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VERIFIED AQA JUNE 2024 A-level ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE Paper 1 Telling Stories MERGED QUESTION PAPER MARK SCHEME 100% GUARANTEE

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A-level ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE Paper 1 Telling Stories Friday 24 May 2024 Morning Time allowed: 3 hours Materials For this paper you must have:  an AQA 12-page answer book  the Insert (enclosed)  a copy of the set texts you have studied for Section B and Section C. These texts must not be annotated and must not contain additional notes or materials. Instructions  Use black ink or black ball-point pen.  Write the information required on the front of your answer book. The Paper Reference is 7707/1.  There are three sections: Section A: Remembered Places Section B: Imagined Worlds Section C: Poetic Voices  Answer three questions in total: the question in Section A, one question from Section B and one question from Section C.  Do all rough work in your answer book. Cross through any work you do not want to be marked. Information  The maximum mark for this paper is 100.  The marks for questions are shown in brackets.  There are 40 marks for the question in Section A, 35 marks for the question in Section B and 25 marks for the question in Section C.  You will be marked on your ability to: – use good English – organise information clearly – use specialist vocabulary where appropriate. Advice It is recommended that you spend 70 minutes on Section A, 60 minutes on Section B and 50 minutes on Section C.

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HOME OF LEGIT AQAs 2024 A-level ENGLISH LANGUAGE A
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HOME OF LEGIT AQAs 2024 A-level ENGLISH LANGUAGE A

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MERGED QUESTION PAPER> MARK SCHEME> 100% GUARANTEE




A-level
ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE
Paper 1 Telling Stories


Friday 24 May 2024 Morning Time allowed: 3 hours
Materials
For this paper you must have:
 an AQA 12-page answer book
 the Insert (enclosed)
 a copy of the set texts you have studied for Section B and Section C. These texts must not be
annotated and must not contain additional notes or materials.

Instructions
 Use black ink or black ball-point pen.
 Write the information required on the front of your answer book. The Paper Reference is 7707/1.
 There are three sections:
Section A: Remembered Places
Section B: Imagined Worlds
Section C: Poetic Voices
 Answer three questions in total: the question in Section A, one question from Section B and one
question from Section C.
 Do all rough work in your answer book. Cross through any work you do not want to be marked.

Information
 The maximum mark for this paper is 100.
 The marks for questions are shown in brackets.
 There are 40 marks for the question in Section A, 35 marks for the question in Section B and 25
marks for the question in Section C.
 You will be marked on your ability to:
– use good English
– organise information clearly
– use specialist vocabulary where appropriate.

Advice
It is recommended that you spend 70 minutes on Section A, 60 minutes on Section B and 50 minutes
on Section C.

, MERGED QUESTION PAPER> MARK SCHEME> 100% GUARANTEE




IB/G/Jun24/G4004/E6 7707/1

, 2


Section A

Remembered Places

Answer Question 1 in this section.


Read Text A and Text B printed below and on the Insert.

Text A is an extract from Neither Here Nor There: Travels in Europe by Bill Bryson.

Text B is an extract from ‗Inside Out and Upside Down‟, (extract from NOT-FOR-PARENTS: PARIS
– Everything you ever wanted to know) by Klay Lamprell.


0 1 Compare and contrast how the writers of Text A and Text B express their ideas about
the Pompidou Centre in Paris.

You should refer to both texts in your answer.
[40 marks]


Text A

Bill Bryson is an American author who has written a number of travel memoirs, as well as
popular books on science and languages. Neither Here Nor There: Travels in Europe tells
the story of his journey through Europe in 1990.

With the Louvre packed I went instead to the new – new to me, at any rate – Musée
d‘Orsay, on the Left Bank opposite the Tuileries. When I had last passed it, sixteen years
before, it had been a derelict hulk, the shell of the old Gare d‘Orsay, but some person of
vision had decided to restore the old station as a museum and it is simply wonderful, both
5 as a building and as a collection of pictures. I spent two happy hours there, and
afterwards checked out the situation at the Louvre – still hopelessly crowded – and
instead went to the Pompidou Centre, which I was determined to try to like, but I
couldn‘t. Everything about it seemed wrong. For one thing it was a bit weathered and
faded, like a child‘s toy that has been left out over winter, which surprised me because it
10 is only a dozen years old and the government had just spent £40 million refurbishing it,
but I guess that‘s what you get when you build with plastic. And it seemed much too
overbearing a structure for its cramped neighbourhood. It would be an altogether
different building in a park.
But what I really dislike about buildings like the Pompidou Centre, and Paris is choking
15 on them, is that they are just showing off. Here‘s Richard Rogers saying to the world,
‗Look, I put all the pipes on the outside. Am I cute enough to kiss?‘ I could excuse that if
some consideration were given to function. No one seems to have thought what the
Pompidou Centre should do – that it should be a gathering place, a haven, because
inside it‘s just crowded and confusing. It has none of the sense of space and light and
20 majestic calm of the Musée d‘Orsay. It‘s like a department store on the first day of a big
sale. There‘s hardly any place to sit and no focal point – no big clock or anything – at
which to meet someone. It has no heart.




IB/G/Jun24/7707/1

, 3


Text B is printed on the Insert




Turn over for Section B




Turn over ►
IB/G/Jun24/7707/1

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Institution
HOME OF LEGIT AQAs 2024 A-level ENGLISH LANGUAGE A
Course
HOME OF LEGIT AQAs 2024 A-level ENGLISH LANGUAGE A

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