Summer 2024
Pearson Edexcel GCE
In German (9GN03)
Speaking
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Summer 2024
Question Paper Log Number 71082_71083
Publications Code 9GN0_03_2406_MS
All the material in this publication is copyright
© Pearson Education Ltd 2024
,General Marking Guidance
• All candidates must receive the same treatment. Examiners must
mark the first candidate in exactly the same way as they mark the
last.
• Mark schemes should be applied positively. Candidates must be
rewarded for what they have shown they can do rather than
penalised for omissions.
• Examiners should mark according to the mark scheme not according
to their perception of where the grade boundaries may lie.
• There is no ceiling on achievement. All marks on the mark scheme
should be used appropriately.
• All the marks on the mark scheme are designed to be awarded.
Examiners should always award full marks if deserved, i.e. if the
answer matches the mark scheme. Examiners should also be
prepared to award zero marks if the candidate’s response is not
worthy of credit according to the mark scheme.
• Where some judgement is required, mark schemes will provide the
principles by which marks will be awarded and exemplification may
be limited.
• When examiners are in doubt regarding the application of the mark
scheme to a candidate’s response, the team leader must be
consulted.
• Crossed out work should be marked UNLESS the candidate has
replaced it with an alternative response.
, Paper 3 mark scheme
For this paper, there are a number of levels-based mark schemes to be applied to
each task.
General guidance on using levels-based mark schemes
Step 1 Decide on a band
• You should first of all consider the answer as a whole and then decide which
descriptors most closely match the answer and place it in that band. The
descriptors for each band indicate the different features that will be seen in the
student’s answer for that band.
• When assigning a level you should look at the overall quality of the answer and
not focus disproportionately on small and specific parts of the answer where the
student has not performed quite as well as the rest. If the answer covers
different aspects of different bands of the mark scheme you should use a ‘best fit’
approach for defining the level and then use the variability of the response to
help decide the mark within the level, for example if the response is
predominantly band 5–8 with a small amount of band 9–12 material, it would be
placed in band 5–8 but be awarded a mark near the top of the band because of
the band 9–12 content.
Step 2 Decide on a mark
• Once you have decided on a band you will then need to decide on a mark within
the band.
• You will decide on the mark to award based on the quality of the answer; you will
award a mark towards the top or bottom of that band depending on how students
have evidenced each of the descriptor bullet points.
• You will modify the mark based on how securely the trait descriptors are met at
that band.
• You will need to go back through the answer as you apply the mark scheme to
clarify points and assure yourself that the band and the mark are appropriate.
Guidance on timing of the speaking assessment
The speaking assessment should last between 16 to 18 minutes. The timing of the
assessment begins with the candidate’s first utterance in relation to Task 1. Once the
maximum stipulated assessment time has passed, the teacher-examiner must bring
the assessment to a natural end, allowing the candidate to complete their last
sentence.
You must stop marking at the end of the sentence once the maximum assessment
time has passed, even if the recorded conversation has gone beyond the maximum
time.