Answering Source-Based Questions — GCSE English Language Revision
Revise Answering Source-Based Questions for GCSE English Language. Step-by-step explanation, worked examples, common mistakes and exam-style practice aligned to AQA, Edexcel, OCR, WJEC, Eduqas, CCEA, Cambridge International (CIE), SQA, IB, AP.
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Go to Comparative Reading ResponsesWhat is Answering Source-Based Questions?
Answering Source-Based Questions gets easier when you separate the demands of the paper instead of treating the reading section like one giant task. Some questions want retrieval, some want inference, some want method analysis, and some want evaluation or comparison. The reliable exam method is to identify the command word first, then match your response shape to that demand.
Board notes: AQA, Edexcel and OCR all reward precise evidence use, clear method, and task control in GCSE English Language, even when the paper layout and wording differ slightly.
Step-by-step explanationWorked example
If the question says 'list four things', give four brief, distinct points from the source and move on. If the question says 'how does the writer use language', shift into evidence-plus-effect analysis. The best students are not always writing more; they are matching the answer shape to the task more quickly.
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Targeted practice plan
- 1Do one short Answering Source-Based Questions response using a quotation or source detail, then check whether every sentence answers the exact question rather than naming techniques generally.
- 2Rewrite your strongest point as one cleaner exam paragraph: point, evidence, method, effect, and a sentence that links back to the task.
- 3Finish with a timed self-check: what would you cut, sharpen, or reorder if you had thirty seconds left in the exam?
Common mistakes
- 1Using analysis for a retrieval question or retrieval for an analysis question because the command word was not processed properly.
- 2Writing without enough source evidence, so the answer feels detached from the text.
- 3Spending too long perfecting one low-mark question and squeezing the higher-mark responses later.
Answering Source-Based Questions exam questions
Exam-style questions for Answering Source-Based Questions with mark-scheme style solutions and timing practice. Aligned to AQA, Edexcel, OCR, WJEC, Eduqas, CCEA, Cambridge International (CIE), SQA, IB, AP specifications.
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Step-by-step method
Step-by-step explanation
4 steps · Worked method for Answering Source-Based Questions
Core concept
Answering Source-Based Questions gets easier when you separate the demands of the paper instead of treating the reading section like one giant task. Some questions want retrieval, some want inference,…
Frequently asked questions
How do I stop mixing up source-based question types?
Underline the command word, decide whether the task is retrieval, inference, analysis, comparison, or evaluation, and then use the matching response pattern.
Should every source answer use quotations?
Most should use either a short quotation or a close reference to the text, but the exact amount depends on whether the task is simple retrieval or deeper analysis.