1. Find out how your teacher wants to play it...
Okay very technically speaking the rules re: the IOC state that you should be presented with a series of envelopes each containing an extract totally unknown to you from any one of the texts/poems etc. you have studied. However, quite a large percentage of IB schools seem to be into alternative versions of the rules, including some where they will let you choose which texts they'll use and even the odd school where they let you choose your extract. Clearly if your teacher is going to let you select which novel you want to get, you're in with an advantage (and can save yourself memorising the plot lines of 4 novels in the bargain), so make sure you know how they want to play it and make the most of whatever you get!
2. Know the chronology of your texts
Assuming that your school hasn't let you choose the extract, you should find you have no idea what you're going to be given until you receive it. The good news is that your teachers are supposed to, according to the IB criteria, select an extract of significance within the novel. The bad news is that it's not always very obvious whereabouts in the novel this is, and you will be expected to put the extract into context. Consequently a reasonably large proportion of your preparation time should actually be dedicated to re-reading the whole text(s) and making sure you're quite clear about what events happen when. For some books this is easy, but for others with very skippy timelines (we all know the sort I mean...) it's really hard, so make sure you put your effort into the right places!
3. Familiarise yourself with the author's style
An excellent way to prepare for your IOC is to familiarise yourself with the sorts of literary features and themes most common within a text
Be sure to look at all aspects of writing style so you literally know enough about the general way the author writes that you can say something about almost any page in the book/poem etc.! You always want to show good knowledge of the novel/poems as a whole body.
4. Use your preparation time wisely
You should be given 20 minutes to prepare for the exam and during this time it is imperative that you make the most of it. The number one key thing is not to panic. Panic = wasting precious minutes. It's better to finish early and idle around than panic for 5 minutes and spend the next 15 writing frantically. Ideally, unless you're such a chilled person that you have no nerves, it's a good idea to have a plan of attack. I personally suggest the most simple which is to go through the extract line by line after reading through it once or twice.
The important thing is that you remember you probably only have enough time to make notes once, so the first notes you make will probably be the exact same ones you use 20 minutes later. There's no writing up into neat! Going through the extract underlining things is therefore not necessarily going to be that helpful if, once you're on the spot, you can't remember/read your own hand writing as to why exactly you underlined it. So make sure that all the points you make are in a format which will be easy for you to understand in the actual thing. Also, although you only have a short period of time, as I mentioned before it's important to put things into context and match them up with other parts of the novel and other parts of the extract, so if you spot the same thing happening twice within your extract, link them up in such a way that you'll remember to mention both at once as you go through it. This makes your commentary seem a lot more structured than it otherwise would with only 20 minutes to prepare!
5. Imagine it's on paper and structure it
Literally imagine that your essay is being written by you rather than spoken by you. What do you need in every essay? Introduction, main body, conclusion. Don't forget to include an introduction (including that all -important putting the extract in context chronologically) and also a conclusion. I strongly suggest you bullet point the contents of these rather than making them up on the spot because nerves can do terrible things when it comes to mind blanks, and the beginning and ending of presentations are both extremely important for the overall impact. You can do a great job but have a terrible ending and it's the lame ending which sticks in people's minds.
6. Don't fail to show outside knowledge!
Reading through the extract and find yourself remembering a related fact/incident as you read? SAY IT! It's really important that you make the context (and your excellent knowledge of it) very clear, So if you remember something related, pop it in. Think that something a character does is reflective of something they do later/earlier/their general behaviour? Mention the other event as well. Don't waste loads of time on it, keep all these outside points reasonably succinct, but whatever you do don't overlook them or fail to mention them.
7. Set yourself up to achieve fluency via knowing how you work
Just like with the IOP, you want to appear extremely competent and fluent. Generally when in a state of panic, the only way to achieve this (besides obviously making sure you know what you're talking about!) is to make excellent notes so when panic strikes, you can stay on track. I'd strongly suggest you practice going through an extract that you pick at random and making notes on it prior to the actual thing. Then try imagining what you'd say based on the notes you've made yourself after 20 minutes. If the notes you've made aren't enough to stop you blanking, re-consider the way in which you make notes.
And finally, take a chill pill because really it's not that hard. IGNORE THE TAPE RECORDER!!
Hopefully those're all helpful hints. Please feel free to post some of your own and I'll edit them into this thread with some credit, or if you have constructive comments to make on the tips already up there, those are also welcome!
Also check out... http://teach.beavert...entarytips.html which has some useful hints & tips - I'd especially recommend having a look at the "Parting Shots" section at the end. This is probably as close as you can get to having an insight into the way they actually apply the (somewhat vague seeming) marking criteria.


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