Theme 1, Topic 3 - Cultural life covers the study of celebrations and festivals, reading, music, sport, and film and television within the context of the s
Topic Synopsis
Theme 1, Topic 3 - Cultural life covers the study of celebrations and festivals, reading, music, sport, and film and television within the context of the student's home country and Greek-speaking communities.
Key Concepts & Core Principles
- Polis religion: State-sponsored worship of patron deities, with festivals reinforcing civic identity and political unity.
- Theatrical genres: Tragedy (e.g., Aeschylus, Sophocles) and comedy (e.g., Aristophanes), performed at the City Dionysia as competitions.
- Panhellenic festivals: Events like the Olympic Games that brought Greeks together, fostering a shared cultural identity despite political divisions.
- Artistic conventions: Black-figure and red-figure pottery, kouros statues, and architectural orders (Doric, Ionic, Corinthian) reflecting ideals of harmony and humanism.
- Philosophical inquiry: Pre-Socratic thinkers, Socrates' method, and Plato's theory of Forms, challenging traditional myths and ethics.
Exam Tips & Revision Strategies
- Use the 12-minute preparation time for speaking tasks to consider questions and stimulus cards, but do not write whole sentences.
- Use rephrasing or repair strategies if you do not know a specific word to sustain communication.
- Ensure you refer to past, present and future events across speaking and writing tasks.
- Read the instructions carefully to determine if a formal or informal register is required.
- For writing tasks, ensure you cover all bullet points to access the highest marks.
- Do not focus disproportionately on small, specific parts of an answer when applying levels-based mark schemes; consider the answer as a whole.
Common Misconceptions & Mistakes to Avoid
- Inaccurate tense formation hindering clarity.
- Inaccurate application of case conventions.
- Mismatch of subject and possessive adjectives.
- Mother-tongue interference.
- Relying on rehearsed language rather than spontaneous interaction in speaking tasks.
- Failure to cover all bullet points in writing tasks.
Examiner Marking Points
- Ability to identify overall message, key points, details and opinions in spoken and written texts.
- Ability to deduce meaning from a variety of texts.
- Ability to recognise the relationship between past, present and future events.
- Ability to communicate and interact effectively in speech for different purposes.
- Ability to express, justify and exchange opinions spontaneously.
- Ability to use a range of vocabulary and grammatical structures accurately, including complex forms.
- Ability to produce clear and coherent written text of varying lengths.
- Ability to translate sentences and short texts accurately between English and Greek.