CBSE Class 11 English Syllabus for 2014-15

The syllabus for English for CBSE Class 11 for 2014-15 encompasses all the necessary aspects prescribed by the Board. Students of CBSE Class 11 English will find it easy to complete their syllabus is due time since it has been smartly organised to educate students and prepare them for exams as well.

Class - XI English Syllabus

 

One paper 3 Hours Marks: 100

Unitwise Weightage

Unit

Areas of Learning

 

Marks

A

Reading Unseen Passages (Two)

20 50

B.

Writing

20

C.

Grammar

10

D.

Textual Questions

(i) Textbook

(ii) Supplementary Reader

20

10

30

E.

Conversation Skills

(i) Listening

(ii) Speaking

05

05

10

F.

(i) Reading Project

10

10

 

Formative and Summative Assessment to be followed in all skills.

READING

Reading unseen Passages for Comprehension and Note-making

20 Marks

40 Periods

This section will have three unseen passages followed by a variety of questions. The questions will include those on vocabulary such as word formation and inferring meaning for 05 marks. The total length of the three passages shall be around 1100 words.

The passages could be any of the following three types:

(a) Factual passages e.g. instructions, descriptions, reports.

(b) Discursive passages e.g. argumentative, persuasive or reflective

(c) Literary passages e.g. excerpts from biographies, novels, poems or essays of subjective type.

SUMMARY - Class XI

 

Unseen

Passages

No of words

Testing Areas

Marks allotted

1

Prose

around 600

5 MCQ type questions to test local, global and inferential comprehension and 1 MCQ on vocabulary on each of the

 
2

Poetry

 

given passages/extracts/poems

5+1

3.

Prose making

 

around 500

Note- in an

appropriate format

05

     

Vocabulary (MCQ)

03
 

Q1 and Q2 will be two unseen texts - one from prose and the other from poetry. The total length of these two texts will be around 600 words.

Each of these extracts will be for 6 marks- five marks for local, global and inferential comprehension in the form of Multiple Choice Questions and one mark for vocabulary.

Q3 will have a prose passage of about 500 words and it will be used for note making (05 marks) and testing vocabulary (03 marks)

SECTION B

WRITING

20 Marks

40 periods

4.

One out of two short writing tasks based on personal response to a verbal stimulus in the form a narrative or a story. (100-150 words)

05

 

5.

One out of two compositions based on a visual and/or verbal input (in about 150-200 words). The output may be descriptive, reflective or argumentative in nature such as an article for

publication in a newspaper or a school magazine, a speech or a report either from a 3rd person point of view or as recounting of an experience/incident in the writer's life.

08

 

6.

Writing One out of two letters based on given input. Letter types include (a) letter to the editor (giving suggestions or opinions on an issue of public interest) or (b) letter to the school or colleges authorities, regarding admissions, school issues, requirements / suitability of courses etc.

07

 

SECTION C

GRAMMAR

10 Marks

30 Periods

 

Different grammatical structures in meaningful contexts will be tested. Item types will include gap-filling, sentence-reordering, dialogue-completion and sentence-transformation. The grammar syllabus includes determiners, tenses, clauses, modals and voice.

These grammar areas will be tested using the following test types:

   

7.

Error Correction

04

 

8.

Editing Task

04

 

9.

Reordering of sentences

02

 

SECTION D

TEXTUAL QUESTIONS

40 Marks

100 Periods

 

Questions on the prescribed textbooks will test comprehension at different levels: literal, inferential

and evaluative based on the following prescribed text books:

1. Hornbill : Text book, published by NCERT, New Delhi.

2. Snapshots : Supplementary Reader,published by NCERT, New Delhi.

   

Text Book

 

20 Marks

 

10.

One out of two extracts based on poetry from the text to test comprehension & appreciation using four multiple choice questions.

04

 

11.

Five out of six short answer questions on the lessons from poetry, prose and plays (at least 2 questions will be from poetry, 1 from play and the remaining from prose). (Upto 40 words)

 5=10

 

12.

One out of two long answer type questions based on the prose text to test global comprehension and extrapolation beyond the set text /and across two texts (Expected word limit would be about 100-125 words)

06

 

Supplementary Reader

10 Marks

 

13.

One out of two long answer type questions based on Supplementary Reader to test comprehension of theme, character and incidents.(Upto 100 words)

04

 

14.

Two out of three short answer questions on Supplementary Reader (upto 30 words)

3+3=6

 

Prescribed Books

1. Hornbill - Text book published by NCERT, New Delhi.

2. Snapshots - Supplementary Reader published by NCERT, New Delhi.

Conversation Skills 10 marks

(Listening + Speaking)

Conversation Skills will be tested both as part of Formative & Summative Assessment. Out of the 10 marks allotted for Conversation, 05 marks may be used for testing listening and 05 marks for testing speaking. The Conversation Skills Assessment Scale may be used for evaluation.

Listening

The examiner will read aloud either a passage on a relevant theme or a short story. The passage may be factual or discursive. The length of the passage should be around 350 words. The examinees are expected to complete the listening comprehension tasks given in a separate sheet while listening to the teacher. The tasks set may be gap-filling, multiple choice, true or false or short answer questions. There may be ten different questions for half a mark each.

Speaking

Speaking shall be tested either through narration using a sequence of pictures or through description of a picture of people or places. It may also require speaking on a given topic involving a personal

experience.Description of a picture (can be pictures of people or places)

NOTE:

The duration of the speaking test should not be less than 5 minutes for each candidate.

At the start of the examination the examiner will give the candidate some time to prepare for the task.

Once the candidate has started speaking, the examiner should intervene as little as possible.

Topics chosen should be within the personal experience of the examinee such as:

relating a funny anecdote, retelling the theme of a book read or a movie seen recently.

Conversation Skills Assessment Scale

Listening

Speaking

The learner:

The learner:

1.

Has general ability to understand words and phrases in a familiar context but cannot follow connected speech;

1.

shows ability to use only isolated words and phrases but cannot operate on connected speech level;

2.

Has ability to follow short connected utterances in a familiar context;

2.

in familiar situations, uses only short connected utterances with limited accuracy;

3.

Has ability to understand explicitly stated information in both familiar and unfamiliar

contexts;

3.

shows ability to use more complex utterances with some fluency in longer discourse; still makes some errors which

impede communication;

4.

Understands a range of longer spoken texts with reasonable accuracy, and is able to draw inferences;

4.

organises and presents thoughts in a reasonably logical and fluent manner in unfamiliar situations; makes errors which do not interfere with communication;

5.

Shows ability to interpret complex discourse in terms of points of view; adapts listening strategies to suit purposes.

5.

can spontaneously adapt style

appropriate to purpose and audience; makes only negligible errors.

   

Reading Project 10 Marks

Inculcating good reading habits in children has always been a concern for all stakeholders in education.

The purpose is to create independent thinking individuals with the ability to not only create their own knowledge but also critically interpret, analyse and evaluate it with objectivity and fairness. This will also help students in learning and acquiring better language skills.

Creating learners for the 21st century involves making them independent learners who can'learn, unlearn and relearn' and if our children are in the habit of reading they will learn to reinvent themselves and deal with the many challenges that lie ahead of them.

Reading is not merely decoding information or pronouncing words correctly, it is an interactive dialogue between the author and the reader in which the reader and author share their experiences and knowledge with each other which helps them to understand the text and impart meaning to the text other than what the author himself may have implied. Good readers are critical readers with an ability to arrive at a deeper understanding of not only the world presented in the book but also of the real world around them. They not only recall what they read but comprehend it too. Their critical reading and understanding of the text helps them create new understanding, solve problems, infer and make connections to other texts and experiences. Reading does not mean reading for leisure only but also for information, analysis and synthesis of knowledge. The child may be encouraged to read on topics as diverse as science and technology, politics and history. This will improve his/her critical thinking skills and also help in improving his/her concentration.

Reading any text should be done with the purpose of:-

1. reading silently at varying speeds depending on the purpose of reading:

2. adopting different strategies for different types of texts, both literary and non-literary:

3. recognising the organisation of a text:

4. identifying the main points of a text;

5. understanding relations between different parts of a text through lexical and grammatical cohesion devices.

6. anticipating and predicting what will come next.

7. deducing the meaning of unfamiliar lexical items in a given context:

8. consulting a dictionary to obtain information on the meaning and use of lexical items:

9. analysing, interpreting, inferring (and evaluating) the ideas in the text:

10. selecting and extracting from text information required for a specific purpose.

11. retrieving and synthesising information from a range of reference material using study skills such as skimming and scanning:

12. interpreting texts by relating them to other material on the same theme (and to their own experience and knowledge): and

13. reading extensively on their own for pleasure.

A good reader is most often an independent learner and consequently an independent thinker capable of taking his/her own decisions in life rationally. Such a learner will most assuredly also be capable of critical thinking.

Reading a book should lead to creative and individual response to the author's ideas presented in the book in the form of:-

• short review

• dramatisation of the story

• commentary on the characters

• critical evaluation of the plot, story line and characters

• comparing and contrasting the characters within the story and with other characters in stories by the same author or by the other authors

• extrapolating about the story's ending or life of characters after the story ends

• defending characters' actions in the story.

• making an audio story out of the novel/text to be read out to younger children.

• Interacting with the author

• Holding a literature fest where various characters interact with each other

• Acting like authors/poets/dramatists, to defend their works and characters.

• Symposiums and seminars for introducing a book, an author, or a theme

• Finding similar text in other languages, native or otherwise and looking at differences and similarities.

• Creating graphic novels out of novels/short stories read

• Dramatising incidents from a novel or a story

• Creating their own stories

1. A Reading Project of 10 marks has been introduced in class XI.

2. Schools may use books of their own choice.

3. Schools can vary the level but at least one book per term is to be read by every child.

Teachers may opt for:-

• One book;

• Books by one author; or

• Books of one genre; to be read by the whole class.

 

The Project should lead to independent learning/ reading skills and hence the chosen book/selection should not be taught in class, but may be introduced through activities and be left for the students to read at their own pace. Teachers may, however, choose to assess a child's progress or success in reading the book by asking for verbal or written progress reports, looking at the diary entries of students, engaging in a discussion about the book, giving a short quiz or a worksheet about the book/short story. The mode of intermittent assessment may be decided by the teacher as she/he sees fit.

These may be used for Formative Assessment (F1, F2, F3 and F4) only. Various modes of assessment such as conducting Reviews, Discussions, Open Houses, Exchanges, Interact with the Author, writing script for plays can be considered.

Get More CBSE Class 11 Syllabus Here

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