đ The Examinerâs Playbook: Securing Top Marks in Leaving Cert Poetry
Hello there.
As an SEC examiner, Iâve read hundreds of scripts. Let me be clear: the difference between an H1 and an H3 is rarely about how much a student knows about a poet. Itâs about how effectively they respond to the marking scheme.
In Leaving Cert English, everything is assessed under PCLM:
- Purpose (P)
- Coherence (C)
- Language (L)
- Mechanics (M)
While all four matter, there is one that dominates:
đ Purpose (P) is king.
đŻ 1. Understanding Purpose (P)
Purpose is worth 30% of your marks, and it asks one simple question:
Did you actually answer the question?
Every year, students walk into the exam with pre-prepared essays. They see a poetâs nameâsay, Bolandâand immediately unload everything they know.
đŤ This is a critical mistake.
If the question has two parts and you only address one, your Purpose mark is effectively halved. And hereâs the harsh reality:
Coherence and Language are capped by Purpose.
If you score 9/15 in Purpose, you cannot score higher than 9/15 in Coherence or Languageâno matter how well written your essay is.
đ 2. Cracking the Code
As examiners, we are looking for what I call âThe Code.â
Every question contains key elements you must address throughout your essay.
Example (Eavan Boland):
âBolandâs skilful use of evocative imagery allows her to explore the complex nature of powerlessness.â
Break this into the Code:
- I = Imagery (HOW)
- P = Powerlessness (WHAT)
đ Your job is to weave both together continuously.
The Golden Formula:
Technique (HOW) + Theme (WHAT) = Purpose (P)
â ď¸ The Common Failure
- Writing only about powerlessness â â
- Writing only about imagery â â
Even a beautifully written essay will fail if it ignores one half of the question.
You are not answering the questionâyou are answering the one you wish had been asked.
đ§ 3. The Mahon Trap: A Lesson in Sound
One of the most revealing questions in recent years asked how Derek Mahonâs poetry is enhanced by being read aloud.
Many students ignored this and wrote standard essays on themes like isolation or urban life.
đ Result: low marks.
Why?
Because they ignored the Code:
- E/a = Enhancement through sound
To answer properly, students needed to discuss:
- Sibilance (hissing âsâ sounds)
- Assonance (vowel repetition)
- Onomatopoeia
- Rhythm and rhyme
đ If you didnât analyse how the sound shaped the experience, you didnât meet the Purpose.
đ§ 4. How to Structure an H1 Paragraph
To consistently hit top marks, follow this structure:
â The H1 Checklist:
- The Echo
Use keywords from the question in your topic sentence. - The Quote
Never leave a quote ânakedââembed and analyse it. - The Link
Connect the technique directly back to the theme.
âď¸ Model Sentence:
The âclattering ironâ imagery vividly conveys the speakerâs powerlessness, as it emphasises the uncontrollable and mechanical force of the horse.
⥠5. Poet-Specific Strategies
Letâs apply âThe Codeâ to key poets:
đźď¸ Eavan Boland
Likely Code: Imagery + Powerlessness
Avoid: Retelling the poem
Do instead: Analyse specific images and link them to loss of control or agency
đŹ Elizabeth Bishop
Likely Code: Detailed description + Reflection
Avoid: Talking about her life or travels
Do instead: Focus on precise details (e.g. âfive big hooksâ) and the emotional reflection that follows
𦢠W. B. Yeats
Likely Code: Symbolism + Change/Transition
Avoid: Biography (e.g. Maud Gonne essays)
Do instead: Analyse symbols (swans, tower, rose) and what they reveal about ageing or politics
đď¸ Paula Meehan
Likely Code: Storytelling + Social commentary
Avoid: Gushing praise
Do instead: Analyse vivid Dublin imagery and how it reflects social issues
đŤ 6. Avoid the âPaddingâ Penalty
Examiners spot this instantlyâand it earns zero marks.
Common mistakes:
- Biography dumping
âYeats was born in 1865âŚâ â irrelevant unless directly linked - Vague praise
âThis poem is very beautiful and emotionalâŚâ â meaningless - Plot summary
We already know what happens in the poem
â You are not here to retellâyou are here to analyse.
âąď¸ 7. The 30-Second Exam Plan
Before you write a single sentence:
- Underline keywords in the question
- Identify the Code (e.g. I + P)
- Choose 3â4 poems that fit BOTH parts
- Check every paragraph hits the Code
đ Final Advice
Do not be a âsummary merchant.â
I donât need the story. I donât need your personal feelings. I need a clear, focused argument that answers the question directly.
đ Every paragraph should make me think:
âYesâthis student understands both the technique and the theme.â
Master that, and you are firmly on the path to an H1.