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ANCIENT-HISTORY-H407 · Cambridge OCR A Level

ANCIENT-HISTORY-H407/13

Drama and poetry pre-1900 (Paper 1)

Ancient History - H407 · 2024 · Variant 3

Relative difficulty

Standard

Analysis source: OCR

Analysis aligned to the official syllabus and assessment design.

Relative difficulty

Cohort performance

Session statistics from official examination reports

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Key examiner messages

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Question difficulty map

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Assessment objectives

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Method marks watchlist

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Recurring mistakes across years

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Question choice intelligence

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Level exemplars

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Grade & admission context

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Deep insights

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Command word playbook

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Time traps

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Syllabus traceability

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MCQ trap analytics

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Topic heatmap across years

Mark concentration by topic and exam year for this subject

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Difficulty trend

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Paper comparison

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Marks you can still earn

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Self-diagnostic checklist

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Teacher briefing pack

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Exam tips

Paper format

Duration
2h 30min
Total marks
60
Weighting
40%
Question types
Passage close analysis, Single-text essay, Comparative essay
  • For instance, in Paper 1 (H472/01) Section 1, Part (a), you are asked to analyze a specific passage from your studied Shakespeare play. Here, AO2 reigns supreme, accounting for a massive 75% of the marks (with AO1 making up the remaining 25%). Your sole focus must be on the microscopic mechanics of the text. You are not writing a general character essay; you are analyzing meter variation, shifts between blank verse and prose, stichomythia, syntactic structures, and phonological effects. If you begin summarizing what happens next in the play, you are hemorrhaging marks. Conversely, in Part (b), the focus pivots dramatically: AO1 and AO5 share a 50/50 split. Here, your close-up stylistic analysis steps aside to make room for a debate about interpretations, staging choices, and the play's overarching themes.
  • In Paper 1 Section 2 (Pre-1900 Drama and Poetry) and Paper 2 Section 2 (Comparative Essay), your grade relies on your ability to synthesize texts. A common failure mode is writing a "block" essay (where Text A is discussed for three pages, followed by Text B for three pages, with a brief comparison at the end). This completely fails AO4 (Connections across texts), which makes up 25% of these questions.

Common mistakes

  • .5Paper 1 Section 2: Comparative Drama and Poetry · 7 marks at stake

    Failing to balance comparative essays, resulting in highly lopsided responses that heavily favor drama over poetry (or vice versa) in Paper 1 Section 2.

    How to avoid: Treat both texts in dialogue. Ensure each body paragraph transitions actively between the pre-1900 drama text and the pre-1900 poetry text.

Analysis is paraphrased for study purposes. Always verify against the official examiner report and mark scheme.

ANCIENT-HISTORY-H407/13 — Cambridge OCR A Level Ancient History - H407 (2024) | Revui