2.0 Specification at a glance

This qualification is linear. Linear means that students will sit all their exams at the end of the course.

2.1 Subject content

  • 1. Social issues and trends
  • 2. Political and artistic culture
  • 3. Grammar

Options

  • 4. Works: literary texts and films

2.2 Assessments

Paper 1: Reading and writing

What's assessed

  • Aspects of Modern Hebrew-speaking society past and present: past and current trends
  • Aspects of Modern Hebrew-speaking society past and present: past and current issues
  • Artistic culture in the Modern Hebrew-speaking world past and present
  • Aspects of political life in the Modern Hebrew-speaking world past and present
  • Grammar
  • Individual research project (one of four sub-themes)

How it's assessed

  • Written exam: 2 hours 30 minutes
  • 85 marks
  • 42.5% of A-level

Questions

Reading and responding to a variety of texts written for different purposes, drawn from a range of authentic sources and adapted as necessary. Material will include complex factual and abstract content and questions will target main points, gist and detail.

All questions are in Modern Hebrew, to be answered with non-verbal responses or in Modern Hebrew (35 marks).

Translation into English: a passage of minimum 100 words (10 marks).

No access to a dictionary during the assessment.

Individual research project: reading and responding in writing to an unseen question based on a target language source on one of the research topics published in the specification. Students will be required to use information from the source as well as the knowledge gained from their individual research (40 marks).

No access to research materials or dictionaries during the assessment.

Students are advised to write approximately 300 words for the research project essay.

Paper 2: Writing

What's assessed

  • One text and one film or two texts from the list set in the specification
  • Grammar

How it's assessed

  • Written exam: 2 hours
  • 80 marks in total
  • 20% of A-level

Questions

Either one question in Modern Hebrew on a set text from a choice of two questions and one question in Modern Hebrew on a set film from a choice of two questions or two questions in Modern Hebrew on set texts from a choice of two questions on each text.

All questions will require a critical appreciation of the concepts and issues covered in the work and a critical and analytical response to features such as the form and the technique of presentation as appropriate to the work studied (eg the effect of narrative voice in a prose text or camera work in a film).

No access to texts or films during the assessment.

No access to a dictionary during the assessment.

Students are advised to write approximately 300 words per essay.

Paper 3: Listening, reading and writing

What's assessed

  • Aspects of Modern Hebrew-speaking society past and present: past and current trends
  • Aspects of Modern Hebrew-speaking society past and present: past and current issues
  • Artistic culture in the Modern Hebrew-speaking world past and present
  • Aspects of political life in the Modern Hebrew-speaking world past and present
  • Grammar

How it's assessed

  • Written exam: 2 hours 30 minutes
  • 75 marks
  • 37.5% of A-level

Questions

Listening and responding to spoken passages from a range of contexts and sources covering different registers and adapted as necessary. Material will include complex factual and abstract content and questions will target main points, gist and detail. Studio recordings will be used and students will have individual control of the recording.

All questions are in Modern Hebrew, to be answered with non-verbal responses or in Modern Hebrew (35 marks).

Translation into Modern Hebrew: a passage of minimum 100 words (10 marks).

Multi-skill task: listening, reading and responding in writing to an unseen target language question on a listening passage and a written source based on one of the themes. The written response will require reference to the information in both the listening and written source. The response will require analysis, evaluation, personal reaction and drawing a conclusion (30 marks).

Students are advised to write approximately 200 words for the multi-skill task essay.