AQA IAL · Thinka 原創模擬試題

2024 AQA IAL English Language (9670) 模擬試題連答案詳解

Thinka Jun 2024 Cambridge International A Level-Style Mock — English Language (9670)

200 510 分鐘2024
An original Thinka practice paper modelled on the structure and difficulty of the Jun 2024 Cambridge International A Level English Language (9670) paper. Not affiliated with or reproduced from Cambridge.

Unit 1 甲部: Understanding texts

Examine how the author of Text A and the speaker in Text B use language to create meanings under different contextual circumstances.
2 題目 · 50
題目 1 · Comparative Text Analysis
25
Read Text A and Text B below.

**Text A** is an extract from an online travel blog, *Frozen Frontiers*, written by adventurer Clara Vance in 2022, describing her arrival in Longyearbyen, Svalbard.

**Text B** is an extract from a transcribed interview with Lars Amundsen, a lifelong Svalbard wilderness guide, speaking in 2023 about his relationship with the Arctic landscape.

**Text A:**
"The descent into Svalbard feels less like landing and more like dropping onto another planet. Out of the cabin window, the world is reduced to a stark, monochrome palette of charcoal peaks and sprawling glaciers that look like frozen rivers caught mid-flow. The silence of the landscape seems to seep through the pressurized glass. Here, the elements do not just exist; they dominate. Stepping off the plane, the air hits your lungs like a physical blow—pure, icy, and sharp enough to make you gasp. It's a land where humans are the temporary guests, tolerated only by the grace of thermal layers and sheer determination."

**Text B:**
*(Transcription key: (.) indicates a micro-pause; (1.2) indicates a timed pause in seconds; bold text indicates stressed syllable/word)*

"Lars: You see (.) people come here and they think it's just cold and dead (1.0) but for me? This is where I breathe. When you are out on the fjord and the wind is howling (1.5) you feel completely **alive**. It's not about surviving the winter, it's about (.) like (.) flowing with it. You have to respect the ice. If you don't, it will tell you very quickly (laughter). But when the polar night comes and it's just dark for months, there is a peace here you cannot find anywhere else in the world."

**Question:**
Examine how the writer of Text A and the speaker in Text B use language to represent their relationship with and attitude towards the environment of Svalbard. In your answer, you should analyze how differences in context, mode, and purpose shape the language choices in both texts.
查看答案詳解

解題

An exemplar response would compare the following aspects of Text A and Text B:

- **Mode and Genre**: Text A is a written, planned travel blog designed for a public online audience seeking entertainment and travel inspiration. Text B is a spoken, semi-spontaneous transcribed interview with a local guide, conveying personal experience and authentic cultural perspective.
- **Representation of Landscape**: Text A uses alienating, highly-crafted metaphorical language ('dropping onto another planet', 'stark, monochrome palette') to depict Svalbard as hostile, foreign, and overwhelming. Text B uses organic, conversational language ('This is where I breathe', 'flowing with it') to represent Svalbard as a living, nurturing, and deeply familiar space.
- **Grammatical and Syntactic Features**: Text A employs complex noun phrases ('stark, monochrome palette of charcoal peaks') and passive/impersonal constructions to emphasize human insignificance. Text B uses first-person pronouns ('I', 'me') and second-person direct address ('you') to establish a personal narrative and shared human experience, alongside colloquial fillers ('like') and prosodic stress ('**alive**') to convey genuine emotion.
- **Lexical Choices and Imagery**: Text A utilizes violent imagery and physical metaphors ('air hits your lungs like a physical blow', 'seep through the pressurized glass') emphasizing physical threat and technological barriers. Text B uses sensory but domesticating metaphors ('respect the ice', 'it will tell you very quickly') showing a collaborative, reciprocal relationship with nature.

評分準則

**Assessment Objectives (AO) Breakdown:**

- **AO1 (10 marks)**: Awarded for linguistic analysis and terminology. High-level responses will accurately label parts of speech, syntax, phonology, and discourse features (e.g., dynamic verbs, abstract nouns, prosodic features, fillers) and write with coherent academic expression.
- **AO2 (10 marks)**: Awarded for critical understanding of concepts. High-level responses will evaluate how the representation of place is constructed socially and culturally, discussing themes like wilderness, tourist gaze versus local belonging, and spontaneous spoken vs. planned written language.
- **AO3 (5 marks)**: Awarded for contextual analysis. High-level responses will explicitly connect linguistic choices to the respective contexts of a digital travel blog (geared towards an external audience, highly curated) and a personal spoken interview (spontaneous, local expertise, conversational dynamic).

**Level Descriptors:**
- **Level 5 (21–25 marks)**: Perceptive, systematic comparison of linguistic choices. Detailed and precise analysis of contextual influences. Thoroughly integrated linguistic terminology.
- **Level 4 (16–20 marks)**: Clear and consistent comparison of texts. Good understanding of contextual variation. Wide range of appropriate linguistic terms.
- **Level 3 (11–15 marks)**: Explores some similarities and differences between texts. Explains contextual factors adequately. Uses a sound range of terminology.
- **Level 2 (6–10 marks)**: General comparison with some focus on language or context. Broad references to differences. Limited terminology.
- **Level 1 (1–5 marks)**: Descriptive or superficial coverage of texts. Little or no linguistic terminology.
題目 2 · Comparative Text Analysis
25
Read Text A and Text B below.

**Text A** is an extract from an online travel blog, *Frozen Frontiers*, written by adventurer Clara Vance in 2022, describing her arrival in Longyearbyen, Svalbard.

**Text B** is an extract from a transcribed interview with Lars Amundsen, a lifelong Svalbard wilderness guide, speaking in 2023 about his relationship with the Arctic landscape.

**Text A:**
"The descent into Svalbard feels less like landing and more like dropping onto another planet. Out of the cabin window, the world is reduced to a stark, monochrome palette of charcoal peaks and sprawling glaciers that look like frozen rivers caught mid-flow. The silence of the landscape seems to seep through the pressurized glass. Here, the elements do not just exist; they dominate. Stepping off the plane, the air hits your lungs like a physical blow—pure, icy, and sharp enough to make you gasp. It's a land where humans are the temporary guests, tolerated only by the grace of thermal layers and sheer determination."

**Text B:**
*(Transcription key: (.) indicates a micro-pause; (1.2) indicates a timed pause in seconds; bold text indicates stressed syllable/word)*

"Lars: You see (.) people come here and they think it's just cold and dead (1.0) but for me? This is where I breathe. When you are out on the fjord and the wind is howling (1.5) you feel completely **alive**. It's not about surviving the winter, it's about (.) like (.) flowing with it. You have to respect the ice. If you don't, it will tell you very quickly (laughter). But when the polar night comes and it's just dark for months, there is a peace here you cannot find anywhere else in the world."

**Question:**
Examine how the writer of Text A and the speaker in Text B use language to represent their relationship with and attitude towards the environment of Svalbard. In your answer, you should analyze how differences in context, mode, and purpose shape the language choices in both texts.
查看答案詳解

解題

An exemplar response would compare the following aspects of Text A and Text B:

- **Mode and Genre**: Text A is a written, planned travel blog designed for a public online audience seeking entertainment and travel inspiration. Text B is a spoken, semi-spontaneous transcribed interview with a local guide, conveying personal experience and authentic cultural perspective.
- **Representation of Landscape**: Text A uses alienating, highly-crafted metaphorical language ('dropping onto another planet', 'stark, monochrome palette') to depict Svalbard as hostile, foreign, and overwhelming. Text B uses organic, conversational language ('This is where I breathe', 'flowing with it') to represent Svalbard as a living, nurturing, and deeply familiar space.
- **Grammatical and Syntactic Features**: Text A employs complex noun phrases ('stark, monochrome palette of charcoal peaks') and passive/impersonal constructions to emphasize human insignificance. Text B uses first-person pronouns ('I', 'me') and second-person direct address ('you') to establish a personal narrative and shared human experience, alongside colloquial fillers ('like') and prosodic stress ('**alive**') to convey genuine emotion.
- **Lexical Choices and Imagery**: Text A utilizes violent imagery and physical metaphors ('air hits your lungs like a physical blow', 'seep through the pressurized glass') emphasizing physical threat and technological barriers. Text B uses sensory but domesticating metaphors ('respect the ice', 'it will tell you very quickly') showing a collaborative, reciprocal relationship with nature.

評分準則

**Assessment Objectives (AO) Breakdown:**

- **AO1 (10 marks)**: Awarded for linguistic analysis and terminology. High-level responses will accurately label parts of speech, syntax, phonology, and discourse features (e.g., dynamic verbs, abstract nouns, prosodic features, fillers) and write with coherent academic expression.
- **AO2 (10 marks)**: Awarded for critical understanding of concepts. High-level responses will evaluate how the representation of place is constructed socially and culturally, discussing themes like wilderness, tourist gaze versus local belonging, and spontaneous spoken vs. planned written language.
- **AO3 (5 marks)**: Awarded for contextual analysis. High-level responses will explicitly connect linguistic choices to the respective contexts of a digital travel blog (geared towards an external audience, highly curated) and a personal spoken interview (spontaneous, local expertise, conversational dynamic).

**Level Descriptors:**
- **Level 5 (21–25 marks)**: Perceptive, systematic comparison of linguistic choices. Detailed and precise analysis of contextual influences. Thoroughly integrated linguistic terminology.
- **Level 4 (16–20 marks)**: Clear and consistent comparison of texts. Good understanding of contextual variation. Wide range of appropriate linguistic terms.
- **Level 3 (11–15 marks)**: Explores some similarities and differences between texts. Explains contextual factors adequately. Uses a sound range of terminology.
- **Level 2 (6–10 marks)**: General comparison with some focus on language or context. Broad references to differences. Limited terminology.
- **Level 1 (1–5 marks)**: Descriptive or superficial coverage of texts. Little or no linguistic terminology.

Unit 1 乙部: Directed writing

Write a cohesive, adapted text for a specified format and audience (approx 400 words) using ideas from Section A.
1 題目 · 25
題目 1 · essay
25
Using the ideas and debates surrounding the evolution of digital language from your studies, write an opinion piece for your international school's student-led online magazine.

In your article, you should:
- evaluate the different viewpoints on whether digital communication (such as texting, internet slang, and emojis) is a threat to, or an enrichment of, the English language
- explore the concept of linguistic adaptation and code-switching in modern social contexts
- write in an engaging, balanced, yet authoritative style appropriate for both your peers and teachers.

You should write approximately 400 words.
查看答案詳解

解題

Title: Texting: Creative Evolution or Linguistic Extinction?

Walk into any classroom, and you will likely hear a collective sigh from educators lamenting the death of formal prose. The culprit? The smartphone glowing in every pocket. For years, prescriptivist commentators have warned that the rise of texting, acronyms like 'LOL', and emojis represents a descent into linguistic barbarism. They fear a generation incapable of constructing a coherent, formal sentence. But is 'Netspeak' really the end of English, or is it a vibrant, creative expansion of our linguistic toolkit?

To view digital communication as a threat is to misunderstand how language actually works. Language is not a static monument to be preserved in amber; it is a living, breathing social medium. Far from degrading English, texting has introduced a new level of pragmatic nuance. Consider the emoji: rather than replacing words, emojis function as digital paralanguage, mimicking the facial expressions and vocal inflections that are lost in written form. A simple 'Okay' can sound cold or passive-aggressive; add a smiling face, and the warmth is restored. This is not laziness; it is a sophisticated adaptation to the limitations of text-based media.

Furthermore, young people today are not losing their grasp of English; they are becoming highly adept bilinguals in their own right. This is where 'code-switching' comes in. Just as we dress differently for a job interview than we do for a weekend with friends, we adapt our linguistic register to fit the context. Today's students are highly capable of navigating these boundaries. We use abbreviated, highly cooperative 'fingered speech' (as linguist John McWhorter calls it) when messaging friends on Instagram, but we can instantly switch to standard orthography and academic grammar when writing an English essay.

Instead of penalizing digital language, we should celebrate it as a testament to human creativity and adaptability. The English language has survived Viking invasions, French integration, and the printing press. It will certainly survive the smiley face. For both teachers and students, the goal should not be to banish Netspeak, but to master the art of knowing when—and where—to use it.

評分準則

AO2 (10 marks): Candidates are assessed on their ability to write for a specified audience, purpose, and genre, maintaining a consistent register.
- Band 5 (9-10 marks): Exceptional control of style and format. Tone is perfectly balanced between engaging for peers and authoritative/respectful for teachers. Structure is highly cohesive and arguments flow logically.
- Band 4 (7-8 marks): Good adaptation of style and format. The voice is clear and appropriate for an online magazine. Arguments are well-structured.
- Band 3 (5-6 marks): Satisfactory adaptation. The piece resembles an article, though there may be occasional lapses in register or tone.
- Band 2 (3-4 marks): Limited awareness of audience and format. The register may be too informal or overly dry and academic.
- Band 1 (1-2 marks): Little to no attempt to adapt to the specified format and audience.

AO5 (15 marks): Candidates are assessed on their synthesis of linguistic concepts, development of ideas, and linguistic accuracy.
- Band 5 (13-15 marks): Sophisticated evaluation of the prescriptivist/descriptivist debate. Concepts like code-switching, digital paralanguage, and linguistic adaptation are seamlessly integrated and accurately applied. Highly accurate spelling, punctuation, and grammar.
- Band 4 (10-12 marks): Clear evaluation of the linguistic debate with accurate use of key terms. The argument is convincing and well-supported. Minor errors in grammar/orthography do not impede meaning.
- Band 3 (7-9 marks): Straightforward understanding of the topic. Some linguistic concepts are discussed, though perhaps superficially. Generally accurate expression.
- Band 2 (4-6 marks): Descriptive rather than analytical. Heavy reliance on personal opinion with little integration of linguistic terminology or framework.
- Band 1 (1-3 marks): Minimal content, lacking coherence, with significant technical errors.

Unit 2 甲部: Language and social groups: texts

Examine how participants in the provided transcript use language to signal relationships, present identities, and manage their interaction.
1 題目 · 25
題目 1 · Interactive Text Analysis
25
### Context

The following transcript is from a planning meeting of a university's Esports and Gaming Society. The participants are **Liam** (Society President), **Maya** (Society Treasurer), and **Chloe** (a new first-year committee volunteer). They are discussing the organization of an upcoming tournament.

### Transcription Key
* `(.)` - micro-pause (less than 0.5 seconds)
* `(1.0)` - timed pause in seconds
* `[laughs]` - non-verbal actions or paralinguistic features
* `[overlapping]` - onset of overlapping speech
* **bold text** - emphasis

### Transcript

**Liam:** okay guys (.) let's get started (1.0) we have like three weeks until the varsity cup and we still haven't locked down the sponsor

**Maya:** i know right (.) it's literally getting so down to the wire (1.0) but i did hear back from epic tech and they're down to give us five hundred quid as long as we put their logo on the main stream overlay

**Chloe:** wait (.) that's actually sick (1.0) but did they say anything about providing peripheral gear for the raffle?

**Liam:** they didn't mention it (.) but chloe if you can chase that up that'd be awesome (.) you've got those discord connections with their community manager don't you?

**Chloe:** yeah yeah (.) i'm literally in a server with him (.) i can just DM him tonight and see what's what

**Maya:** absolute legend (.) okay so if we get the peripherals that saves us a chunk of the budget (.) which means we can spend more on the pizza for the social afterwards (1.5) we need to make sure the casual crowd feels welcome too (.) not just the try-hards

**Liam:** [laughing] yeah true (.) we don't want another sweat-fest like last term (.) we need those casual sign-ups to hit our target

**Chloe:** totally agree (.) some of my friends were too intimidated to come last time because they thought everyone would be like (.) super sweat and toxic (.) so if we advertise the pizza and social play more prominently on the socials that'll help

**Maya:** definitely (.) chloe could you draft some Instagram stories for that? (.) you're way better at the aesthetics than us two boomers [laughs]

**Liam:** hey! i'm not a boomer (.) i'm only twenty-one!

**Maya:** [teasingly] same difference (.) you still use facebook messenger liam

---

### Task

Analyze how the participants use language to signal relationships, present identities, and manage their interaction.

In your response, you should:
* analyze the language features used by the speakers, including discourse structure, turn-taking, and lexical choices
* explore how social roles, power dynamics, and group identities are negotiated and maintained
* refer to relevant linguistic frameworks and concepts.
查看答案詳解

解題

### Theoretical Frameworks to Apply
* **Lave and Wenger’s Communities of Practice**: The speakers belong to a distinct community with mutual engagement, a joint enterprise (planning the tournament), and a shared repertoire (gaming sociolect).
* **Giles’ Communication Accommodation Theory**: Convergence is used to reduce social distance and project a unified subcultural identity.
* **Brown and Levinson’s Face Theory**: The speakers use positive politeness strategies to build solidarity and mitigate potential face-threatening acts (such as task delegation and teasing).
* **Drew and Heritage’s Institutional Talk**: The interaction features goal-orientation and asymmetrical power structures, which are actively mitigated by colloquial and egalitarian language choices.

### Section-by-Section Analysis

#### 1. Sociolect, Jargon, and Shared Group Identity (Lexis & Semantics)
* **Subcultural Sociolect**: The text is saturated with gaming and internet culture jargon: "stream overlay", "discord", "DM" (direct message), "try-hards", "sweat-fest", "super sweat", "toxic", and "socials". These terms demonstrate a shared linguistic repertoire, signaling mutual membership in the gaming community.
* **Semantic Shifts**: "Sweat" and "try-hard" function as peer-group pejoratives referring to overly competitive players. Using this slang allows the speakers to align their values (promoting inclusivity over elitism) through a shared vocabulary.
* **Colloquialisms & Youth Slang**: Words like "sick" (excellent), "quid" (pounds), "boomers" (out-of-touch/older people), and "legend" function as informal youth sociolect, establishing a low social distance between the speakers.
* **Linguistic Convergence**: Chloe adopts the term "sweat" ("super sweat") shortly after Liam uses the noun "sweat-fest". This lexical convergence (Giles) demonstrates her desire to assimilate into the committee and show alignment with the senior members' perspectives.

#### 2. Managing Relationships and Face-Work (Pragmatics)
* **Positive Politeness**: Maya and Liam actively support and validate Chloe's contribution to integrate her into the group. Maya calls Chloe an "absolute legend" and complements her design skills ("you're way better at the aesthetics"), which satisfies Chloe's positive face needs (the desire to be appreciated and approved of).
* **Mitigated Directives**: Liam delegates a task to Chloe using a conditional clause and a tag question: "if you can chase that up that'd be awesome (.) you've got those discord connections... don't you?". This reduces the weight of the directive, avoiding a negative-face threat by presenting it as a request rather than an order.
* **Teasing and Banter**: Maya's humorous labeling of herself and Liam as "boomers" and her subsequent tease about "facebook messenger" function as solidarity-building strategies. By teasing Liam, Maya displays low social distance and signals a close, egalitarian friendship. Liam's defensive exclamation ("hey! i'm not a boomer") is playfully cooperative rather than genuinely offended.

#### 3. Power Dynamics and Interaction Management (Discourse & Grammar)
* **Agenda-Setting and Institutional Power**: As Society President, Liam initiates the discourse with an agenda-setting transition: "okay guys (.) let's get started". He frames the joint enterprise by establishing the timeline and problem ("three weeks until the varsity cup", "still haven't locked down the sponsor").
* **Egalitarian Power Distribution**: Despite his nominal leadership role, Liam does not dominate the turn-taking. Power is distributed horizontally; Maya acts as an informal co-facilitator, steering the budget discussion and delegating creative tasks ("could you draft some Instagram stories?").
* **Cooperative Turn-Taking**: Turn-taking is highly supportive and collaborative, characterized by latching and supportive agreements ("i know right", "totally agree", "definitely"). This demonstrates high interactive cohesion and mutual alignment toward the shared goal.

評分準則

### Marking Grid (25 Marks Total)

#### AO1: Apply appropriate linguistic methods to describe and analyze language features (10 marks)
* **Level 5 (9-10 marks)**: Excellent, systematic, and highly precise description of linguistic features across multiple levels (lexis, semantics, pragmatics, grammar, discourse). Accurate use of linguistic terminology (e.g., sociolect, mitigation, face-work, convergence, directives).
* **Level 4 (7-8 marks)**: Consistent and clear description of linguistic features. Good use of terminology, though there may be occasional minor omissions.
* **Level 3 (5-6 marks)**: Competent identification of linguistic features (mostly focusing on lexis/slang and basic turn-taking). Some terminology is used correctly.
* **Level 2 (3-4 marks)**: General or descriptive comments with sparse or inconsistent use of linguistic terminology.
* **Level 1 (1-2 marks)**: Very limited description; primarily relies on summarizing what the speakers are saying rather than how they say it.

#### AO2: Demonstrate critical understanding of linguistic concepts and theories (10 marks)
* **Level 5 (9-10 marks)**: Sharp, perceptive application of relevant theories (e.g., Communities of Practice, Giles' Accommodation Theory, Face Theory, Institutional Talk). The candidate integrates theories seamlessly to explain the dynamics of the social group.
* **Level 4 (7-8 marks)**: Secure understanding of key linguistic concepts and theories. Concepts are applied accurately to support the main arguments.
* **Level 3 (5-6 marks)**: Sound understanding of relevant concepts (e.g., politeness, slang, power), but application may be somewhat mechanical or superficial.
* **Level 2 (3-4 marks)**: Mentions some concepts/theories (e.g., "politeness" or "jargon") but without deep understanding or analytical integration.
* **Level 1 (1-2 marks)**: Little to no reference to linguistic theories or concepts.

#### AO3: Analyze and evaluate how contextual factors influence language use (5 marks)
* **Level 5 (5 marks)**: Exceptional evaluation of how the specific context (university gaming committee, student peer group, balance of professional task and social bond) shapes the language of the participants.
* **Level 4 (4 marks)**: Clear and effective exploration of contextual factors, linking the environment and social roles to the language observed.
* **Level 3 (3 marks)**: General awareness of the context (student gamers having a meeting), with some links made to the language used.
* **Level 2 (2 marks)**: Minimal consideration of context; treats the text in isolation.
* **Level 1 (1 mark)**: Superficial or irrelevant remarks regarding context.

Unit 2 乙部: Language and social groups: writing

Evaluate the extent to which sociolinguistic variables (such as age) influence individual language use, referencing relevant theories.
1 題目 · 25
題目 1 · Sociolinguistic Essay
25
Evaluate the view that an individual's age is the single most influential factor in determining their language choices.
查看答案詳解

解題

The essay should critically evaluate the statement by balancing the influence of age against other sociolinguistic variables. Key points to include: 1. Defining 'age' in sociolinguistic terms: Penelope Eckert (1998) distinguishes between biological, chronological, and social age. Age is not a static variable, and language use shifts across different life stages (e.g., adolescence vs. middle age vs. retirement). 2. Linguistic features of adolescent language: Use of slang, neologisms, and textspeak, which serves to establish group identity and distance from adults (e.g., Anna-Brita Stenström's research on teenage talk, featuring overlaps, word shortenings, and non-standard grammatical features). 3. Age-Grading vs. Generational Change: Distinguish between changes in an individual's language as they age (age-grading) and broader historical language change where younger generations introduce new forms that remain with them as they age. 4. Alternative factors: Evaluate the influence of other social variables: - Social Class and Social Networks: William Labov’s New York department store study or Martha's Vineyard study; Lesley Milroy’s Belfast study on open and closed networks. - Gender: Robin Lakoff's deficit model, Deborah Tannen's difference model, or Janet Holmes' research on politeness. - Occupation and Discourse Communities: John Swales' concept of discourse communities and the role of specialized jargon. 5. Synthesis: Conclude that while age is a powerful driver of contemporary slang and identity marking, it intersects dynamically with gender, class, and social network, meaning no single variable operates in isolation.

評分準則

Total Marks: 25. Assessment Objectives: AO1 (10 marks): Apply systematic linguistic knowledge and concepts to discuss language use. - Level 5 (9-10 marks): Sophisticated, highly accurate use of linguistic terminology. Clear, coherent, and academic expression throughout. - Level 4 (7-8 marks): Good, accurate use of linguistic terminology with a structured and clear argument. - Level 3 (5-6 marks): Some accurate use of linguistic terms; generally clear expression with occasional lapses. - Level 2 (3-4 marks): Limited or inconsistent use of terminology; narrative rather than analytical. - Level 1 (1-2 marks): Minimal linguistic terminology; struggles to express ideas clearly. AO2 (15 marks): Demonstrate critical understanding of a range of concepts and issues related to language use. - Level 5 (13-15 marks): Exceptional conceptual understanding. Highly critical evaluation of the prompt, synthesizing multiple sociolinguistic theories (e.g., Eckert, Milroy, Labov, Swales). - Level 4 (10-12 marks): Consistent, clear critical discussion of sociolinguistic concepts. Well-supported with relevant studies on age and other variables. - Level 3 (7-9 marks): Sound understanding of sociolinguistic concepts, though discussion may be more descriptive than evaluative. - Level 2 (4-6 marks): Basic understanding of concepts; limited range of theories referenced. - Level 1 (1-3 marks): Minimal awareness of sociolinguistic concepts or theories; largely anecdotal response.

Unit 3 甲部: Learning language

Evaluate developmental views using the provided datasets of child speech or writing, integrating language acquisition theory.
1 題目 · 25
題目 1 · essay
25
### Transcript:
Leo (3 years, 2 months) is playing with building blocks and toy cars with his father (Dad).

* **Dad**: What are you building, Leo?
* **Leo**: I builded a big tower for my cars. Look!
* **Dad**: Wow, that's a very tall tower. Who lives in it?
* **Leo**: The mans live there. No, the mens. They got cars.
* **Dad**: Oh, the men live there? Do they have fast cars?
* **Leo**: Yeah, them cars are very fast. This one runned away.
* **Dad**: Why did it run away?
* **Leo**: Because it was scared of the big doggie. Doggie barked.
* **Dad**: Why was the dog barking?
* **Leo**: Him want to play. Me want to play with him too.
* **Dad**: You want to play with the dog?
* **Leo**: Yes, but the doggie is gone now. He runned under the table.

### Task:
Evaluating the data in the transcript, analyze how Leo's language development illustrates the processes of language acquisition. In your answer, refer to the transcript in detail and discuss relevant linguistic theories and concepts.
查看答案詳解

解題

### Key Points of Linguistic Analysis (AO1):
* **Morphology & Syntax (Virtuous Errors):** Leo uses 'builded' and 'runned' (overgeneralising the regular past-tense '-ed' morpheme to irregular verbs) and 'mans'/'mens' (overgeneralising the plural '-s' morpheme). This is primary evidence of a child applying internal grammatical rules rather than merely mimicking adults.
* **Pronoun Development:** Leo struggles with pronoun case, using object/possessive pronouns in subject positions ('Him want to play', 'Me want to play') and 'them' as a demonstrative determiner ('them cars'). This demonstrates he is in a transitional phase of pronoun acquisition (typically associated with Ursula Bellugi's stages of pronoun development).
* **Phonology and Lexis:** Use of the diminutive 'doggie' shows child-directed language exposure or early child-lexis preference. His sentences demonstrate an established SVO (Subject-Verb-Object) syntax (e.g., 'I builded a big tower for my cars'), indicating advanced syntactic planning despite morphological errors.

### Theoretical Perspectives (AO2):
* **Nativism (Noam Chomsky):** The presence of virtuous errors ('builded', 'mens') directly supports Chomsky's theory of a Language Acquisition Device (LAD). Because adults do not say 'builded', the child could not have learned this via imitation; it must be the product of an innate, generative grammatical system.
* **Behaviorism (B.F. Skinner):** The data strongly challenges Skinner's theory of operant conditioning and imitation. If language were acquired purely by imitation, Leo would say 'built' and 'men'. However, some behavioral reinforcement might occur through the father's conversational continuation.
* **Interactionism (Jerome Bruner):** The father acts as a Language Acquisition Support System (LASS). When Leo says 'The mans live there', the father uses a recast ('Oh, the men live there?'). Leo's immediate self-correction to 'mens' shows he is paying attention to feedback and attempting to adjust, highlighting the cooperative nature of language learning.

評分準則

### Marking Grid (25 Marks Total)

#### AO1: Apply systematic linguistic frameworks and terminology to analyze language data (10 Marks)
* **Level 5 (9-10 marks):** Assured, systematic, and insightful analysis of the child's language. Highly accurate application of linguistic terminology (e.g., *overgeneralisation*, *morphemes*, *recasts*, *demonstrative determiners*, *pronoun case error*).
* **Level 4 (7-8 marks):** Clear and detailed analysis of the child's language. Good range of linguistic terms applied accurately to identify patterns in the data.
* **Level 3 (5-6 marks):** Consistent analysis of the data with relevant, though sometimes descriptive, application of terminology.
* **Level 2 (3-4 marks):** Spotty or superficial analysis. Relying largely on summarizing the dialogue with occasional linguistic terms.
* **Level 1 (1-2 marks):** Minimal focus on linguistic features. Descriptive or anecdotal assertions with little to no terminology.

#### AO2: Demonstrate critical understanding of theories, concepts, and issues related to language acquisition (15 Marks)
* **Level 5 (13-15 marks):** Excellent, sophisticated evaluation of language acquisition theories (Nativism, Behaviorism, Interactionism, Cognitive theory). Synthesizes theoretical concepts seamlessly with evidence from the transcript to argue a balanced perspective on rule-governed acquisition vs. environmental input.
* **Level 4 (10-12 marks):** Sound and explicit evaluation of relevant theories. Uses the data productively to support theoretical points, showing a clear grasp of concepts like the LAD, virtuous errors, and scaffolding.
* **Level 3 (7-9 marks):** Shows a straightforward understanding of theories and applies them to the transcript, though the discussion may remain somewhat separate from detailed data analysis.
* **Level 2 (4-6 marks):** Relies on generalized or basic descriptions of theories with limited or simplistic links to the text.
* **Level 1 (1-3 marks):** Minimal or confused awareness of language acquisition theories; descriptive writing with little theoretical engagement.

Unit 3 乙部: International English

Write a critical essay evaluating the spread and evolution of English worldwide, discussing the major historical and cultural factors involved.
1 題目 · 25
題目 1 · World Englishes Essay
25
Evaluate the view that the rise of English as a Lingua Franca (ELF) represents a democratic and practical tool for global communication, rather than a form of linguistic imperialism that threatens local languages and identities.
查看答案詳解

解題

An effective response will construct a balanced, critically evaluative essay addressing the core debate. Points of discussion should include: 1. Defining English as a Lingua Franca (ELF): ELF as a functional medium of communication used between speakers who do not share a common first language. Contrast with English as a Native Language (ENL). 2. The Democratic/Practical View: Discuss Jennifer Jenkins' Lingua Franca Core (LFC) and Barbara Seidlhofer's VOICE corpus. Highlight how ELF focuses on mutual intelligibility and accommodation rather than slavish adherence to native-speaker norms (RP/GA). This empowers non-native speakers, decoupling English from its colonial origins. 3. Theoretical Models: Apply Kachru's Three Circles model, showing how the Expanding Circle is increasingly norm-developing or norm-independent through ELF. Contrast with Schneider's Dynamic Model to explore how postcolonial varieties evolve. 4. The Imperialist/Threat View: Discuss Robert Phillipson's theory of Linguistic Imperialism. Argue that the spread of English is not neutral but structurally promoted to maintain the socio-economic and political dominance of Core English-speaking nations (USA/UK). 5. Cultural and Language Loss: Address the concept of linguicide or language shift, where English displaces indigenous languages and threatens local identities, creating global inequalities. 6. Synthesis: Conclude by evaluating whether ELF can genuinely exist independently of ideological and economic hegemony, or if it represents a pragmatically necessary compromise in a globalized world.

評分準則

Mark Scheme breakdown (Total: 25 Marks): AO1 (10 Marks): Ability to apply linguistic terminology, academic frameworks, and structured linguistic analysis. Level 5 (9-10 marks): Sophisticated, precise use of terminology (e.g., accommodation, endonormative, LFC, hegemony). Level 4 (7-8 marks): Consistent and accurate use of linguistic terminology and clear essay structure. Level 3 (5-6 marks): Competent use of terminology with some structured discussion. Level 2 (3-4 marks): Limited or inconsistent terminology, mostly descriptive. Level 1 (1-2 marks): Minimal linguistic framework or vocabulary. AO2 (15 Marks): Critical understanding of concepts and issues relating to the global spread and variation of English. Level 5 (13-15 marks): Exceptional, synthesis-driven evaluation of the ELF vs. linguistic imperialism debate. Thoroughly integrates theorists like Jenkins, Seidlhofer, Phillipson, and Kachru. Level 4 (10-12 marks): Clear, critical evaluation of theories with good examples of ELF features and political impacts. Level 3 (7-9 marks): Sound understanding of the debate, but may rely on summarizing theories rather than critically evaluating them. Level 2 (4-6 marks): Generalized discussion of global English with limited theoretical grounding. Level 1 (1-3 marks): Simplistic view of English as a global language with no theoretical support.

部分 Unit 4: Language exploration

Complete an analytical language investigation on two or more provided texts, establishing your own title, aim, linguistic frameworks, and systematic conclusion.
1 題目 · 50
題目 1 · Language Investigation Report
50
### Language Exploration: Spoken Commentary vs. Written Match Report

**Data Set:**

**Text A: Transcription of Live Audio-Visual Spoken Commentary**
*(Background SFX: Loud roar of the stadium crowd)*
**Commentator 1:** And it’s... Henderson now... clips it long towards Salah. Beautiful first touch! Salah’s got space on this right-hand side. Cuts inside... past one... still Salah... past two! He shoots! *Oh!* What a stop! Fantastic reflex save from Ramsdale! Absolutely flying through the air to deny him there.
**Commentator 2:** Outstanding. Just outstanding. The way Salah shifted his body weight there... absolutely left the defender for dead. But the keeper, my goodness, the athleticism to get a fingertip to that. Corner kick to Liverpool.

**Text B: Extract from an Online Newspaper Match Report**
"In the seventy-fourth minute, Mohamed Salah ignited the Anfield crowd with a breath-taking individual run. Receiving a perfectly weighted diagonal pass from Jordan Henderson, the Egyptian winger controlled the ball effortlessly before cutting inside onto his stronger left foot. After weaving past two helpless defenders with mesmerizing agility, he unleashed a ferocious curling effort towards the far corner. However, Arsenal’s Aaron Ramsdale produced a sensational, leaping save, tipping the ball over the crossbar with his fingertips to deny what seemed a certain goal and preserve the visitors' fragile lead."

**Task:**
Using the data provided in Text A and Text B, write a Language Investigation Report.

In your report, you should compare how the spoken live commentary (Text A) and the written match report (Text B) use lexical, grammatical, and discourse/phonological features to engage their audiences and construct their respective representations of the sporting event.

You must:
- Formulate your own investigation title and specific aim.
- Apply relevant linguistic frameworks and concepts.
- Use a systematic, analytical approach.
- Draw a clear, evidence-based conclusion.
查看答案詳解

解題

### Sample Investigation Title:
*An Investigation into the Impact of Mode on Sports Narrative: A Comparative Analysis of Spoken Live Commentary and Written Match Reports.*

### Sample Aim:
To investigate how the constraints and affordances of the spoken mode (live commentary) and the written mode (online journalism) influence lexical choices, grammatical complexity, and discourse structures when representing the same high-stakes sporting event.

### Key Analytical Points for Comparison:

#### 1. Grammatical Frameworks (Grammar & Syntax):
- **Text A (Spoken):** Demonstrates high levels of grammatical reduction, ellipsis, and minor sentences. Phrases like 'Beautiful first touch!' and 'past two!' function as situational ellipsis, omitting subjects and verbs to maintain a rapid tempo. The present tense ('clips', 'cuts', 'shoots') creates immediacy, synchronizing the commentary with the real-time action. Non-standard structures are accepted due to the cognitive load of live speech.
- **Text B (Written):** Shows complex, syntactically dense structures. It utilizes non-finite clausal structures ('Receiving a perfectly weighted diagonal pass...', 'After weaving past...') to embed background details. Grammatical modification is heavy, using pre-modifying adjectives ('perfectly weighted diagonal pass') and post-modifying prepositional phrases ('with mesmerizing agility') to build descriptive depth. The past tense ('ignited', 'controlled', 'unleashed') frames the event retrospectively.

#### 2. Lexical & Semantic Frameworks (Lexis & Semantics):
- **Text A (Spoken):** Relies on highly evaluative, colloquial, and immediate adjectives ('Beautiful', 'Outstanding') and idiomatic jargon common to the soccer sociolect ('left the defender for dead'). Interjections and emotive expressions ('Oh!', 'my goodness') communicate instant, unfiltered affective responses.
- **Text B (Written):** Deploys a carefully curated, elevated literary lexicon ('ignited', 'breath-taking', 'ferocious', 'mesmerizing') that shapes a dramatic narrative arc. This elevates the players to heroic status and creates a structured aesthetic experience for a silent, distant reader.

#### 3. Phonological, Graphological, & Discourse Frameworks:
- **Text A (Spoken):** Governed by prosodic stress, paralinguistic cues (stadium roar), and pauses (indicated by ellipses) representing real-time cognitive processing. The collaborative turn-taking structure between Commentator 1 (play-by-play narrative) and Commentator 2 (color/expert commentary) is typical of broadcast talk.
- **Text B (Written):** Governed by standard written orthography, punctuation, and cohesive paragraph structures. The layout and syntax are optimized for asynchronous reading, allowing readers to digest complex structural clauses that would be unintelligible if spoken aloud live.

### Sample Conclusion:
The investigation demonstrates that mode is the primary driver of linguistic variation between these texts. The real-time, shared physical context of live spoken commentary demands grammatical simplicity, ellipsis, and immediate deictic references to sustain rapid delivery. Conversely, the asynchronous, written online report exploits the planned nature of writing to deploy complex noun phrases, rich figurative lexis, and cohesive retrospective narrative syntax.

評分準則

### Marking Scheme (Total: 50 Marks)

#### AO1: Apply Systematic Linguistic Frameworks and Terminology (15 Marks)
- **Band 5 (13-15 marks):** Sophisticated, highly systematic application of frameworks. Exceptionally precise use of terminology (e.g., situational ellipsis, non-finite clauses, pre/post-modification, deictics, turn-taking patterns).
- **Band 4 (10-12 marks):** Clear, systematic framework-based approach. Terminology is accurate and consistently supports the analysis.
- **Band 3 (7-9 marks):** Competent application of frameworks with some minor gaps. Descriptive terminology is mostly accurate.
- **Band 2 (4-6 marks):** Inconsistent application of frameworks; relies heavily on general descriptions rather than linguistic terminology.
- **Band 1 (1-3 marks):** Minimal or no systematic framework applied.

#### AO2: Demonstrate Critical Understanding of Concepts (15 Marks)
- **Band 5 (13-15 marks):** Excellent, sophisticated understanding of concepts of mode, register, and representation. Nuanced discussion of the affordances and constraints of spoken vs. written mediums.
- **Band 4 (10-12 marks):** Consistent and secure understanding of how mode influences language production and reception.
- **Band 3 (7-9 marks):** Sound understanding of spoken vs. written differences, though discussion may occasionally be general rather than analytical.
- **Band 2 (4-6 marks):** Basic awareness of differences in mode, with some simplified or generalized assertions.
- **Band 1 (1-3 marks):** Very little conceptual awareness of language variation or mode.

#### AO3: Analyse and Evaluate How Contextual Factors Shape Meaning (20 Marks)
- **Band 5 (17-20 marks):** Masterful evaluation of how contextual factors (audience, purpose, real-time constraints, retrospective processing) shape lexical, grammatical, and discourse choices. Highly perceptive comparisons between the texts.
- **Band 4 (13-16 marks):** Detailed and thorough analysis of contextual influences on both texts. Clear and cohesive comparisons.
- **Band 3 (9-12 marks):** Competent analysis of context and purpose, identifying obvious differences between the spoken and written forms.
- **Band 2 (5-8 marks):** Descriptive comparison of contexts with limited analytical depth.
- **Band 1 (1-4 marks):** Minimal focus on context; highly superficial comparison.

想知道自己有幾分把握?

Thinka 是 DSE 學生用的 AI 練習應用程式,有無限量練習題、即時自動批改和詳細解題步驟。逾 100,000 名學生用它確認自己真的識,而不只是「以為識」。

想練更多類似題型?在 Thinka 無限量操練,即時知道答案。

免費開始練習