2023 November English HL P3 Memo
2023 November English HL P3 Memo
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NATIONAL
SENIOR CERTIFICATE
GRADE 12
NOVEMBER 2023
MARKING GUIDELINES
MARKS: 100
In assessing a candidate's work, the following aspects, among others, drawn from the
assessment rubric, must be borne in mind:
The overall effect of planning, drafting, proofreading and editing of the work on the
final text produced
Sentence construction
Paragraphing
Interpretation of the topic that will be reflected in the overall content: the
introduction, the development of ideas and the conclusion
SECTION A: ESSAY
Refer to SECTION A: Rubric for Assessing an Essay found on pages 7 and 8 of these
marking guidelines.
1. Read the whole piece and decide on a category for CONTENT AND
2. PLANNING.
Re-read the piece and select the appropriate category for LANGUAGE, STYLE
3. AND EDITING.
Re-read the piece and select the appropriate category for STRUCTURE.
NOTE:
An essay cannot be without any indication that it has been read and awarded marks
accordingly. The final mark awarded on the essay must be justifiable.
Unlike the summary where there is a very strict word limit, an essay is creative work. If
an essay is flowing in terms of creativity and captivating to the reader, it becomes
unfair to focus only on the length at the expense of the content. The rule of thumb is
that:
No additional penalties may be imposed as the rubric itself imposes penalties.
Refer to SECTION B: Rubric for Assessing Transactional Texts found on page 9 of these
marking guidelines.
1. Read the whole piece and decide on a category for CONTENT, PLANNING
AND FORMAT.
2. Re-read the piece and select the appropriate category for LANGUAGE, STYLE
AND EDITING.
NOTE:
Various formats of transactional/referential/informational texts have been
taught/are in current practice. This has to be considered when assessing the
format.
Give credit for appropriateness of format.
Look for a logical approach in all writing.
NOTE:
The points given below each topic in these marking guidelines serve only
as a guide to markers.
Allowance must be made for a candidate's own interpretation of the topic,
even if it differs from the given points or a marker's own views or
interpretations.
SECTION A: ESSAY
QUESTION 1
Candidates are required to write ONE essay of 400–450 words (2–2½ pages) on ONE
of the given topics. Candidates may write in any genre: narrative, descriptive,
reflective, discursive, argumentative, or any combination of these.
1.4 It was a loud and hearty laugh that broke through the awkward silence
of the room …
NOTE: There must be a clear link between the essay and the picture chosen.
TOTAL SECTION A: 50
QUESTION 2
Candidates are required to respond to TWO of the topics set. The body of each
response should be 180–200 words (20–25 lines) in length. The language, register,
style and tone must be appropriate to the context.
2.1 DIALOGUE
2.4 SPEECH
2.5 E-MAIL
The e-mail should express gratitude and provide feedback on the event.
Format: sender's and recipient's e-mail addresses, subject line,
salutation, and signing off [25]
TOTAL SECTION B: 50
GRAND TOTAL: 100
NOTE:
Always use the rubric when marking the creative essay (Paper 3, SECTION A).
Marks from 0–50 have been divided into FIVE major level descriptors.
In the Content, Language and Style criteria, each of the five level descriptors is divided into an upper-level and a lower level sub-
category with the applicable mark range and descriptors.
Structure is not affected by the upper-level and lower-level division.
expectations -Fully relevant and coherent and convincing -Unclear ideas and -Confused and
ideas) -Intelligent, thought- interesting ideas with -Reasonably organised unoriginal unfocused ideas
Organisation of provoking and mature evidence of maturity and coherent, including -Little evidence of -Vague and repetitive
ideas for planning; ideas -Very well organised introduction, body and organisation and -Unorganised and
Awareness of -Exceptionally well and coherent, including conclusion coherence incoherent
purpose, audience organised and coherent, introduction, body and
and context including introduction, conclusion
body and conclusion
30 MARKS 25–27 19–21 13–15 7–9 0–3
-Excellent response but -Well-crafted response -Satisfactory response -Largely irrelevant -No attempt to respond
lacks the exceptionally -Relevant and but some lapses in response to the topic
Lower level
striking qualities of the interesting ideas clarity -Ideas tend to be -Completely irrelevant
outstanding essay -Well organised and -Ideas are fairly disconnected and and inappropriate
-Mature and intelligent coherent, including coherent and convincing confusing -Unfocused and
ideas introduction, body and -Some degree of -Hardly any evidence muddled
-Skilfully organised and conclusion organisation and of organisation and
coherent, including coherence, including coherence
introduction, body and introduction, body and
conclusion conclusion
style, vocabulary -Exceptionally -Language is effective -Appropriate use of -Very basic use of appropriate to purpose,
appropriate to impressive use of and a consistently language to convey language audience and context
purpose/effect and language appropriate tone is meaning -Tone and diction are -Vocabulary limitations
context; -Compelling and used -Tone is appropriate inappropriate so extreme as to make
Word choice; rhetorically effective in -Largely error-free in -Rhetorical devices -Very limited comprehension
Language use and tone grammar and spelling used to enhance vocabulary impossible
conventions, -Virtually error-free in -Very well crafted content
punctuation, grammar and spelling
grammar, spelling - Very skilfully crafted
13 10 7 4
15 MARKS -Language excellent and -Language engaging -Adequate use of -Inadequate use of
Lower level
5 MARKS
10 MARKS
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