6 tips for SQA exams and assessment: Esol

Each year, the Scottish Qualifications Authority produces course reports for individual subjects. In this ongoing series, we take one subject at a time and look at some key advice from 2024
4th October 2024, 3:41pm

Share

6 tips for SQA exams and assessment: Esol

/magazine/teaching-learning/secondary/6-tips-sqa-exams-and-assessment-esol
6 tips for SQA exams and assessment: ESOL

The first 2024 Scottish Qualifications Authority (SQA) course reports were published in September, including at National 5 and Higher.

The Esol Higher was taken by 1,080 students in 2024, making it the 30th most popular subject at that level.

Here are six key points to emerge from the Esol course reports at National 5 and Higher:

1. Punctuation

A lack of capital letters or inconsistently used full stops will “significantly reduce the available marks for a piece of writing” in the . Teachers should provide texts without punctuation and ask candidates to add it in; tasks like this will “focus attention on the difficulty of following the message when punctuation is missing” and on the importance of accurate punctation

2. Start early on key skills

For the speaking and listening performance at Higher, teachers should ensure that students are focusing on improving their speaking and interactive listening skills “from the beginning of the course”.

3. Show understanding

Higher students should be “careful not to copy long chunks from the text” when answering questions in the reading paper that ask for short answers, since “this suggests they have not understood the specific information the question asks for and therefore they will not gain the marks”.

4. Stick to word limit

At , students should be aware that, in the listening question paper of the exam, “they will not gain marks if they use more than the requested number of words”. Even if they include the correct information in an answer that goes over the word limit, “they will not receive any marks as it is not clear that they have fully understood the question”.

5. Vocabulary

Building “a depth of vocabulary across a wide range of topics” will help students to cope with the demands of the National 5 exam’s reading paper.

6. Recording conversations

Giving students opportunities to practise conversations at the right level of difficulty - and recording these conversations - is “an essential part” of preparations for the National 5 speaking and listening performance.

For the latest in Scottish education delivered directly to your inbox, sign up for Tes’ The Week in Scotland newsletter

Want to keep reading for free?

Register with Tes and you can read two free articles every month plus you'll have access to our range of award-winning newsletters.

Register with Tes and you can read two free articles every month plus you'll have access to our range of award-winning newsletters.

Keep reading with our special offer!

You’ve reached your limit of free articles this month.

/per month for 12 months
  • Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
  • Save your favourite articles and gift them to your colleagues
  • Exclusive subscriber-only stories
  • Over 200,000 archived articles
  • Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
  • Save your favourite articles and gift them to your colleagues
  • Exclusive subscriber-only stories
  • Over 200,000 archived articles
Recent
Most read
Most shared