The Assessment and Qualifications Alliance (the AQA) has produced Anthologies for GCSE English and English Literature studied in English schools. This follows on from AQA's predecessor organisations; Northern Examinations and Assessment Board (NEAB) and Southern Examining Group (SEG).
2000 Anthology
editThe 2000 AQA anthology covered four sections: poets in the English Literary Heritage, poems from other cultures and traditions, 20th-century prose, and 20th- or pre-20th-century poetry.[1]
English: Poets in the English Literary Heritage
editSimon Armitage
edit- "I Am Very Bothered When I Think"
- "Poem"
- "It Ain't What You Do, It's What It Does To You"
- "Cataract Operation"
- "About His Person"
Ted Hughes
edit- "Works and Play"
- "The Warm and the Cold"
- "The Tractor"
- "Wind"
- "Hawk Roosting"
Carol Ann Duffy
edit- "War Photographer"
- "Valentine"
- "Stealing"
- "Before You Were Mine"
- "In Mrs. Tilscher's Class"
English: Poems from other cultures and traditions
edit- Sujata Bhatt: "Search for My Tongue"
- Tom Leonard: "Unrelated Incidents"
- John Agard: "Half Caste"
- Imtiaz Dharker: "Blessing"
- Moniza Alvi: "Presents from my 'Aunts' in Pakistan"
- Edward Kamau Brathwaite: "Ogun"
- Fiona Farrell: "Passengers - Charlotte O'Neil's Song"
- Arun Kolatkar: "An Old Woman"
- Grace Nichols: "Hurricane Hits England"
- Tatamkhulu Afrika: "Nothing's Changed"[2]
English literature: 20th-century prose
edit- Penelope Lively: "The Darkness Out There"
- Sylvia Plath: "Superman and Paula Brown's New Snowsuit"
- Doris Lessing: "Flight"
- Michèle Roberts: "Your Shoes"
English literature: 20th- or pre-20th-century poetry
edit- "Hearts and Partners"
- "That Old Rope"
- "When the Going Gets Tough"[3]
2004 Anthology
editThe 2004 AQA Anthology was a collection of poems and short texts. The anthology was split into several sections covering poems from other cultures, the poetry of Seamus Heaney,[4] Gillian Clarke, Carol Ann Duffy and Simon Armitage, and a bank of pre-1914 poems. There was also a section of prose pieces, which could have been studied in schools which had chosen not to study a separate set text.
English: Poems from Other Cultures
editGCSE English students studied all of the poems in either cluster and answered a question on them in Section A of Paper 2. In 2005, Andrew Cunningham, an English teacher at Charterhouse School complained in the Telegraph that the inclusion of the poems represented an "obsession with multi-culturalism".[5]
Cluster 1
edit- Edward Kamau Brathwaite: "Limbo"
- Tatamkhulu Afrika: "Nothing's Changed"
- Grace Nichols: "Island Man"
- Imtiaz Dharker: "Blessing"
- Lawrence Ferlinghetti: "Two Scavengers in a Truck, Two Beautiful People In A Mercedes"
- Nissim Ezekiel: "Night of the Scorpion"
- Chinua Achebe: "Vultures"
- Denise Levertov: "What Were They Like?"
Cluster 2
edit- Sujata Bhatt: "Search for My Tongue"
- Tom Leonard: "Unrelated Incidents"
- John Agard: "Half Caste"
- Derek Walcott: "Love After Love"
- Imtiaz Dharker: "This Room"
- Niyi Osundare: "Not My Business"
- Moniza Alvi: "Presents from my 'Aunts' in Pakistan"
- Grace Nichols: "Hurricane Hits England"
English Literature: Poetry
editSeamus Heaney
edit- "Storm on the Island"
- "Perch"
- "Blackberry-Picking"
- "Death of a Naturalist"
- "Digging"
- "Mid-Term Break"
- "Follower"
- "At a Potato Digging"
Gillian Clarke
edit- "Catrin"
- "Baby-sitting"
- "Mali"
- "A Difficult Birth, Easter 1998"
- "The Field Mouse"
- "October"
- "On The Train"
- "Cold Knap Lake"
Carol Ann Duffy
edit- "Havisham"
- "Elvis's Twin Sister"
- "Anne Hathaway"
- "Salome"
- "We Remember Your Childhood Well"
- "Before You Were Mine"
"Education for Leisure"- removed from Anthology- "Stealing"
Simon Armitage
edit- from Book of Matches, “Mother, any distance greater than a single span”
- from Book of Matches, “My father thought it...”
- "Homecoming"
- "November"
- "Kid"
- from Book of Matches, “Those bastards in their mansions”
- from Book of Matches, “I've made out a will; I'm leaving myself”
- "Hitcher"
- "The Manhunt"
Pre-1914 Poetry Bank
edit- Ben Jonson: "On My First Sonne"
- William Butler Yeats: "The Song of the Old Mother"
- William Wordsworth: "The Affliction of Margaret"
- William Blake: "The Little Boy Lost" and "The Little Boy Found"
- Charles Tichborne: "Tichborne's Elegy"
- Thomas Hardy: "The Man He Killed"
- Walt Whitman: "Patrolling Barnegat"
- William Shakespeare: Sonnet 130 - "My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun"
- Robert Browning: "My Last Duchess"
- Robert Browning: "The Laboratory"
- Alfred Tennyson: "Ulysses"
- Oliver Goldsmith: "The Village Schoolmaster"
- Alfred Tennyson: "The Eagle"
- John Clare: Sonnet - “I love to see the summer...”
- Percy Bysshe Shelley: "Ozymandias"
English Literature: Prose
edit- Doris Lessing: "Flight"
- Sylvia Plath: "Superman and Paula Brown's New Snowsuit"
- Michèle Roberts: "Your Shoes"
- Joyce Cary: "Growing Up"
- Ernest Hemingway: "The End of Something"
- Graham Swift: "Chemistry"
- Leslie Norris: "Snowdrops"
2008 Reissued Anthology
editIn 2008 the Anthology was reissued without "Education for Leisure" following complaints about its reference to knives and concerns about rising levels of knife crime in schools.[6] In the new Anthology the poem was replaced with a "This page is left intentionally blank" notice. After removing "Education for Leisure" from the anthology the exam board was accused of censorship.[7]
2010 Anthology
editThe fifth anthology was produced for first teaching in 2010.[8]
The anthology includes poems under the heading "Moon on the Tides" and prose under the heading "Sunlight on the Grass".[9] Some of the poems are by authors of poems in the first anthology such as Agard and Armitage.
The poetry anthology was divided into four clusters, titled "Character and voice",[10] "Place",[11] "Conflict",[12] and "Relationships".[13]
Poems
editCharacter and voice
edit- 'The Clown Punk' by Simon Armitage
- 'Checking Out Me History' by John Agard
- 'Horse Whisperer' by Andrew Forster
- 'Medusa' by Carol Ann Duffy
- 'Singh Song!' by Daljit Nagra
- 'Brendon Gallacher' by Jackie Kay
- 'Give' by Simon Armitage
- 'Les Grands Seigneurs' by Dorothy Molloy
- 'Ozymandias' by Percy Bysshe Shelley
- 'My Last Duchess' by Robert Browning
- 'The River God' by Stevie Smith
- 'The Hunchback in the Park' by Dylan Thomas
- 'The Ruined Maid' by Thomas Hardy
- 'Casehistory: Alison (head injury)' by U. A. Fanthorpe
- 'On a Portrait of a Deaf Man' by John Betjeman
Place
edit- 'The Blackbird of Glanmore' by Seamus Heaney
- 'A Vision' by Simon Armitage
- 'The Moment' by Margaret Atwood
- 'Cold Knap Lake' by Gillian Clarke
- 'Price We Pay for the Sun' by Grace Nichols
- 'Neighbours' by Gillian Clarke
- 'Crossing the Loch' by Kathleen Jamie
- 'Hard Water' by Jean Sprackland
- 'London' by William Blake
- 'The Prelude' extract by William Wordsworth
- 'The Wild Swans at Coole' by W. B. Yeats
- 'Spellbound' by Emily Brontë
- 'Below the Green Corrie' by Norman MacCaig
- 'Storm in the Black Forest' by D. H. Lawrence
- 'Wind' by Ted Hughes
Conflict
edit- 'Flag' by John Agard
- 'Out of the Blue' extract by Simon Armitage
- 'Mametz Wood' by Owen Sheers
- 'The Yellow Palm' by Robert Minhinnick
- 'The Right Word' by Imtiaz Dharker
- 'At the Border' by Choman Hardi
- 'Belfast Confetti' by Ciaran Carson
- 'Poppies' by Jane Weir
- 'Futility' by Wilfred Owen
- 'The Charge of the Light Brigade' by Alfred Lord Tennyson
- 'Bayonet Charge' by Ted Hughes
- 'The Falling Leaves' by Margaret Postgate Cole
- 'Come On, Come Back' by Stevie Smith
- 'next to of course god america i' by E. E. Cummings
- 'Hawk Roosting' by Ted Hughes
Relationships
edit- 'The Manhunt' by Simon Armitage
- 'Hour' by Carol Ann Duffy
- 'In Paris With You' by James Fenton
- 'Quickdraw' by Carol Ann Duffy
- 'Ghazal' by Mimi Khalvati
- 'Brothers' by Andrew Forster
- 'Praise Song for My Mother' by Grace Nichols
- 'Harmonium' by Simon Armitage
- Sonnet 116 by William Shakespeare
- Sonnet 43 by Elizabeth Barrett Browning
- 'To His Coy Mistress' by Andrew Marvell
- 'The Farmer's Bride' by Charlotte Mew
- 'Sister Maude' by Christina Rossetti
- 'Nettles' by Vernon Scannell
- 'Born Yesterday' by Philip Larkin
Modern Prose
edit- 'My Polish Teacher's Tie' by Helen Dunmore
- 'When the Wasps Drowned' by Clare Wigfall
- 'Compass and Torch' by Elizabeth Baines
- 'On Seeing the 100% Perfect Girl One Beautiful April Morning' by Haruki Murakami
- 'The Darkness Out There' by Penelope Lively
- 'Anil' by Ridjal Noor
- 'Something Old, Something New' by Leila Aboulela
2015 Anthology
editThe newest edition of the anthology was produced for first teaching in 2015,[14][15] in line with the reformed GCSE English Literature qualification. The anthology includes poems under the title "Poems Past and Present", and prose under the title "Telling Tales".
The poetry anthology is divided into two clusters - "Love and Relationships" and "Power and Conflict".
Poems Past and Present
editLove and Relationships
edit- 'When We Two Parted' by Lord Byron
- 'Love's Philosophy' by Percy Bysshe Shelley
- 'Porphyria's Lover' by Robert Browning
- 'Sonnet 29 - 'I think of thee!'' by Elizabeth Barrett Browning
- 'Neutral Tones' by Thomas Hardy
- 'Letters from Yorkshire' by Maura Dooley
- 'The Farmer's Bride' by Charlotte Mew
- 'Walking Away' by Cecil Day-Lewis
- 'Eden Rock' by Charles Causley
- 'Follower' by Seamus Heaney
- 'Mother, any distance' by Simon Armitage
- 'Before You Were Mine' by Carol Ann Duffy
- 'Winter Swans' by Owen Sheers
- 'Singh Song!' by Daljit Nagra
- 'Climbing My Grandfather' by Andrew Waterhouse
Power and Conflict
edit- 'Ozymandias' by Percy Bysshe Shelley
- 'London' by William Blake
- 'The Prelude' extract by William Wordsworth
- 'My Last Duchess' by Robert Browning
- 'The Charge of the Light Brigade' by Alfred Lord Tennyson
- 'Exposure' by Wilfred Owen
- 'Storm on the Island' by Seamus Heaney
- 'Bayonet Charge' by Ted Hughes
- 'Remains' by Simon Armitage
- 'Poppies' by Jane Weir
- 'War Photographer' by Carol Ann Duffy
- 'Tissue' by Imtiaz Dharker
- 'The Emigrée' by Carol Rumens
- 'Checking Out Me History' by John Agard
- 'Kamikaze' by Beatrice Garland
Telling Tales
edit- 'Chemistry' by Graham Swift
- 'Odour of Chrysanthemums' by DH Lawrence
- 'My Polish Teacher's Tie' by Helen Dunmore
- 'Korea' by John McGahern
- 'A Family Supper' by Kazuo Ishiguro
- 'Invisible Mass of the Back Row' by Claudette Williams
- 'The Darkness Out There' by Penelope Lively
See also
edit- Poetry Live, events where poets perform their poetry for school children
References
edit- ^ ASIN 0435101315, NEAB Anthology: English and English Literature 2000/2001 GCSE (2000)
- ^ Moore, Andrew; Justice, Sue (2000). "The NEAB/AQA English Anthology". Universal Teacher. Archived from the original on 2020-11-05. Retrieved 2021-02-26.
- ^ Moore, Andrew (2001). "Teachers' Virtual English Department". Universal Teacher. Archived from the original on 2020-01-13. Retrieved 2021-02-26.
- ^ "Teachit.co.uk". Archived from the original on 2011-08-18. Retrieved 2009-08-20.
- ^ Cunningham, Andrew (2005-12-17). "No prayers nor bells for the finest". ISSN 0307-1235. Archived from the original on 2020-11-17. Retrieved 2019-12-22.
- ^ The Guardian (4 September 2008). "Top exam board asks schools to destroy book containing knife poem". Archived from the original on 18 January 2013. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
- ^ Curtis, Polly; editor, education (2008-09-03). "Top exam board asks schools to destroy book containing knife poem". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Archived from the original on 2013-01-18. Retrieved 2019-12-22.
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has generic name (help) - ^ "AQA - Anthology Zone - Home page". 2010-03-30. Archived from the original on 30 March 2010. Retrieved 2022-06-28.
- ^ AQA, https://anthology.aqa.org.uk/ Archived 2017-06-03 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "AQA - Anthology Zone - Character and voice". 2010-03-31. Archived from the original on 31 March 2010. Retrieved 2022-06-28.
- ^ "AQA - Anthology Zone - Place". 2010-03-31. Archived from the original on 31 March 2010. Retrieved 2022-06-28.
- ^ "AQA - Anthology Zone - Conflict". 2010-03-31. Archived from the original on 31 March 2010. Retrieved 2022-06-28.
- ^ "AQA - Anthology Zone - Relationships". 2010-03-31. Archived from the original on 31 March 2010. Retrieved 2022-06-28.
- ^ "Anthology: AQA Anthology of Poetry - poems past and present". www.aqa.org.uk. Retrieved 2022-06-28.
- ^ "Anthology: AQA Anthology - telling tales". www.aqa.org.uk. Retrieved 2022-06-28.