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A subject-specific guide to implementing AI marking and feedback for AQA English Language, fully aligned with Department for Education (DfE) safety and ethical standards.
ReMarkAble AI is calibrated specifically for the AQA mark scheme. Our agents are trained to recognize the nuanced requirements of this subject, ensuring that feedback is both accurate and exam-board specific.
AO1: Apply language concepts and methods
Apply appropriate methods of language analysis, using associated terminology and coherent written expression. Students must demonstrate command of linguistic frameworks — lexis, semantics, grammar, pragmatics, phonology, and discourse — selecting and applying them with precision.
AO2: Demonstrate critical understanding
Demonstrate critical understanding of concepts and issues relevant to language use. This includes engaging with debates around language change, language and power, language and gender, and language acquisition, showing awareness of competing theoretical positions.
AO3: Analyse contextual factors
Analyse and evaluate how contextual factors and language features are associated with the construction of meaning. Students must consider how mode, field, tenor, audience, purpose, and socio-historical context shape language choices and their effects.
AO4: Explore connections across texts
Explore connections across texts, informed by linguistic concepts and methods. This requires comparative analysis of language data — identifying patterns, contrasts, and relationships between texts from different periods, modes, or genres.
AO5: Demonstrate expertise in writing
Demonstrate expertise and creativity in the use of English to communicate in different ways. This covers both original writing (creative and persuasive) and academic writing, requiring students to craft prose that is stylistically controlled, purposeful, and audience-aware.
For English Language, AI feedback should be used as a draft. Teachers should verify that the AI has correctly interpreted complex analytical points or context-specific references before finalising.
Our system detects "off-task" or potentially AI-generated submissions to protect the integrity of the assessment process in English Language.
Do not just identify features — analyse them through specific frameworks. Instead of noting "the writer uses short sentences," explain how the syntactic simplicity creates a declarative, authoritative tenor that positions the reader as passive recipient. Name the framework you are using.
AO1 rewards fluent integration of terminology, not lists of feature-spotted terms. Write "the pragmatic implicature of the hedging device suggests..." rather than "there is a hedge, which is a pragmatic feature." Let the terminology serve the analysis, not the other way round.
AO3 requires you to connect language features to their contextual conditions. Always consider mode (spoken vs. written), field (subject matter), tenor (relationship between participants), and the broader socio-cultural or historical moment in which the text was produced.
A-Level responses should read as structured arguments, not feature-spotting lists. Open with a clear thesis, develop paragraphs around analytical points (not AO-by-AO), use topic sentences, and build towards a conclusion that synthesises your analysis.
For AO2, show awareness that language issues are contested. When discussing language and gender, for example, acknowledge the limitations of deficit, dominance, and difference models rather than presenting one theory as absolute truth.