(Syllabus) CBSE Class 10th - English "Communicative" : Year 2013
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Syllabus CBSE Class 10th
English Communicative
The total weightage assigned to Summative Assessment (SA I&II) is 60%. The total weightage assigned to Formative Assessment (FA1, 2, 3, &4) is 40%. Out of the 40% assigned to Formative Assessment, 10% weightage is assigned to conversation skills (5% each in Term I&II) and 10% weightage to the Reading Project (at least 1 Book is to be read in each term and the Project will carry a weightage of 5% in each term) 2. The Summative Assessment I and Summative Assessment II is for ninety marks each. The weighatge assigned to Summative Assessment I is 30% and the weightage assigned to Summative Assessment II is 30%.
SECTION A: READING : 20 Marks
Qs 1-3 The reading section will have three unseen texts as shown below:
The total length of the three passages will be between 850 - 1100 words. There will be at least 5 marks for assessing vocabulary. All questions on vocabulary will not be from the same passage. Care should be taken to cover all the three text types, ie factual, discursive and literary while selecting the passages. A poem may or may not be used as one of the three texts. Text I will be either factual or discursive. Apart from a poem, prose literary texts may include excerpts from authentic literature such as short story, autobiography, biography, travelogue, novel etc.
Whenever a poem or a prose literary text is used, the other two texts should be discursive and factual, thus covering all the three text types.
SECTION B: WRITING : 25 Marks
The writing section comprises four writing tasks as indicated below.
Q. 4 A short composition of upto 50 words in the form of a Notice, Message
or Diary Entry. : 4 Marks
Questions 4 & 5 will assess students' skill of expressing ideas in clear and
grammatically correct English, presenting ideas coherently and concisely,
writing a clear description, a clear account of events, expanding notes into a
piece of writing, transcoding information from one form to another or using a
style appropriate for a notice, message or diary entry.
Q. 5 A composition of upto 100 words in the form of Biographical sketch, Data Interpretation, Dialogue writing or Description (people, Objects or Events) : 6 Mark
Q. 6 An extended writing task of length upto 120 words in the form of a Formal/Informal Letter or Email. The long piece of writing will assess the use of appropriate style, language, content and expression.: 7 Marks
Q. 7 An extended writing task of length upto 150 words in the form of an Article, Speech, Report or Story. : 8 Marks
Students' skill in expressing ideas in clear and grammatically correct English, planning, organising an presenting ideas coherently by introducing, developing and concluding a topic, comparing and contrasting ideas and arriving at a conclusion, presenting an argument with supporting examples, using an appropriate style and format and expanding notes into longer pieces of writing and creative expression of ideas will be assessed.
Qs 6 & 7 will make use of a visual/ verbal stimulus.
Important Note on Format and Word Limit:
- Format will not carry any separate marks and in most cases, format will be given in the questions paper.
- The word limit given is the suggested minimum word limit. No candidate may be penalised for writing more or less than the suggested word limit provided the topic is covered and adequately. Stress should be on content, expression, coherence and relevance of the content presented.
SECTION C: GRAMMAR : 20 Marks
This section will assess Grammar items in context for 20 Marks. It will carry 5 questionsof 4 marks each.
Questions 8 & 9 will have Multiple Choice Questions. The test types for MCQs
include the following:
• Gap filling
• Sentence completion
• Dialogue completion
Questions 10,11 & 12 will be based on response supplied by students (Supply
Type). The test types will include the following:
• Sentence reordering
• Editing
• Omission
• Sentence transformation
Questions 8 to 12 will test grammar items which have been dealt with in class IX. Different structures such as verb forms, sentence structure, connectors, determiners, pronouns, prepositions, clauses, phrases etc., can be tested through formative assessment over a period of time. As far as the summative assessment is concerned, it will recycle grammar items learnt over a period of time and will test them in context. Tests types used will include gap-filling, cloze (gap filling exercise with blanks at regular intervals), sentence completion, recording word groups into sentences, editing, dialogue-completion and sentence-transformation.
The grammar syllabus will be sampled each year, with marks allotted for:
- Verbs forms
- Sentence structures
- Other areas
Note: Jumbled words in reordering exercise to test syntax will involve sentences in a context. Each sentence will be split into sense groups (not necessarily into single words) and jumbled up.
Section D: LITERATURE : 25 Marks
Q 13 will have the following arrangement:
13 A: An extract from poetry with three Multiple Choice Questions based on
reference to context. (Word limit : 20-30 words) 3 Marks
13 B: An extract from a short story with three reference to context questions
requiring the students to supply the answers. (Word limit : 20-30 words) 3 Marks
13 C: An extract from a play with three reference to context questions requiring
the students to supply the answers. (Word limit : 20-30 words) 3 Marks
Q 14 Four out of Five short answer type questions based on prose, poetry and play of 2 marks each. The questions will not test recall but inference and evaluation. (Word limit : 30 - 40 words each) : 8 Marks
Q 15 One out of two long answer type questions to assess personal response to text (story, poem or play) by going beyond the text/ poem/story or extract. Creativity, imagination and extrapolation beyond the text and across two texts will also be assessed. (Word limit : 150 words) : 8 Marks
Prescribed Books/ Materials
1. Interact in English - X Main Course Book Revised edition
2. Interact in English - X Literature Reader Revised edition Published by CBSE
3. Interact in English -X Workbook Revised edition Delhi-110092
Reading Section: Reading for comprehension, critical evaluation, inference and analysis is a skill to be tested formatively as well as summatively. There will be no division of passages for this section, however, for reading purpose. The Interact in English Main Course Book will be read in two terms i.e. Term I (April-September) and Term II (October-March).
Writing Section: All types of short and extended writing tasks will be dealt with in both I and II Term Summative as well as in Formative Assessment. For purpose of assessment all themes dealt with in Main Course Book and other themes may be used.
Note on assessing Writing Tasks.
Q. 4 Content : 2 marks
Expression : 2 marks (Accuracy & Fluency)
Total : 4 marks
Upto one mark may be deducted for spelling, punctuation and grammar errors.
Q. 5 Content : 3 marks
Fluency : 2 marks
Accuracy : 1 mark
Total : 6 marks
Upto one mark may be deducted for spelling, punctuation and grammar errors.
Q.6 Content : 3 marks
Fluency : 2 marks
Accuracy : 2 marks
Total : 7 marks
Upto two marks may be deducted for spelling punctuation and grammar errors.
Q. 7: Content : 4 marks
Fluency : 2 marks
Accuracy : 2 marks
Total : 8 marks
Upto two marks may be deducted for spelling, punctuation and
grammar errors.
Though marks have been allotted specifically for Content, they should not be
awarded in a mechanical manner. For instance, if a student has merely mentioned
the value points (content) as per the marking scheme, the examiner should assess
whether the content has been expressed/communicated in a coherent and cohesive
manner. It means content and expression are perceived as interlinked aspects of
writing. Similarly in all the writing tasks credit should be given to creativity
in the realm of ideas and language use. What it means for the examiner is that
students who think differently and are able to use the language with felicity in
terms of structures as well as vocabulary should be given due weightage. This
need not necessarily be seen as leaning towards subjectivity in marking. A
proper balance of content, expression (accuracy, fluency, cohesion and
coherence) and creativity would encourage students to aim for higher standards
in written communication. Errors in spelling, punctuation and grammar should be
penalised to the extent of marks allotted for Accuracy.
Grammar:
Grammar items mentioned in the syllabus will be taught and assessed summatively as well as formatively over a period of time. There will be no division of syllabus for Grammar in the summative of formative assessments for the terms. However a suggested split - up of the Work Book for the two terms is given to help teachers in planning their classroom teaching.