PENTAKSIRAN DIAGNOSTIK AKADEMIK SBP 2015 PERCUBAAN SIJIL PELAJARAN MALAYSIA

Similar documents
November 2012 MUET (800)

CEFR Overall Illustrative English Proficiency Scales

TRAITS OF GOOD WRITING

BENGKEL 21ST CENTURY LEARNING DESIGN PERINGKAT DAERAH KUNAK, 2016

We are going to talk about the meaning of the word weary. Then we will learn how it can be used in different sentences.

1. READING ENGAGEMENT 2. ORAL READING FLUENCY

Think A F R I C A when assessing speaking. C.E.F.R. Oral Assessment Criteria. Think A F R I C A - 1 -

Facing our Fears: Reading and Writing about Characters in Literary Text

Myths, Legends, Fairytales and Novels (Writing a Letter)

Guidelines for Writing an Internship Report

Handbook for Teachers

GENERAL COMMENTS Some students performed well on the 2013 Tamil written examination. However, there were some who did not perform well.

ELPAC. Practice Test. Kindergarten. English Language Proficiency Assessments for California

Grade 6: Module 2A Unit 2: Overview

This publication is also available for download at

ANGLAIS LANGUE SECONDE

PAGE(S) WHERE TAUGHT If sub mission ins not a book, cite appropriate location(s))

5. UPPER INTERMEDIATE

Arizona s English Language Arts Standards th Grade ARIZONA DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION HIGH ACADEMIC STANDARDS FOR STUDENTS

ENGLISH. Progression Chart YEAR 8

Coast Academies Writing Framework Step 4. 1 of 7

Reading Project. Happy reading and have an excellent summer!

What the National Curriculum requires in reading at Y5 and Y6

PREP S SPEAKER LISTENER TECHNIQUE COACHING MANUAL

Grade 4. Common Core Adoption Process. (Unpacked Standards)

1. READING ENGAGEMENT 2. ORAL READING FLUENCY

ELA/ELD Standards Correlation Matrix for ELD Materials Grade 1 Reading

Project Based Learning Debriefing Form Elementary School

Language Arts: ( ) Instructional Syllabus. Teachers: T. Beard address

Achievement Level Descriptors for American Literature and Composition

Reading Grammar Section and Lesson Writing Chapter and Lesson Identify a purpose for reading W1-LO; W2- LO; W3- LO; W4- LO; W5-

The Common European Framework of Reference for Languages p. 58 to p. 82

Picture It, Dads! Facilitator Activities For. The Mitten

Writing the Personal Statement

Rubric for Scoring English 1 Unit 1, Rhetorical Analysis

Biome I Can Statements

First Grade Curriculum Highlights: In alignment with the Common Core Standards

Loughton School s curriculum evening. 28 th February 2017

Student Name: OSIS#: DOB: / / School: Grade:

EQuIP Review Feedback

Opportunities for Writing Title Key Stage 1 Key Stage 2 Narrative

Individual Component Checklist L I S T E N I N G. for use with ONE task ENGLISH VERSION

South Carolina English Language Arts

Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts

Rendezvous with Comet Halley Next Generation of Science Standards

English Language Arts Scoring Guide for Sample Test 2005

Subject: Opening the American West. What are you teaching? Explorations of Lewis and Clark

California Department of Education English Language Development Standards for Grade 8

Films for ESOL training. Section 2 - Language Experience

GCSE Mathematics B (Linear) Mark Scheme for November Component J567/04: Mathematics Paper 4 (Higher) General Certificate of Secondary Education

Case study Norway case 1

Houghton Mifflin Reading Correlation to the Common Core Standards for English Language Arts (Grade1)

Highlighting and Annotation Tips Foundation Lesson

PROJECTS FOR HAPPINESS 2015

Tap vs. Bottled Water

Grade 6: Module 4: Unit 3: Overview

REFERENCE GUIDE AND TEST PRODUCED BY VIDEO COMMUNICATIONS

and secondary sources, attending to such features as the date and origin of the information.

Example answers and examiner commentaries: Paper 2

Tutoring First-Year Writing Students at UNM

MADERA SCIENCE FAIR 2013 Grades 4 th 6 th Project due date: Tuesday, April 9, 8:15 am Parent Night: Tuesday, April 16, 6:00 8:00 pm

SIJIL PELAJARAN MALAYSIA 2011

FOR TEACHERS ONLY. The University of the State of New York REGENTS HIGH SCHOOL EXAMINATION. ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS (Common Core)

CARING FOR OTHERS KINDERGARTEN. Kindness Song Activity, pp. 3-4 (10 to 15 minutes)

New York State P-12 Common Core Learning Standards For English Language Arts & Literacy

Oakland Unified School District English/ Language Arts Course Syllabus

DISCIPLINARY PROCEDURES

MYP Language A Course Outline Year 3

GCSE. Mathematics A. Mark Scheme for January General Certificate of Secondary Education Unit A503/01: Mathematics C (Foundation Tier)

How to Judge the Quality of an Objective Classroom Test

The College Board Redesigned SAT Grade 12

Lower and Upper Secondary

Teaching Task Rewrite. Teaching Task: Rewrite the Teaching Task: What is the theme of the poem Mother to Son?

A PRIMER FOR HOST FAMILIES

Supervised Agriculture Experience Suffield Regional 2013

ASSESSMENT GUIDELINES (PRACTICAL /PERFORMANCE WORK) Grade: 85%+ Description: 'Outstanding work in all respects', ' Work of high professional standard'

Candidates must achieve a grade of at least C2 level in each examination in order to achieve the overall qualification at C2 Level.

Oakland Unified School District English/ Language Arts Course Syllabus

Metacognitive Strategies that Enhance Reading Comprehension in the Foreign Language University Classroom

1 st Quarter (September, October, November) August/September Strand Topic Standard Notes Reading for Literature

WebQuest - Student Web Page

QLWG Skills for Life Acknowledgements

MISSISSIPPI OCCUPATIONAL DIPLOMA EMPLOYMENT ENGLISH I: NINTH, TENTH, ELEVENTH AND TWELFTH GRADES

Dickinson ISD ELAR Year at a Glance 3rd Grade- 1st Nine Weeks

5.1 Sound & Light Unit Overview

Statistical Analysis of Climate Change, Renewable Energies, and Sustainability An Independent Investigation for Introduction to Statistics

RESPONSE TO LITERATURE

DIBELS Next BENCHMARK ASSESSMENTS

Pearson Longman Keystone Book D 2013

CHEM 591 Seminar in Inorganic Chemistry

Public Speaking Rubric

2017 national curriculum tests. Key stage 1. English grammar, punctuation and spelling test mark schemes. Paper 1: spelling and Paper 2: questions

National Literacy and Numeracy Framework for years 3/4

Pre-AP English 1-2. Mrs. Kimberly Cloud Career Tech & Global Studies Room N-201

TWO OLD WOMEN (An Alaskan Legend of Betrayal, Courage and Survival) By Velma Wallis

English Language Arts Missouri Learning Standards Grade-Level Expectations

Secondary English-Language Arts

Transcription:

BAHAGIAN PENGURUSAN SEKOLAH BERASRAMA PENUH DAN SEKOLAH KECEMERLANGAN PENTAKSIRAN DIAGNOSTIK AKADEMIK SBP 2015 PERCUBAAN SIJIL PELAJARAN MALAYSIA PERATURAN PERAHAN BAHASA INGGERIS 1119/1 & 1119/2 KERTAS 1 DAN KERTAS 2

SULIT 2 SCHEME FOR Question 1 This question is assessed as follows: 1. ALLOCATION OF S: FORMAT 3 marks CONTENT 12 marks LANGUAGE 20 marks Total SECTION A : DIRECTED WRITING 35 marks 2. FORMAT AND CONTENT S 15 marks FORMAT F1 = Sender s address F2 = Recipient s address F3 = Date F4 = Salutation F5 = Title F6 = Closing + name ONE / TWO correct format = THREE / FOUR correct formats = 2 marks FIVE / SIX correct formats = 3 marks Sub-total 3 (All keywords must be mentioned or paraphrased before any content point can be awarded. If any idea is incomplete, the content point cannot be awarded) C1 Rimba Maya Camp Site 1 C2 accompanied by teachers 1 C3 activities; pitch tents 1 C4 cook meals 1 C5 camp fire 1 C6 jungle-trekking 1 C7 nature study 1 C8 survival skills 1 C9 leadership and teamwork 1 C10 keep camp site clean 1 C11 suggestion 1 1 C12 suggestion 2 1 Sub-total 12 Grand Total 15

SULIT 3 3. LANGUAGE - 20 Marks 1. Marks are awarded for: i. Accurate English ii Style and Tone [appropriate to task] 2. Read the script and indicate all errors of language by underlining the word, phrase or punctuation where the mistake appears. 3. Please tick for good appropriate vocabulary, structure and tone. 4. Award marks by referring to the criteria for marking language. CRITERIA FOR ING LANGUAGE Section A: Directed Writing RANGE A 19-20 B 16-18 C 13-15 DESCRIPTION OF CRITERIA The language is entirely accurate apart from the very occasional first draft slips. Sentence structure is varied and shows that the candidate is able to use various types of sentences to achieve a particular effect. Vocabulary shows some sophistication and is used with precision. Punctuation is accurate and helpful to the reader. Spelling is accurate across the full range of vocabulary used. Paragraphs have unity and are well linked. The topic is addressed with consistent relevance The tone is appropriate for a formal letter. The language is almost always accurate; occasional errors are either minor or first draft slips. Sentences show some variation of length and type, including some complex sentences. Vocabulary is wide enough to convey intended shades of meaning with some precision. Punctuation is almost always accurate and generally helpful to the reader. Spelling is nearly always accurate. Paragraphs show some evidence of planning, having unity and are linked appropriately linked. The tone is appropriate for a formal letter. The language is largely accurate to communicate meaning clearly to the reader. Simple structures are used without error; mistakes may occur when more sophisticated structures are attempted. Sentences show some variety of length and structure although there is a tendency to repeat some sentence types, giving it a monotonous effect. Vocabulary is wide enough to convey intended meaning but may lack precision. Punctuation of simple structures is accurate on the whole but errors may occur in more complex uses. Spelling is accurate across the full range of vocabulary used. Paragraphs are well-planned, have unity and are linked. The topic is addressed with consistent relevance The tone is appropriate for a formal letter.

SULIT 4 RANGE D 10-12 E 7-9 U(i) 4 6 U(ii) 2 3 U(iii) 0 1 DESCRIPTION OF CRITERIA The language is sufficiently accurate There will be patches of clarity especially when simple structures are used (throughout the piece of writing). Mistakes will occur when complex sentence structures are used. There may be some variety of sentence length and type but this may not enhance the meaning or arouse interest. Vocabulary is adequate but may lack precision. Punctuation is generally correct but it does not enhance or clarify meaning. Sentence separation errors may occur. Simple words are spelt accurately; errors may occur with unfamiliar words. Paragraphs may show some unity in topic. Lapses in slang or informal language may occur consistently. Meaning never in doubt, but single word errors are sufficiently frequent and serious to hamper speed of reading. Some simple structures will be accurate but accuracy is not sustained for long. Vocabulary is limited too simple to convey meaning or imperfectly understood. Simple words will usually be spelt accurately but mistakes occur with more difficult words. Paragraphs lack unity and links are incorrectly used. Errors occur in sentence separation and punctuation. Meaning is fairly clear Correction of single word errors may produce a fairly accurate English. High incidence of errors impedes reading. Few simple sentence structures are used accurately. Vocabulary is limited may not extend beyond a simple range of words; inadequate to express intended shades of meaning. Punctuation is sometimes correct but sentence separation errors may occur. Paragraphs show lack of planning. Frequent spelling errors occur. May not show understanding of the detailed requirements of the task. Sense will usually decipherable, but some of the errors will be multiple, requiring the reader to re-read and re-organise before the meaning becomes clear. Whole sections of the letter may make little or no sense. Unlikely to have more than one or two accurate sentences. Content is comprehensible but tone and style is hidden by the high density of errors. Almost entirely impossible to recognize as pieces of English. Whole sections of letter may make no sense at all or is copied from the task. Award 1 mark if some sense is obtained. The mark 0 should only be awarded if the letter makes no sense at all.

SULIT 5 SECTION B : Continuous Writing ING SCHEME FOR Section B Marks are awarded as follows: 1. Assessment is based on impression. 2. Read and re-read the response, at the same time underline gross and minor errors. 3. Put insertion marks (^) where errors occur. 4. Mark for good vocabulary or expressions by putting a merit tick ( ) above such merits. 5. Fit the candidate s response against the most appropriate band having most of the criteria as found in the band. Refer to the upper or lower bands to the band already chosen to BEST FIT the student s response to the most appropriate band. 6. Justify the band and marks given, commenting on the strengths and weaknesses of the candidate s response, using the criteria found in the band. CATEGORY DESCRIPTIONS FOR THE ASSESSMENT OF CONTINUOUS WRITING Section B : Continuous Writing RANGE A 44-50 DESCRIPTION OF CRITERIA The language is entirely accurate apart from the very occasional first draft slips. Sentence structure is varied and shows that the candidate is able to use various types of sentences to achieve a particular effect. Vocabulary shows some sophistication and is used with precision. Punctuation is accurate and helpful to the reader. Spelling is accurate across the full range of vocabulary used. Paragraphs have unity and are well linked. The topic is addressed with consistent relevance. The interest of the reader is aroused and sustained throughout the writing. B 38-43 The language is accurate; occasional errors are either minor or first draft slips. Sentences show some variation and of length and type, including some complex sentences. Vocabulary is wide enough to convey intended shades of meaning with some precision. Punctuation is almost always accurate and generally helpful to the reader. Spelling is nearly always accurate. Paragraphs show some evidence of planning, having unity and are appropriately linked. The piece of writing is relevant to the topic and the interest of the reader is aroused and sustained through most of the writing.

SULIT 6 RANGE C 32-37 DESCRIPTION OF CRITERIA The language is largely accurate. Simple structures are used without error; mistakes may occur when more sophisticated structures are attempted. Sentences show some variety of length and structure although there is a tendency to repeat some sentence types, giving it a monotonous effect. Vocabulary is wide enough to convey intended meaning but may lack precision. Punctuation of simple structures is accurate on the whole but errors may occur in more complex uses. Spelling of simple words may be accurate but errors occur when more sophisticated words are used. Paragraphs may show some unity although some links may not be present or inappropriate. The writing is relevant but may lack originality and planning. Topic is addressed with consistent relevance. Some interest is aroused but not sustained. D 26-31 The language is sufficiently accurate There will be patches of clarity especially when simple vocabulary and structures are used. There may be some variety of sentence length and type but purpose is not seen clearly. Vocabulary is adequate to show intended meaning but is not developed to show precision. Punctuation is generally correct but it does not clarify meaning. Simple words are spelt accurately, but more errors will occur. Paragraphs used but show lack of planning or unity. The topic is addressed with some relevance but it may be lacking in liveliness and interest. E 20-25 Meaning never in doubt, but errors are sufficiently frequent and serious to hamper reading. Some simple structures may be accurate but accuracy is not sustained for long. Vocabulary is limited too simple to convey precise meaning or more ambitious but imperfectly understood Simple words will usually be spelt accurately but frequent mistakes make reading the script difficult. Paragraphs lack unity and are poorly organised. Writing shows some relevance to the topic but only partial treatment is given. High incidence of errors - distracts reader from merits of content of the piece of writing.

SULIT 7 RANGE U (i) 14-19 U(ii) 8-13 U(iii) 0 7 DESCRIPTION OF CRITERIA Meaning is fairly clear High incidence of errors impede reading. Many serious errors of various kinds throughout the script (single word) Very few accurate sentences sentences are simple and often repetitive. Frequent errors cause blurring. Punctuation is sometimes correct but sentence separation errors may occur. Paragraphs lack unity / may not have paragraphs at all. Sense will usually decipherable, but some of the errors will be multiple, requiring the reader to read and re-read before the meaning becomes clear. Only a few accurate simple sentences. Content of writing is comprehensible but meaning is blur due to high incidence of errors. Scripts may be also far short of the required number of words. Almost entirely impossible to read. Whole sections make little or no sense at all. Award marks if some sense is obtained. The mark 0 should only be awarded if the letter makes no sense at all.

SULIT 8 SCHEME: PAPER 2 1119/2 SECTION A 1 D 9 B 2 C 10 A 3 C 11 B 4 D 12 D 5 B 13 C 6 A 14 A 7 A 15 D 8 C SECTION B : INFORMATION TRANSFER 16 Vasco s, Hilton K L 17 ghazal group 18 Simmered Catfish in fermented durian coconut gravy 19 blue coloured rice served with its traditional condiments 20 Malay desserts / Malay kuih and delicacies / Malay kuih / Malay delicacies 21 Daily / 6 a.m. to midnight 22 RM68.00 (nett) 23 RM49.00 (nett) 24 the first and last three days of the fasting month 25 discount vouchers and Hari Raya mystery gifts interchangeable interchangeable

SULIT 9 SECTION C : READING COMPREHENSION QUESTION ANSWER LINES LIFTED (a) engulfed Line 2 26 (b) (c) parents went overseas/her mother joined her father who was studying overseas i ii. they did not want to upset her/ she was happy in her kampung school/ she was doing well in school Line 6 Lines 7-9 27 her (younger) sister was born/ the birth of her sister Line 10 28 water the potted plants Lines 32 29 (a) the raised floor kept dampness away Line 36 (b) the spaces between the planks provided good ventilation Lines 36-37 30 Accept any other possible answer, e.g : She missed the home she grew up in She was nostalgic about her childhood She wanted to hold on to her memories 0 / 2 marks DO NOT accept if students answer: She missed her grandmother

SULIT 10 SECTION C : SUMMARY Content : 10 marks Language : 5 marks TOTAL : 15 marks Note : Award for each content point to a maximum of 10 marks Content Points Lifting of lines C1 rolled up the (mengkuang) mat Line 18 C2 put it away behind the clothes rack Lines 18-19 C3 took towel from the rack and moved towards the door Line 19 C4 stepped into the living room Line 20 C5 opened the kitchen door into the compound Line 26 C6 lowered the pail into the well (expertly pulled up the attached robe) Line 29 C7 strolled around the old house Line 34 C8 traditional Malay house Line 35 C9 built on post above the ground Line 35-36 C10 raised floor kept dampness away Line 36 C11 spaces between floor planks provided (good) ventilation Line 36-37 C12 played with childhood friends beneath the house Line 37-38 C13 walked past the verandah with its large windows Line 41 C14 rounded the corner Line 41 C15 went back into the kitchen Line 43

SULIT 11 STYLE AND PRESENTATION DESCRIPTOR FOR LANGUAGE Marks for Style and Presentation are awarded based on the average sum total (to the nearest rounded fraction/decimal) of Paraphrase and Use of English. Annotate as follows : Paraphrase : 5 Use of English : 4 9 2 = 4.5 = 5 marks BAND DESCRIPTORS FOR SUMMARY PARAPHRASE (RP) USE OF ENGLISH (UE) There is a sustained attempt to rephrase the text language. Expression is secure. Allow phrases from the text, which Apart from very occasional slips, the language is accurate. Any occasional errors are either first draft slips or minor errors. 5 are difficult to substitute. Sentence structure is varied and there is a marked 5 ability to use original complex syntax outside text structures. Punctuation is accurate and helpful to the reader. Spelling is secure across the full range of vocabulary used. 4 3 2 1 There is a noticeable attempt to rephrase the text. The summary is free from stretches of concentrated lifting. Expression is generally sound. Intelligent and selective lifting, i.e. when groups of words are combined with own words. Limited attempt to rephrase the text. Expression may not always be secure but the attempt to substitute will gain credit. Wholesale copying of text material, i.e. in chunks not a complete script of the original. Attempts to substitute own language will be limited to single word expression. Irrelevant sections of the text will be more frequent at this and subsequent levels. More or less a complete transcript of the text. This means sentence after sentence copied without a clear break. Originality barely noticeable. There will also be random transcription of irrelevant sections of the text. 4 3 2 0-1 The language is almost always accurate. Serious errors will be isolated as to be almost unnoticeable. Sentences will show some variation including original syntax outside text structures. Punctuation is accurate and generally helpful. Spelling is nearly always secure. The language is largely accurate. Simple structures tend to dominate. Serious errors are not frequent, although they are noticeable. Where sentences show some variety and complexity, they will generally be lifted from the text. Serious errors may occur when more sophisticated structures are attempted. Punctuation is largely accurate. Spelling is mostly secure. Errors may occur in the use of original or ambitious vocabulary Meaning not in doubt, but serious errors are becoming more frequent. Simple structures will be accurate, although this accuracy is not sustained for long. Simple punctuation will usually be correct, with occasional errors of sentence separation. Spelling is largely accurate, but mistakes will occur in handling the more difficult words. Irrelevant or distorted detail will destroy the sequence in places. Heavy frequency of serious errors, impeding the reading in many places. Fractured syntax is much more pronounced at this level, and punctuation falters. Errors of sentence separation are liable to be frequent.

SULIT 12 SECTION D : LITERATURE COMPONENT QUESTION 32 a) concealed b) sunset / the sun going down/ dusk c) sad / miserable / upset / unhappy / frustrated / angry / troubled / disturbed DO NOT accept if students answer- guilty d) Example: L : spending time with family R : because I have been away from them for so long Accept any other possible answer.

SULIT 13 QUESTION 33: NOVEL Marks awarded are as follows: CONTENT : 10 marks LANGUAGE : 5 marks TOTAL 15 marks Please refer to the band descriptors below before deciding which band BEST FITS the mark for CONTENT and LANGUAGE. ING FOR CONTENT ING FOR LANGUAGE Score Band Descriptors Mark Use of Language 10-9 8-7 6-5 4-3 2-1 an always relevant response to the task almost always provide textual evidence (detailed and well developed) 5 maintains a consistent and convincing point of view candidates can tie the quality of the character with evidence mentioned a relevant response to the task usually provides textual evidence maintains a consistent point of view 4 doesn t convince (argument not as developed as 9/10 but with some development) more towards narration an intermittently relevant response to the task 3 provides little textual evidence point of view consistent in parts a response of very little relevance to the task 2 hardly any textual evidence point of view difficult to establish show barely any understanding of the requirement(s) of the task point of view not establish 1 accurate very well-organised easily understood largely accurate well-organised easily understood frequent errors but meaning not in doubt fairly organised can be understood some blurring in meaning poorly organised generally difficult to understand makes little or no sense at all/hard to follow lacks organisation difficult to understand Note: The mark 0 should only be awarded if there is no understanding of the requirement(s) of the task the response is in language other than English there is no response is awarded if candidate mentions something about the novel