The Leaving Cert English syllabus is strongly focused on getting students to think for themselves and to formulate their own opinions: “Students should be able to develop an awareness of their own responses, affective, imaginative, and intellectual, to aesthetic texts.” That means: don’t just learn a book of notes off by heart and think you’ll get an ‘A’ because you won’t.
By all means read a range of criticism and analysis of your literary studies but ultimately you need to listen to your instincts and formulate your own opinions. Do this well in advance of the exam day, as you won’t have much time for pondering your innermost feelings on Heaney in the exam hall.
2) Engage personally.
Don’t write about the poet or poetry in the
passive voice ie “Yeats is considered to be one of the twentieth century’s
greatest poets…’ All Leaving Cert poetry questions are addressed directly to
YOU and need to be answered by YOU, for example, ‘I found Yeats’ poetry about
ageing to be incredibly powerful’ or ‘Heaney’s poem The Call reminded me of when I used to make phone calls home during
my summer away…’ A personal example of how you connected with a poem will go a
long way towards showing the examiner that you have engaged with the poetry on
a personal level rather than simply learning off notes.
3) Talk the Talk
Familiarise
yourself with the technical terms of poetry and don’t be afraid to use them
e.g. stanza, metre, rhyme, metaphor, simile, onomatopoeia, alliteration,
assonance, tone, imagery etc. There are glossaries of terms in a lot of the
poetry textbooks or easily available online so there’s no excuse for pleading
ignorance.
Only use
technical terms, however, if they are relevant to the point you’re making or
back up your argument in some way.
Trying to show off knowledge of terms out of context will make you look
a little desperate. A simple rule is to
only talk about technique in the context of its effect on the reader.
4)
Don’t be a Plath Predictor.
In
2012 every student in the country (or so it seemed) was completely certain that
Sylvia Plath was going to be on the exam paper but when it came to that fateful
day in June the poetic minx wasn’t there.
You simply cannot count on the one poet you want to come up being there
on your exam paper. The State Examinations’ commission is deliberately trying
to make the exam less predictable so counting on patterns or predictions is
unreliable.
The
only surefire way of being prepared for June is by knowing five poets really
well. The manner of questioning has also
become a lot more specific over the past few years so, even if that poet you
love does come up, the question might not suit your knowledge of them. Be a good Girl or Boy Scout and ‘Be
Prepared’!
5) Don’t focus too much on
Biography
Us teachers
spend a lot of time filling students in on the context of a poem being studied;
the life of the poet, the history of the era etc. When it comes to the exam question,
however, you need to focus entirely on the poems and not on the exciting lives
of the poets who wrote them. It may
fascinate us that Yeats knew some of the 1916 Rising leaders or that Emily
Dickinson was a bit of a hermit but giving a heap of biographical detail
unrelated to the question will earn you zero marks. Biography can help us
understand the poems but the examiner is far more interested in what you made
of the poetry than how many facts about Kinsella you’ve memorized.
6) Read a wide variety of poetry to
prepare for the Unseen Poem
It’s only 20 marks but it might be the
20 marks that brings you up a grade so don’t neglect to prepare for the Unseen
Poem. Your textbook is likely to have an
Unseen poetry section with a variety of poems that you can practice on. If it doesn’t try exploring some of the
following websites: poemhunter.com, poetryoutloud.org and poetrybyheart.org.uk
Don’t worry
if you don’t understand every single word of a poem. It’s more important to practice describing
how a poem makes you feel or what images stay with you after you finish reading
it.
7) Don’t Paraphrase the Poem
The Chief
Examiner for English has criticized Leaving Cert English students for being
prone to paraphrasing or summarizing both the unseen poem and studied poetry: “While the majority of answers engaged with
the text in a positive way, some merely paraphrased the poem or offered
undeveloped responses.” At Higher
Level they expect deeper analysis, criticism and personal engagement. (Starting
to see a pattern here?)
8) Read the Question
You could be
a professor in Yeats’ studies at Yeats’ University, Yeats-ville and you could
still fail the poetry question unless you read the question on the exam paper
and then answer that question. You are
being assessed on how you answer that question so make that your focus.
9) Signpost your Answer
READ THE
QUESTION! Did I say that already? Read it and then focus all your energy on
answering that question and on showing the examiner that you are
answering it by signposting clearly.
Don’t signpost it like a botharín in West Kerry with the sign pointing
wonkily into a field. Signpost your
answer like you’re on a German Autobahn – clearly, logically and at regular
intervals. Mention some aspect of the question in every, single paragraph and
drill it in to that examiner that you are a poetry question answering machine.
My final
message is to enjoy poetry – love it.
99% of you will never study poetry in a formal context again so this is
it for you. These are the poets that will
stay with you for life. The lines that
you memorise will haunt you and at the most unexpected of moments you will find
words from old poems helping you describe experiences you cannot verbalise
yourself. Hazlitt said that ‘Poetry is all that is worth remembering in life’
and as the years roll by you’ll be shocked to realize that all that ‘practical’
stuff you learned in Maths and Biology will be long gone from your memory but
lines from Yeats and Heaney will be etched on your heart forever.
Ms E. Dobbyn
Ms E. Dobbyn
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