have to learn everything else, it'll just ease the burden of revision so much.

  6. Comment by Ash posted on

    This is absolute nonsense. The entire post is a contradictory mess, and is a clear example of why students are struggling. It is ridiculous that you have decided to transition the exams at different years, and even more so that you make the exams harder. The students studying for the 2017 only have one sample paper to prepare for from, which is absurd.

    You claim that the exam is about understanding rather than memory, so how does providing the texts impact that? If I took the examination and understood the texts thoroughly, but forgot a quote to use, does that then mean that I lack complete understanding and should have my grade lowered? Or does that show that I didn't memorise the texts well enough? No matter what you say, memory clearly has a strong influence on this exam.

    I could memorise two poems for the Poetry paper, and if they came up, I could do better than someone who had struggled to memorise thorough details about the minimum 15 poems required.

    Students are already expected to study details for other GCSE assessments, such as all three sciences, Geography, History, Religious Studies, and more. The decision to remove open texts seems to be an unnecessary decision that will limit the capabilities of students taking the exam.

    Overall, your points are not clear. You contradict yourself, and have ignored the complaints of students. You are adding more pressure to an already pressuring situation, with students entering an exam that they are likely unprepared for (due to the lack of resources). You are the problem, not the students.

  7. Comment by Ash posted on

    This is absolute nonsense. The entire post is a contradictory mess, and is a clear example of why students are struggling. It is ridiculous that you have decided to transition the exams at different years, and even more so that you make the exams harder. The students studying for the 2017 only have one sample paper to prepare for from, which is absurd.

    You claim that the exam is about understanding rather than memory, so how does providing the texts impact that? If I took the examination and understood the texts thoroughly, but forgot a quote to use, does that then mean that I lack complete understanding and should have my grade lowered? Or does that show that I didn't memorise the texts well enough? No matter what you say, memory clearly has a strong influence on this exam.

    I could memorise two poems for the Poetry paper, and if they came up, I could do better than someone who had struggled to memorise thorough details about the minimum 15 poems required.

    Students are already expected to study details for other GCSE assessments, such as all three sciences, Geography, History, Religious Studies, and more. The decision to remove open texts seems to be an unnecessary decision that will limit the capabilities of students taking the exam.

    Overall, your points are not clear. You contradict yourself, and have ignored the complaints of students. You are adding more pressure to an already pressuring situation, with students entering an exam that they are likely unprepared for (due to the lack of resources). You are the problem, not the students.

  8. Comment by Steve Campsall posted on

    For a student to be able to show and exemplify their close knowledge of the effects created by a writer's linguistic choices, including those created by form and structure, key parts of each text will need to be memorised.

    Since the student cannot know which parts of any text will be relevant until the exam question is met with, it is, thus, very difficult, to limit a student's memory requirement. Considering that the new exam covers many complex texts, including Shakespeare and 19th century texts, this requirement is unfair and does not test any useful subject knowledge.

  9. Comment by Hannah posted on

    Its not just the poems we need to learn, we have three books and 15 poems. We are not allowed anything in the exam and that means we have to memorise too many quotes and also what the book is about and the analysis. I don't think any of the goverment would be able to get above a level 4 in the literature exam. It is too difficult to not have the book

  10. Comment by Ross Jeffrey posted on

    "relevant quotation and detailed textual references" and how do you do that? Oh yes, by remembering the quotes. We're not talking 3 or 4 quotes here, more like 10 or 12 from each main character in 3 different books as well as roughly 5 quotes from each poem. Not only, but also we must also have to talk about themes, methods and context in poems which will require more quotes to be learned. Now if we were simply given the books and poems in the exam, there would be no need for remembering but only analysis. The government seem to be forgetting that English isn't the only subject, I have 27 exams coming up! Mostly 2 or 3 a day! Maths now requires us to remember all the formulas because that was another funny idea the government came up with. For God's sake, give us books and make it easier. In the past, students have not been expected to remember all these quotes and themes and they've simply gotten their A' s through analysis. Why can't it be the same for us?!

  11. Comment by Yumna posted on

    I'm absolutely disgraced by this new syllabus; we as students have raised many signatures to show our concern, however as a result an email was sent simply stating what we already knew. As a result of this new syllabus, many of my peers have become depressed and stressed. When are the government going to understand that this syllabus is simply too much for the average 15-16 year old student to handle. We have expressed our opinions only to get shut down yet again. The UK is statistically not one of the best countries academically speaking. Bringing a harder, more complex GCSE syllabus into schools will definitely not improve this. Honestly I would not be wasting my time writing this comment, but I am fed up (as are many others 18,000+ share this view) of this new syllabus the government has simply dumped on us with ONLY 2 YEARS NOTICE. The grading system has not been released. Its in a shambles.

  12. Comment by Ryan warren posted on

    Even though you are not required to learn the poems off by heart, 15 quotes from 15 poems is still almost impossible to memorize, and that is minimum standard having one quote per poem, also the fact that if you mess up a single bit of the quote it's bad for the student, it is unnecessary for this change to be made, if students are doing bad in Exams don't make the exams harder, that just makes things even harder, the current examinations are already hard enough, so what is the need in making them even harder, I know several people who made it out by the tip of their finger with a C in their English exam. If standards are raised them all your going to get is A LOT of unqualified or lower than pass marked students and the extremely occasional very smart student, soon we'll all be working at McDonald's...

  13. Comment by Henry Bird posted on

    I am doing my gcses this year but actually I think it's okay. It's not 'unacceptable' people! It's the correct thing to do. Every test has a aspect of memory. Just like in biology or in maths and remembering those methods. Yes it's harder of course it is. It's the governments way of separating the talented from the semi-talented. It's bringing infuther division so that in employment, someone can differentiate a good solid A* from a low A*. Making it harder just does not matter. Everyone this year in year 11 doing GCSEs is taking the test. The SAME test. Grade boundaries are not just made up but after analysing how everyone does.

    • Replies to Henry Bird>

      Comment by Yumna posted on

      Fair enough, its easy for you - but many others as, you can see from the 100,000+ signatures the petition has received, think otherwise.

  14. Comment by Sidharth Nambiath posted on

    As a rather competent student of GCSE English, I find it outrageous to see the Chief Regulator blindly trying to justify the problems with the exam. To a certain degree, memorizing quotes does show an understanding, but the premise that this is necessary is utterly ridiculous. When given an extract from a story, I, and many other esteemed colleagues can produce a fantastic analysis. Your argument, Chief Regulator has not answered the question but just raised the claim that this is not a memory test, when all evidence and experience points otherwise. I'd like to hear a valid reason as to why there is any need for memory when the exam is supposedly testing one's understanding and interpretations of a given test.
    Thank you.

  15. Comment by zz posted on

    For the record, WJEC Eduqas English Literature students have to study not 15 but 18 poems. One of the texts ('The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time', the modern play) was recently 'updated' around January/February 2017 and students are having to relearn the 'updated' parts. My cohort learned this play back in September 2015 (almost 2 years ago), and it's pretty discouraging when you see that certain parts have been changed, added, or straight up removed.

  16. Comment by Ross posted on

    The debate has now happened, and the problems that face over 100,000+ students still remain unsolved. Typical government. Time to go and revise the main characters in "An Inspector Calls" so that I'll be able to REMEMBER the aspects about each one for the exam.

  17. Comment by Oliver posted on

    I have an idea, why don't they do a test with zero memory, you have all the texts you need and the marks are awarded as a percentage not a grade, a percentage is easily verifiable, there is no problems of a student just missing a grade and getting it re-marked, the only downside is if there is a particularily hard test then a year may get a lower percentage, this can be fixed by having a standardised test and answer system

  18. Comment by Tania posted on

    Some people argue that few textual references are needed to gain a good grade in these exams. I would like to respond with the (I thought obvious) fact that my somewhat limited psychic powers leave me unaware of which of the many questions that could possibly be asked in this exam I will have to face. I shall now use what analytical English skills I have to suggest you may have intended the word 'relevant' to emphasize that complete memorization is not required. I now provide an alternate interpretation that, as I shockingly am unaware of my future exam question, I have to learn many, many quotes (note my use of the literary technique: repetition to emphasize my point) to ensure that I am prepared to provide you with the 'relative' and 'detailed' evidence you so ardently desire no matter what question you provide me with. My written analysis weeps and whines (personification and alliteration there) as it will never gain me the marks it deserves, due to my inability to remember its fellow quotations.

    Higher diversity amongst students is important however the new GCSEs have an interesting way of achieving this. As with science, humanities and many others, 'higher students' are being separated due to better memory. This, followed by the decline of course work, leaves me to wonder how those with lesser memories will be able to showcase skill.

    You and I, I'm sure, can claim a decent understanding in many things such the English language or perhaps, Darwin's theory of evolution. May I now ask you to present your detailed evidence of the English dictionary, or 'On the origin of species' which clearly you know by heart or you wouldn't have a top notch understanding, right?

    This may be a rather hyperbolic comparison but the message stands. I have spent my KS3 years developing my analysis and interpretation skills for a supposedly outdated GCSE, however the announcement of a new GCSE specification, and a sudden rush to find a method of learning as much relevant evidence as possible (a time consuming wave of panic, if you will) has left me exhausted, stressed and holding a firm belief that, having failed to find working revision methods in such a short time, achieving 'higher grades' is impossible for me – how sad it makes me to think that I honestly cannot imagine (let alone hope for) a 9, 8 or 7 in my results envelope.

    Well gov, I hope the younger years are better prepared that we are, and eventually prove us head-strong teens wrong, for our generation's sake and yours.

  19. Comment by Richard posted on

    There have been many eloquent negative responses to this post and none in support. I would like to see a proper response from Dame Stacey on this matter and above all I would like to know that those who took the time to comment have been heard.

  20. Comment by Mohammed posted on

    honestly i don't know why people are getting so outraged by it. I'm going to be taking the exam as well this may but i know that no matter how hard the test is, everyone will sit the same exam, which means the grade boundaries will come down. I get it's a pain to memorise quotes, but if they did just give the novels, the test scores would come out a lot higher, which would impact people like me, as I would have a lower chance of getting my 8/9