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A subject-specific guide to implementing AI marking and feedback for OCR English Literature, fully aligned with Department for Education (DfE) safety and ethical standards.
ReMarkAble AI is calibrated specifically for the OCR 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: Read, understand and respond
Read, understand and respond to texts. Maintain a critical style and develop an informed personal response, using textual references including quotations to support and illustrate interpretations.
AO2: Analyse language, form and structure
Analyse the language, form and structure used by a writer to create meanings and effects, using relevant subject terminology where appropriate.
AO3: Relationship between texts and contexts
Show understanding of the relationships between texts and the contexts in which they were written, including social, historical, and literary contexts.
AO4: Use vocabulary and sentence structures
Use a range of vocabulary and sentence structures for clarity, purpose and effect, with accurate spelling and punctuation. Assessed in the extended writing questions.
For English Literature, 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 Literature.
Component 01 requires you to engage with how a 19th-century text reflects its literary and historical heritage — this is distinct from simply describing the context. Ask: what traditions, conventions, or social attitudes does this text embody or challenge? This line of thinking directly targets AO3 in OCR's specific sense.
OCR's AO2 rewards analysis of how writers construct meaning through language, form, and structure. A top-band response does not retell what happens — it examines why a writer chooses a specific word, sentence structure, or narrative technique, and what effect that creates for the reader.
OCR explicitly assesses "an informed personal response." This means taking a position and sustaining it — not hedging every sentence. Use phrases like "the most striking aspect of Golding's technique here is..." to show you are evaluating, not just explaining. Quotations must support your argument, not lead it.
In Component 02 poetry comparison questions, link poems through shared concerns rather than structural similarities alone. OCR rewards comparisons that reveal something meaningful about both poems — consider how different poets at different times explore the same theme through different poetic choices, and what that contrast reveals.
AO3 in OCR English Literature rewards contextual knowledge that directly illuminates the text. Avoid bolted-on context paragraphs — instead, weave social or historical awareness into your textual analysis: "Dickens' characterisation of Magwitch as a terrifying convict reflects Victorian anxieties about the criminal classes, yet his redemptive arc challenges readers to question those assumptions."