Monday 27 April 2020

Work for T, J and M

Text One 
My First Job adapted from a short story by David Lodge 


At the age of seventeen and three-quarters in 1952, I got my first job, selling newspapers and magazines off a little barrow on Waterloo Station. It was a temporary job, to fill in a few weeks between getting my A level results and going to university. The next Monday morning, I presented myself, promptly at 8.30, at the bookstall, a large green island in 4 the middle of Waterloo Station. Waves of office workers arriving on suburban trains surged across the station area as if pursued by demons, pausing only to snatch newspapers and magazines from the counters of the shop for the next stage of their journeys by tube or bus. Inside the shop, in a cramped and stuffy little office, seated at a desk heaped with invoices and ringed with the traces of innumerable mugs of tea, was the manager, Mr Hoskyns. 10

He asked me how much change I would give from a pound to a customer who had bought three items costing ninepence, two and sixpence, and a penny-halfpence1 , respectively. Suppressing an urge to remind him that I had just passed A level Mathswith-Statistics with flying colours, I patiently answered the question, with a speed that seemed to impress him. Then Mr Hoskyns took me outside to where two youths loitered 15 beside three mobile news-stands. These were green-painted wooden barrows, their steeply-angled sides fitted with racks for displaying magazines and newspapers.

 ‘Ray! Mitch! This ’ere’s the new boy. Show ’im the ropes,’ said Mr Hoskyns, and disappeared back into his office. 

The ‘ropes’ were simple enough. You loaded your barrow with newspapers and 20 magazines, and trundled off to platforms where trains were filling up prior to their departure. There were no kiosks on the actual platforms of Waterloo Station in those days, and we were meant to serve passengers who had passed through the ticket barriers without providing themselves with reading matter. The best trade came from the trains that connected at Southampton with the transatlantic liners whose passengers always 25 included Americans anxious to free their pockets of the heavy British change.

A Next in importance were the express trains to the holiday resorts and county towns of the south-west. The late-afternoon and early-evening commuting crowds, cramming themselves back into the same grimy carriages that had disgorged them in the morning, bought little except newspapers from us. Our job was simply to roam the station in 30 search of custom. When our stocks were low, we pushed our barrows back to the shop to replenish them. At the end of the day we took our money to be counted by Mr Hoskyns and entered in his ledger.

 ‘What’s the highest amount you’ve ever taken in one day?’ I asked, as we left the shop, pocketing our meagre wages, and prepared to join the home-going crowds. 35

 ‘Ray took eleven pounds nineteen ’n’ six1 one Friday,’ said Mitch. ‘That’s the all-time record.’

 I set myself to beat Ray’s record the following Friday. I still remember the shocked, unbelieving expressions on Ray’s and Mitch’s faces as Mr Hoskyns called out my total.

 ‘Twelve pounds exactly! Well done, lad! That’s the best ever, I do believe.’

 The following Friday was my last on the job. Aware of this fact, Ray and Mitch 40 competed fiercely to exceed my takings, while I responded eagerly to the challenge. Recklessly we raced across the station with our barrows, that day, to claim the most favourable pitch, beside the first-class compartments of departing express trains; jealously we eyed each other’s dwindling stocks. Like foreign street-traders we accosted astonished passengers and pestered them to buy our wares. 45

At the end of the day, Mitch had taken £15 8s 6d1 , Ray £20 1s 9d1 and myself £21 2s 6d1 . I felt suddenly sorry for them both. The future stretched out for me full of promise while for Ray and Mitch the future held only the prospect of pushing the barrows from platform to platform, until perhaps they graduated to serving behind the counters of the shop – or, more likely – became porters or cleaners. I regretted, now, that I had won the 50 competition for takings, and denied them the small satisfaction of beating me in that respect at least.

1 ninepence, two and sixpence, and a penny-halfpence 
eleven pounds nineteen ‘n’ six 
£15 8s 6d
£20 1s 9d
£21 2s 6d – 
all are examples of money used in England before 1971 


Text Two 
Should My Teen Be Working Part-Time? 
Will A Job Affect School Work? by Glynis Kozma 

It’s 7am and I am just about awake. It’s cold and not quite daylight outside. As I fill the kettle, I see the newspaper girl ride up to my neighbour’s, sometimes with a dog in tow. I know exactly how long she has to finish her round, walk to the bus stop for the school bus, and be wide awake for double maths. I don’t know how she does it. 

Across the country, boys and girls are delivering newspapers to earn themselves a fiver. 5 We’ve come a long way since they cleaned chimneys1 – but is it a good idea for your child to have any part-time job when they are in full-time education?

 My first Saturday job was in a fabric shop where I was expected to advise customers on the correct amount of material they’d need for a pair of curtains or a dress. To say I was out of my depth is an understatement. I had nightmares about women all over the north 10 wrestling with fabric that wasn’t fit for purpose. I suppose it was character building. 

Viki, a 38-year-old mum from Cornwall, recalls, ‘From age 15, I had three jobs: stacking loaves for a bakery in the morning, doing a newspaper round on Sundays and working at a pharmacy evenings, weekends and holidays. My mum was widowed young, had three girls and we needed the money to keep us going. I did well in my A levels and went to 15 
a good university.’ Even if finances are not an issue, Viki strongly believes in teenagers working and expects her own children to do so when they are older. 

But competition for university places is tougher than ever – A*s are the order of the day and GCSE grades count too. Is it worth your child potentially risking their chances by having a part-time job? 20

Why work? 

I doubt if there are many parents who don’t support the idea of their teenager earning money: they learn to save and budget; it encourages independence; it improves social skills; they learn about commitment and responsibility and they might make new friends.  Or better still, as my friend Helen told me, ‘My niece has just saved her waitressing wages 25 and bought her own iPod. ‘ 

So, which job? 

Which job, if any, is best? A paper round sounds tempting – hop on a bike, walk round a few streets before school, and earn anything from five to ten pounds. The reality is different, however. Your child might have to get up at 6am, lose an hour’s sleep, and on 30 winter mornings they will be out in the pitch dark, with all the safety issues that raises. 

• Be realistic. If your child is struggling to keep up with their school work, are they going to be able to cope with the demands of a job? 

• Every child is different. If your child is super-organised – bag packed the night before, homework ticked off, sports kit always ready and waiting – well, they will be fine. 35   But if, as in many households, the mornings are manic, do you need the pressure of a paper round as well? 

• Maybe consider other jobs which avoid the early morning start. Babysitting, dog walking, pet sitting, car washing, working in a stables, and gardening are options. When your children are over 16 they can join the shelf-stacking brigade 40 
in the supermarket. Some stores are happy for teenagers to work one day a week. Others require a full day and two evenings until 9pm or later. That’s a big commitment on top of GCSEs or A levels. Would your children cope? Would you cope? If you aren’t on a bus route you might have to taxi them there and back. 45

It’s great for teenagers to have part-time jobs but, speaking as a parent who has been there, never underestimate the impact it may have on your time, and on their studies. 

1 We’ve come a long way since they cleaned chimneys – in the nineteenth century in England, children were employed to clean chimneys.

Questions

SECTION A
The following questions are based on Text One and Text Two in the Extracts Booklet.
You should spend about 40 minutes answering the questions in this section.
Both texts are about part-time work. In some countries students do part-time work
while they are studying.
Read Text One in the Extracts Booklet, adapted from a short story called
‘My First Job’.

1 In the first paragraph, the writer describes Mr. Hoskyns’ office.
Give two details of his office.
 (Total for Question 1 = 2 marks)

2 In paragraph two, the writer seems to impress Mr. Hoskyns.
State one way he does this.
 (Total for Question 2 = 1 mark)

3 Using lines 20–33, in your own words, describe what the writer had to do each day.
(Total for Question 3 = 3 marks)

4 In lines 40–52, the writer describes his experiences on his last day at work. In your
own words, explain what his last day was like.
(Total for Question 4 = 4 marks)


Now read Text Two, ‘Should My Teen Be Working Part-Time? Will A Job
Affect Schoolwork?’

5 In paragraph one, the writer gives some of the problems the newspaper
girl experiences.
State two of them.
(Total for Question 5 = 2 marks)

6 Identify two part-time jobs which have been done by either the writer or Viki.
 (Total for Question 6 = 2 marks)


7 In lines 22–26, the writer makes some points about the benefits to teenagers of doing
part-time work.
In your own words, identify two of her points and give a quotation from the text to
support each point.

(i) Point

 Quotation

(ii) Point

 Quotation
(Total for Question 7 = 4 marks)

8 In lines 28–31, the writer describes what paper rounds involve.
In your own words, give two positive points and one negative point the writer
makes about paper rounds.

(Total for Question 8 = 3 marks)

9 Using lines 32–44, in your own words, explain what advice the writer offers on
part-time jobs.

(Total for Question 9 = 3 marks)


Refer to BOTH Text One AND Text Two to answer the following question.

10 Which text is more successful at presenting the writer’s experiences of part-time work?
You may choose either Text One or Text Two but you must explain your
choice carefully.

Give two reasons why you chose this text and one reason for not choosing the other
text. You may wish to comment on the writers’ language and techniques.
You should support your points with evidence from the texts.

(6)

Thursday 16 April 2020

Of Mice and Men - Settings Quiz


Answer the questions below on setting in Of Mice and Men.

Read Less
1.
Of Mice and Men is set in which country?
Mexico
Ireland
Australia
USA

2.
The events in the novel take place near Soledad. What is the meaning of this name?
Soldier
Solitude
Solvent
Solicitous

Soledad" is Spanish for "solitude" or "loneliness". Most of the characters are lonely, solitary figures, although temporarily in the company of one another. George and Lennie, who travel together, are unusual in their companionship

3.
When is the novel set?
1890s
1910s
1930s
1950s

The novel takes place during the Great Depression which followed the Wall Street Crash of 1929. The problems of itinerant workers in California predated the Great Depression, however





4.
Where does the novel open?
In the bunkhouse
In Soledad
By a pool in the Salinas River valley
In Weed

The pool is hidden from view, a peaceful place known to the itinerant workers who rest there on their way between one job and another



5.
The events on the ranch take place where?
The bunkhouse
The barn
The harness room
All of the above

Although the men work outdoors and often play horseshoes outdoors, the action takes place in various interiors. These temporary homes contrast sharply with the dream home conjured by George's stories of the future

6.
Which one of the following is NOT represented by the ranch of Lennie's and George's dreams?
Self-reliance
Freedom from work
Plenty
Comfort

Lennie and George expect to work hard on their own ranch, but always for themselves and always with the freedom to decide when and how they will work.

7.
After Lennie kills Curley's wife, the barn is described as very still, and the light very "soft". What is the effect of this description?
Life appears to pause for a moment in the face of death
It emphasises how the lives of everyone on the ranch will improve after Curley's wife's death
It emphasises the barn as a place of refuge for the men
It reminds the reader that the barn is a pleasant, homey place

An atmosphere of profound stillness reigns over the barn until disturbed by Candy's terrible discovery of the dead woman's body








8.
The bunkhouse is the only place where the men are able to take some refuge on the ranch. What effect do Curley and his wife have on this environment?
·        They disrupt and disturb
·        They bring entertainment
·        They create jealousies amongst the men
·        All of the above

Although the men only seem to kill time in the bunkhouse through engaging in activities such as playing cards, their shared quarters represent their temporary home. The semi-restful environment of the bunkhouse is frequently disrupted by both Curley and his wife

9.
In the final chapter of the novel, we find the following description of the green pool along the Salinas River: "A far rush of wind sounded and a gust drove through the tops of the trees like a wave. The sycamore leaves turned up their silver sides, the brown, dry leaves on the ground scudded a few feet. And row on row of tiny wind waves flowed up the pool's green surface. As quickly as it had come, the wind died, and the clearing was quiet again." What is significant about the wind in this passage?
·        It serves merely to attract attention to the stillness of the heron waiting to devour snakes
·        Its disruption of the deceptively peaceful environment foreshadows the dramatic events about to take place in this setting
·        It signifies the coming of spring and a rebirth for George
·        The wind is a realistic detail and is not significant in itself

The setting in the final chapter is the same as that of the opening chapter. The stillness and peace are disturbed by a wind more ominous than the "little wind" of the first chapter


10.
In the same passage, what might the dying of the wind represent? Choose the best answer.
·        Lennie's calm trust in George
·        Curley's determined pursuit of Lennie
·        Slim's reassurance to George that he has taken the best action
·        The speed with which life will appear to return to normal after the death of Lennie

In this final setting, surface appearances are deceptively calm, while life and death struggles carry on almost unseen (as that for example between the still heron and the unsuspecting snakes it waits patiently to devour)

An Inspector Calls Quiz


An Inspector Calls - Character Quiz

A - Read the extract and answer the following questions:


INSPECTOR
I’d like some information if you don't mind, Mr Birling. Two hours ago a young woman died in the infirmary. She'd been taken there this afternoon because she'd swallowed a lot of strong disinfectant. Burnt her inside out, of course.

ERIC (INVOLUNTARILY)
My God!

INSPECTOR
Yes, she was in great agony. They did everything they could for her at the infirmary, but she died. Suicide, of course.

BIRLING (RATHER IMPATIENTLY)
Yes, yes. Horrid business. But I don't understand why you should come here, Inspector -

INSPECTOR (CUTTING THROUGH, MASSIVELY)
I’ve been round to the room she had, and she'd left a letter there and a sort of diary. Like a lot of these young women who get into various kinds of trouble, she'd used more than one name. But her original name - her real name - was Eva Smith.

BIRLING (THOUGHTFULLY)
Eva Smith?

INSPECTOR
Do you remember her, Mr Birling?

BIRLING (SLOWLY)
No - I seem to remember hearing that name - Eva Smith - somewhere. But it doesn't convey anything to me. And I don't see where I come into this.

Act One

1How does the Inspector convey how awful the death of Eva Smith was?



  • He goes into gruesome detail about her death
  • He uses plain but emotive language to convey the horror of what happened to her
  • He looks hard at each character as he speaks to them


2 How is Mr Birling's arrogance shown in this extract?



  • He speaks slowly and thoughtfully
  • He remembers hearing the name, Eva Smith
  • He is impatient with the Inspector and tries to hurry him along


3 What does Eric's involuntary outburst reveal about him?



  • He has been drinking and cannot control himself
  • He is only a young man and so is shocked by such stories
  • He is a sensitive and emotional young man


B - Read the extract and answer the following questions:

MRS BIRLING
You're looking tired, dear. I think you ought to go to bed - and forget about this absurd business. You'll feel better in the morning.

SHEILA
Mother, I couldn't possibly go. Nothing could be worse for me. We've settled all that. I'm staying here until I know why that girl killed herself.

MRS BIRLING
Nothing but morbid curiosity.

SHEILA
No it isn't.

MRS BIRLING
Please don't contradict me like that. And in any case I don't suppose for a moment that we can understand why the girl committed suicide. Girls of that class--

SHEILA (URGENTLY, CUTTING IN)
Mother, don't - please don't. For your own sake, as well as ours, you mustn't--

MRS BIRLING (ANNOYED)
Mustn't - what? Really, Sheila!

SHEILA (SLOWLY, CAREFULLY NOW)
You mustn't try to build up a kind of wall between us and that girl. If you do, then the Inspector will just break it down. And it'll be all the worse when he does.

Act Two

4 How does Sheila show that she is assertive and insightful in this extract?



  • She realises that what she has done is wrong
  • She does not want to leave the room
  • She stands up to her mother and understands what the Inspector is doing


5 What themes does Sybil Birling highlight in this extract?



  • Gender and class
  • Social responsibility and age
  • Social responsibility and class


6 How are the Inspector's potential supernatural powers hinted at here?



  • Sheila has realised that he has a ghostly name
  • Sheila has realised that he knows what they are going to say so there is no use pretending
  • They are not sure if he is a real Inspector or not


C - Read the following extract and answer the following questions:

SHEILA
So nothing really happened. So there's nothing to be sorry for, nothing to learn. We can all go on behaving just as we did.

MRS BIRLING
Well, why shouldn't we?

SHEILA
I tell you - whoever that Inspector was, it was anything but a joke. You knew it then. You began to learn something. And now you've stopped. You're ready to go on in the same old way.

BIRLING (AMUSED)
And you're not, eh?

SHEILA
No, because I remember what he said, how he looked, and what he made me feel. Fire and blood and anguish. And it frightens me the way you talk, and I can't listen to any more of it.

ERIC
And I agree with Sheila. It frightens me too.

BIRLING
Well, go to bed then, and don't stand there being hysterical.

MRS BIRLING
They're over-tired. In the morning they'll be as amused as we are.

GERALD
Everything's all right now, Sheila. (Holds up the ring.) What about this ring?

Act Three

7 What does Priestley want the audience to think about Sybil Birling here?



  • She is a strong character
  • That she is a parent who disciplines her children
  • That she has learned nothing about her own behaviour


8 'Gerald lets himself down at the end of the play.' How does this extract back up the statement?



  • Gerald has gone out for some fresh air
  • He asks Sheila to reconsider their engagement
  • He has had an affair with Eva Smith



9 How do Sheila and Eric show they are different from their parents in this extract?



  • They are both frightened by what the Inspector has told them
  • They are emotional and tired by this point in the play
  • They are both sorry for what they have done




10 How does Mr Birling show that he has not changed his outlook in the extract?



  • He doesn't seem to care about the death of Eva Smith
  • He still treats his son and daughter as if they are children
  • He doesn't seem to listen to Sheila

Wednesday 15 April 2020

Edexcel iGCSE English Language B Section Texts Sample paper

SECTION A: READING 

Read the following texts carefully and then answer Section A in the Question Paper.

Text 1: 
First impressions – an Englishman in New York

In the passage, the writer describes his first experience of New York.

In May of 2011 I fulfilled one of my many travel goals by travelling to New York for the first time. With a place to stay (a friend’s apartment in Manhattan, no less) I was looking forward to seeing what the city was really like. Despite a rather rough flight over and the first signs of jetlag kicking in, my spirits were as high as the skyscrapers poked through the clouds as we descended.

The approach to JFK

The views when circling the city and coming in to land at JFK airport are spectacular; having flown over Long Island I could clearly make out several of the most famous buildings of central New York. As I was right at the back of the plane I decided not to stress about getting out quickly. I took my time and was the last to disembark which was a mistake as I was then at the back of the queue when we’d passed through the sweaty tunnels on the way to the immigration hall.
The immigration process I could see it was going to take time as the entire human content of our 747 was waiting in line in front of me. There was little to do except wait. We were at least entertained by a video selling the delights of New York on a continuous loop on one of several television screens. The actual passport check procedure was quick and painless, although I did find it unusual to be both photographed and finger-printed.
The view on the way from the airport Terminal 7, which British Airways use at JFK, is a little run-down but small and manageable. The first sight to greet me on exiting the baggage hall was of a Starbucks and a McDonald’s. Years ago this would have seemed like a ‘Welcome to the USA’ in itself but these days it could be practically anywhere in the world. With both signs and announcements warning not to use dodgy taxis but to go to the taxi office, I took the hint and found a classic yellow cab to take me into Manhattan. On the way I noticed how most Americans drive the same kind of cars as we do in Europe, although there were a few big Jeeps, a couple of stretch limousines and lots of those vans favoured by FBI agents running surveillance. But the real ‘wow’ moment was when I saw that iconic Manhattan skyline as we crossed the Queensboro Bridge with the sun setting. I had arrived…

The skyscrapers

I woke early the next day in my host’s apartment. The view from the living room was certainly not quite what I was used to, being 29 floors up as opposed to one. The Midtown location was amazing, right round the corner from the UN building and surrounded by even taller buildings. I think this is the first and most obvious sign of someone who has just arrived in New York – that they keep looking up all the time. Now it was time to check out the city in daylight – and with the benefit of a few hours sleep.

The feeling of being on a film set

This is a classic cliché that most people who have been to New York talk about – but like a lot of clichés it’s also true. The Big Apple is of course the backdrop to countless movies and TV shows and you’ll find something that you recognise or which looks familiar round most corners. You’ll see those yellow fire hydrants, newspaper vending machines and ‘Walk/Don’t Walk’ signs.

The sheer level of noise on the streets

When you walk along the busy streets of New York it’s like somebody turned the volume up. It’s also (to my ears) amazing how people just do not care who hears their conversations, whether in person or on the phone. You get a fascinating insight into the private lives of New Yorkers in the form of ten second clips as you pass and they move out of range.

The scale of the place 

Finally, it’s only when you get up high that you fully appreciate how mind-blowing New York architecture really is. Both the Empire State Building and the Rockefeller Center offer fantastic views and both are recommended. Next time I’m planning to save my money for a helicopter ride over the city; that would be the ultimate way to see New York. As my plane left the tarmac for my return flight I was already thinking about coming back. New York lived up to – and in fact exceeded my expectations – it should be on everyone’s list of places to visit.

Text 2: Notes from a Small Island 

In the passage, the writer describes the journey to Dover in England.

In the morning, I breakfasted early, settled my bill and stepped out to another promising day. Clutching an inadequate little map that came with my ferry ticket, I set off in search of the ferry terminal. On the map it looked to be quite nearby, practically in the town centre, but in reality it was a good 2 miles away at the far end of a bewildering wasteland of oil refineries, derelict factories, and acres of waste ground strewn with old girders and piles of jagged concrete. I found myself squeezing through holes in chainlink fences and picking my way between rusting railway carriages with broken windows. I don’t know how other people get to the ferry at Calais, but I had the distinct feeling that no one had ever done it this way before. And all the while I walked I was uncomfortably aware – actually in a whimpering panic – that the departure time was drawing nigh and that the ferry terminal, though always visible, never actually seemed to get any closer. Eventually, after dodging across a dual carriageway and clambering up an embankment, I arrived breathless and late and looking like someone who’d just survived a mining disaster, and was hustled aboard a shuttle bus by an officious woman.

I boarded the ship perspiring freely and with a certain disquiet. I’m not a good sailor, I freely admit. I get sick on a rowing boat. The boat was crammed with people, all of them English. I spent the first quarter of an hour wandering around wondering how they had got there without getting filthy, inserted myself briefly into the mayhem that was the duty-free shop and as quickly found my way out again, strolled around the cafeteria with a tray looking at the food, searched for a seat among hordes of dementedly lively children, and finally found my way out onto the breezy deck where people with blue lips and dancing hair were trying to convince themselves that because the sun was shining they couldn’t possibly be cold.

Before long, the White Cliffs of Dover rose from the sea and began creeping towards us and in no time at all, it seemed, we were sailing into Dover Harbour and clumsily nuzzling up to the dock. I was eager to see Dover again after all these years. I strode into the centre along Marine Parade and with a small cry of pleasure spied the shelter I’d slept in those many years ago. It was covered in about eleven more layers of bile-green paint but otherwise unchanged. The view out to sea was likewise unchanged, though the water was bluer and more glittery than when I’d last seen it. But everything else looked different. Where I recalled there being a row of elegant Georgian terraces there was now a vast and unbecoming brick apartment block. Townwall Street, the main through road to the west, was wider and more menacing with traffic than I remembered, and there was now a subway to the town centre, which itself was unrecognizable.

The main shopping street had been pedestrianised and the Market Square had been turned into a kind of piazza with show-off paving and the usual array of cast-iron trimmings. The whole town centre seemed uncomfortably squeezed by busy, wide roads of which I had no recollection and there was now a big tourist attraction called the White Cliffs Experience, where, I presume from the name, you can discover what it feels like to be 800-million-year-old chalk. I didn’t recognize anything. The trouble with English towns is that they are so indistinguishable one from another. They all have a Boots and W.H. Smith and Marks & Spencer1 . You could be anywhere really.

I plodded distractedly through the streets, unhappy that a place so central to my memories was so unfamiliar. Then, on my third grumbling pass through the town centre, on a lane I would swear I had never walked before, I came across the cinema, still recognizable despite refurbishment, and everything suddenly became clear. Now that I had a fixed point of reference, I knew precisely where I was. I strode purposefully 500 yards north and then west – now I could almost have done it blindfolded – and found myself square in front of Mrs Smith’s establishment. It was still a hotel and looked substantially unchanged, as far as I could remember, except for the addition of a parking area in the front garden and a plastic sign announcing colour TVs and en-suite bathrooms. I thought about knocking at the door, but there didn’t seem much point. The dragon-like Mrs Smith must be long since gone. She couldn’t possibly have coped with the modern age of British guesthouses, with their en-suite bathrooms and coffee-making facilities and people having pizzas delivered to their rooms.

Cheered by this thought, I strolled up the Folkestone Road to the station and bought a ticket for the next train to London.

1 Typical British shops

Questions

SECTION A: Reading

Answer ALL questions in this section.
You should spend 1 hour on this section.

Read Text 1 in the Extracts Booklet, from First Impressions – an Englishman in New York, which is about a man’s first experience of New York.

1 In lines 16–20 the writer describes the immigration process.
Identify one point the writer makes about the experience.

 (Total for Question 1 = 1 mark)

2 In lines 21–30, the writer leaves the airport and travels into the city.
State one thing the writer sees.

 (Total for Question 2 = 1 mark)


3 Explain how the writer presents his impressions of New York.
You should support your answer with close reference to the passage, including
brief quotations.
 (10)


Read Text 2 in the Extracts Booklet, from Notes from a Small Island, which is about a
journey the writer makes to Dover in England.

4 In lines 1–18, the writer describes his journey to the ferry terminal.
State one of the difficulties the writer experienced.

 (Total for Question 4 = 1 mark)

5 In lines 19–27, the writer describes the ferry crossing.
Name two things the writer finds unpleasant.
1
2
 (Total for Question 5 = 2 marks)

6 How does the writer describe his thoughts and feelings about his trip to Dover?
You should support your answer with close reference to the passage, including
brief quotations.
(10)

Refer to BOTH Text 1 AND Text 2 to answer the following question.

7 Compare how the writers of Text 1 and Text 2 convey their ideas and experiences. Support your answer with examples from both texts.
(15)


SECTION B:

Reading and Writing

Answer the question in this section.
You should spend 1 hour on this section.
Use ideas from BOTH Text 1 and Text 2 in the Extracts Booklet to answer this question.

8 A friend of yours is going abroad for the first time.
Write a letter to your friend explaining what it might be like.

You should include:
• what might be seen or experienced
• what might be enjoyable
• what might be disappointing.

Think carefully about the purpose of your letter and the audience for whom it is intended.

 (30)

SECTION C:

Writing

Answer ONE question from this section.

You should spend 1 hour on your chosen question.

Begin your answer on page 23.
Do not re-tell events from Text One or Text Two in the Extracts Booklet.
Write approximately 400 words on one of the following:

EITHER 9 ‘To travel is better than to arrive.’ Discuss.
 (Total for Question 9 = 30 marks)

OR

10 Write a story (true or imaginary) entitled ‘The Beginning’.
 (Total for Question 10 = 30 marks)

OR

11 Describe a place that has made an impression on you.
 (Total for Question 11 = 30 marks)

'I was a homeless asylum seeker; now I work and save £1,00 a month




'I was a homeless asylum seeker; now I work and save £1,000 a month'

Javad, 30, on how he received help with training through a crowdfunding website
Javad for How I Spend It in Money
 Javad spends about £200 on petrol and £150 on car insurance a month because a lot of his work as freelance digger operator is outside London.

Name: Javad
Age: 30
Income: About £28,000, or £120 a day
Job: Digger operator, Romford
I was forced to flee Iran when I converted to Christianity. I could have been imprisoned or killed because of my beliefs. I didn’t want to leave Iran – I’d graduated and was just starting to build a career as a survey engineer but there was no alternative. My uncle paid some smugglers to help me escape Iran and get to Europe. That journey took five months. It was a very difficult time. I remember walking for days. Other times, I travelled in the back of a lorry. I didn’t have any money or any belongings apart from the clothes on my back.
I arrived in the UK in the back of a lorry. When the driver saw me, he was so angry. I felt scared. The police turned up and arrested me. I was sent to a detention centre. There were so many different nationalities. I didn’t know what would happen to me but I felt safe at last; people were kind and provided me with food and a bed. Afterwards I was sent to a hotel in Glasgow to live with some other asylum seekers before being placed in Dagenham. Shortly afterwards the Home Office granted me leave to remain for five years. This led to me becoming homeless as I had to vacate the designated housing I’d been put up in. Fortunately I found a bed at a YMCA. That’s when my journey really began to change. I was referred to Renaisi, a social enterprise that helps disadvantaged people, and during their weekly visits they’d ask me about what I wanted to do with my life, what my goals were. I said I wanted to study civil engineering and return to the building trade. I really wanted a job as digger operator but knew I’d struggle to do the training as it was expensive and I would need to save for years.



Renaisi organised my CSCS card, which is required to work on construction sites, and by some miracle, my support worker referred me to Beam, a crowdfunding website that helps homeless people like me. I received £4,324 – more than enough for the £2,844 digger operator course and the £700 for the street works course. I couldn’t believe it.
For the past four months I’ve worked as a freelance digger operator. Recruitment agencies find me jobs which could last for a few days or a few weeks. Recently I was on a demolition job, which was exciting as I hadn’t done that before. I receive about £18 an hour, or about £120 a day. I know people work a lot harder for a lot less so I’m really happy with that rate.
I rent a room in a shared house with two other people for £500 a month including bills. A lot of my income goes on my car, which I need because of work. I often work outside of London so end up spending £200 a month on petrol. Car insurance costs £150 a month.



I spend £250 to £300 a month on food and drink. I do eat a lot. Every morning I spend about £8 on food and drinks. I normally stop off at a petrol station and pick up a coffee and croissant. If I’m working on a big site, I’ll buy lots of coffees and food like sandwiches, sausages and chips. But if I’m working at a small place with no canteen, I’ll bring in Iranian food cooked at home.
I’m good at saving. I’m single and don’t have many outgoings so I’m able to save about £1,000 a month. I’m saving to help me pursue my dreams. I want to go to university here in the UK. I’m constantly trying to learn – I spend about five hours a week studying. Over the past year I’ve studied for my maths and English language GCSEs plus English for speakers of other languages (Esol) courses. My aim is to build my savings so I can study civil engineering here and then later buy my own place to live. My dream is to set up my own construction firm.
I’m feeling really happy. When I was living at the YMCA I wasn’t happy, I felt depressed and isolated. I thought that was my future. But thank God so many opportunities have come through. I’ve been able to study, learn English, fit in to British life, save money, pay my taxes, and I have a home to live in. But most of all, I’m free.
For more information about Beam visit www.beam.org