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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: Identify and interpret
Identify and interpret explicit and implicit information and ideas. Select and synthesise evidence from different texts.
AO2: Explain, comment, analyse
Explain, comment on and analyse how writers use language and structure to achieve effects and influence readers, using relevant subject terminology.
AO3: Compare
Compare writers' ideas and perspectives, as well as how these are conveyed, across two or more texts.
AO4: Evaluate critically
Evaluate texts critically and support this with appropriate textual references.
AO5: Communicate clearly
Communicate clearly, effectively and imaginatively, selecting and adapting tone, style and register for different forms, purposes and audiences. Organise information and ideas, using structural and grammatical features to support coherence and cohesion of texts.
AO6: Technical accuracy
Use a range of vocabulary and sentence structures for clarity, purpose and effect, with accurate spelling and punctuation.
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.
Spend 5 minutes planning your structure. A clear beginning, middle, and end with varied paragraph lengths signals AO5 control to examiners.
Mix short, punchy sentences with longer, complex ones. Start sentences in different ways — with adverbs, prepositions, or subordinate clauses. This directly targets AO6.
In creative writing, use sensory detail and figurative language rather than stating emotions directly. "Her hands trembled" is stronger than "She was scared."
In Paper 2, identify your audience and purpose first. A letter to a headteacher needs a different register than an article for a teen magazine.
Reserve 5 minutes at the end to check spelling, punctuation, and grammar. Accurate SPaG across AO6 can be the difference between grade boundaries.