Food critic Jay Rayner promises to ‘help’ GCSE students analyse his writing in exam paper

Journalist says the move is likely to ‘infuriate’ AQA, which bought one of his articles to use in a specimen paper
15th November 2016, 11:53am

Share

Food critic Jay Rayner promises to ‘help’ GCSE students analyse his writing in exam paper

https://www.tes.com/magazine/archive/food-critic-jay-rayner-promises-help-gcse-students-analyse-his-writing-exam-paper
Thumbnail

Having been handed the accolade of seeing his writing enshrined in a specimen GCSE exam paper, journalist Jay Rayner is now planning on “infuriating” the examining board by helping students with the answers.

The Observer’s food critic has tweeted that he will help parents, teachers and students to analyse a piece of his writing that has been used by AQA in its English language GCSE specimen papers.

The exam board bought, from the newspaper, an article in which Mr Rayner wrote about attempting to do his then 14-year-old’s maths homework.

It means that thousands of teenagers will be asked to unpick his writing, and, in a rebellious move, he has promised to help them scrutinise it. 

‘I hated that sort of thing’ 

“Given I hated that sort of thing (I got a B at English language and a C at Eng lit), I thought I should help,” he tweeted.

The journalist intends to field questions using the hashtag #askJay on Thursday 17 November at 6pm.

“I may infuriate AQA and I do not guarantee anything I say will be helpful. But it could be fun. Year 10/11 people please RT.”

 

Many GCSE English students are being forced to study a bit of my writing. I want to help. (Link: https://t.co/xthTs6LmPD) pic.twitter.com/wyPOcRcXsd

- Jay Rayner (@jayrayner1) November 13, 2016

 

As I conclude this TES online article, I think it is unlikely that it will ever be used in a mock GCSE paper. But it could perhaps prove useful in an undergraduate postmodernism course as an example of a journalist writing about a journalist who wrote about his teen’s homework, which is now likely to form homework for many other teens.

An AQA spokesperson said: “It’s nice that Jay’s offering to help students like this. Hearing from the writer is a great contribution to the study of a text - if Shakespeare was alive and on Twitter, maybe he’d be offering to do the same.

“Jay doesn’t have to worry about infuriating us - the article is only from a specimen paper that anyone can see on our website, so it won’t come up in anyone’s summer exams.”

 

Want to keep reading for free?

Register with Tes and you can read two free articles every month plus you'll have access to our range of award-winning newsletters.

Keep reading for just £1 per month

You've reached your limit of free articles this month. Subscribe for £1 per month for three months and get:

  • Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
  • Exclusive subscriber-only stories
  • Award-winning email newsletters
Recent
Most read
Most shared