This topic explores personal identity and social connections, covering relationships, childhood memories, descriptions of friends and family, qualities of
Topic Synopsis
This topic explores personal identity and social connections, covering relationships, childhood memories, descriptions of friends and family, qualities of a good friend, personal interests, socialising, and the influence of role models.
Key Concepts & Core Principles
- Personal descriptions: using adjectives (e.g., ψηλός, έξυπνος) with correct gender, number, and case agreement.
- Possessive pronouns: distinguishing between μου, σου, του/της, μας, σας, τους and their placement after the noun.
- Reflexive verbs: understanding verbs like με λένε (I am called) and νιώθω (I feel) to express identity and emotions.
- Family vocabulary: terms for immediate and extended family (πατέρας, μητέρα, αδερφός, γιαγιά) and possessive constructions.
- Daily routine: using reflexive verbs (πλένομαι, ντύνομαι) and time expressions to describe habits.
Exam Tips & Revision Strategies
- Use the 12-minute preparation time for speaking tasks to consider questions and make brief notes (max one side of A4).
- Do not read out whole, prepared sentences during speaking assessments.
- Use rephrasing or repair strategies if you get stuck during the speaking conversation.
- Ensure you cover all bullet points in writing tasks to access higher mark bands.
- Use a variety of tenses (past, present, future) to demonstrate linguistic range.
- Focus on the quality of communication and content rather than just the length of the response.
Common Misconceptions & Mistakes to Avoid
- Over-reliance on rehearsed language in speaking tasks.
- Failure to cover all bullet points in writing tasks.
- Inaccurate tense formation or mismatch of subject and possessive adjectives.
- Mother-tongue interference hindering clarity.
- Inappropriate use of register (e.g., using informal language in a formal writing task).
- Lack of justification for opinions in higher-tier responses.
Examiner Marking Points
- Ability to describe and narrate events coherently and confidently.
- Use of a range of vocabulary and grammatical structures, including complex forms.
- Reference to past, present, and future events.
- Expression and justification of thoughts and opinions.
- Use of appropriate register (formal vs informal) in speaking and writing tasks.
- Spontaneous interaction and use of repair strategies in speaking.
- Effective adaptation of language for different purposes (informing, narrating, convincing).
- Accuracy in grammatical structures and vocabulary.