What the text is about
- its subject matter
You need to show
you have understood the text's subject matter and content.
You will also
need to be able to locate details and discuss aspects of these (this
requires an understanding of the text's big picture).
Slide 2
Who the text has been written for
- its audience
This is very
important: you need to consider audience with care as it will help you
recognise features of style that you can discuss in your answers.
Writing about audience means
recognising and showing how a text has been created to suit a particular
kind of reader.
When a writer
is asked to write a text, one of the key questions asked is who the text
is aimed at. With knowledge of the text's audience, only then will the
writer be able to consider the most suitable style of
writing to choose - its content, its vocabulary choices and its tone.
Slide 3
Why the text was written
- its writer's purpose
This means
recognising the messages contained
within the text, both on the surface and - although this is not so
important compared to literary texts - if there are different layers of meaning.
Slide 4
How the text has been made to 'work' for its particular audience
and purpose
- the writer's methods and their effects
You need to be
able to identify the methods a writer
has used to create the important elements within the text. This includes
considering aspects of the text's genre, style, language and structure.
You will also
need to be able to discuss the effects of these
methods on the audience - and, of course, the purpose behind
these effects.
It most
especially means looking closely at the language and layout used in the
text.
How is language
being used - what effects are being created and for what purpose?
How is the
layout helping the text achieve its purpose for its audience?