Guidance For Candidates On Individual Examinations
Guidance For Candidates On Individual Examinations
Guidance For Candidates On Individual Examinations
Introduction
This is an informal, spontaneous and natural conversation intended to put candidates at their ease.
In this conversation the examiner may make reference to the format and content of the examination,
the candidates current situation in education and/or work, the conditions under which the examination
is being held and so on. The candidate should aim to engage in a spontaneous exchange with the
examiner, rather than giving a prepared formal introduction.
At Initial and Foundation grades candidates are awarded marks for this task.
Candidates will normally sit during this task.
Interactive task
At Initial and some Foundation grades candidates either tell a story and/or describe an event or the
significance of an object or objects. The candidate may then be required to respond to questions about
this from the examiner.
From Grade 3 upwards candidates attempt to persuade the examiner to do something (e.g. give them
a job, lend them an object, go on holiday). At Grade 7 candidates engage in a radio/TV-type interview
with the examiner. At Grade 8 the candidate and examiner negotiate in order to resolve a conflict.
In all these tasks there is an element of role play. The examiner will represent someone such as a
friend, an employer or a potential supporter of a charity. In preparing these tasks, candidates should
give careful thought to who they wish the examiner to represent. So for example at Grade 5 (The
candidate will attempt to persuade a defined person to support a charity or good cause) the examiner
will ask Who do you wish me to represent? Possible responses might be: The President of the United
States or Madonna or my headmaster or a total stranger whom I have just walked up to in the
street. The choice will of course influence the way in which the candidate approaches the task and the
examiners responses.
The examiner will within reason accept any premise offered by the candidate and interact
accordingly. In some cases the examiner may sketch in an appropriate character but will not give
a complete acted performance of, for example, a young child.
The examiner will interact with the candidate throughout the task. It is quite possible that the
examiner will express reservations about ideas and suggestions offered by the candidate and/or
suggest alternative views or approaches. As part of the preparation for the examination the candidate
should consider possible objections and/or reservations and be prepared to deal with them. However,
candidates should not think in terms of winning or losing an argument, but rather in engaging
successfully in an interactive manner with the examiner.
Talk
Candidates give a talk on an appropriate subject, using visual and/or audio aids as appropriate. This is a
more formal scenario and candidates should stand to present their talks as if to an imaginary audience.
From Grade 7 upwards candidates must specify the audience to whom they are speaking. This could be
quite straightforward (e.g. my class at school) or more ambitious (e.g. a group of potential employees for
my firm, a group of one hundred senior policemen, the General Medical Council).
Candidates should project their voices to address an imagined audience, of which the examiner is but
one member.
These talks should avoid giving the impression of repeating an essay or information learned
parrot-fashion. The style of delivery should be fluent and suitably relaxed, demonstrating a
personal engagement with the (imaginary) audience and awareness of techniques that may be
employed to engage and sustain their interest.
While prompt cards may be used, the talk should not be written out in full nor read verbatim from a
script. These examinations do not assess the skill of reading aloud. Oral communication differs from
the language of written prose and candidates are expected to demonstrate their understanding of this.
For talks and presentations in which audio and/or visual aids are used, candidates should remember
that these are primarily an aid to good communication and never a replacement for personal skill.
Great thought should be given to the presentation, design and positioning of any visual aid in relation
to the speaker and listener(s). It is the candidates responsibility to set up and remove any such aids
within the time allowed for the examination, and to ensure that any computer or other technical
equipment is fully operational before the examination begins.
Summary task
In Grades 48 candidates are required to summarise an article read aloud by the examiner. The length
and subject matter of each article is listed in the grade requirements listed overleaf.
The examiner reads the article aloud at a moderate pace, during which candidates may take notes.
Candidates intending to take notes during this task must bring a notepad and pencil or pen into the
examination with them.
Candidates will be given a few moments to review their notes, and then be asked to give a verbal
summary of the content. At Grades 7 and 8 the summary is followed by a short discussion in which
candidates may be asked to express some views on the content.
One of the purposes of this task is to encourage careful and selective listening. Candidates should not
attempt to write down as if from dictation every word of the article and then repeat it back verbatim.
Rather they should listen carefully to the argument and/or views expressed in the article and note
down those details that appear to be relevant. In reviewing their notes, they may wish to alter the order
in which information is presented in the article. An effective verbal summary may be quite brief.
This is an informal task and candidates will normally be invited to sit before the examiner starts to read.