0520 Y11 Sy
0520 Y11 Sy
0520 Y11 Sy
Cambridge IGCSE Dutch Syllabus code 0515 For examination in June 2011 Cambridge IGCSE French Syllabus code 0520 For examination in June and November 2011 Cambridge IGCSE German Syllabus code 0525 For examination in June 2011 Cambridge IGCSE Spanish Syllabus code 0530 For examination in June and November 2011
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Note for Exams Officers: Before making Final Entries, please check availability of the codes for the components and options in the E3 booklet (titled Procedures for the Submission of Entries) relevant to the exam session. Please note that component and option codes are subject to change.
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Contents
Cambridge IGCSE French Cambridge IGCSE Spanish Syllabus code 0520 Syllabus code 0530
1. Introduction ..................................................................................... 2
1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Why choose Cambridge? Why choose Cambridge IGCSE foreign languages? Cambridge International Certificate of Education (ICE) How can I find out more?
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Cambridge IGCSE Dutch (0515) and German (0525). Examination in June 2011. Cambridge IGCSE French (0520) and Spanish (0530). Examination in June and November 2011. UCLES 2008
Cambridge IGCSE Dutch (0515) and German (0525). Examination in June 2011. Cambridge IGCSE French (0520) and Spanish (0530). Examination in June and November 2011.
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1. Introduction
Recognition
Cambridge IGCSE is internationally recognised by schools, universities and employers as equivalent to UK GCSE. Cambridge IGCSE is excellent preparation for A/AS Level, the Advanced International Certificate of Education (AICE), US Advanced Placement Programme and the International Baccalaureate (IB) Diploma. Learn more at www.cie.org.uk/recognition.
Support
CIE provides a world-class support service for teachers and exams officers. We offer a wide range of teacher materials to Centres, plus teacher training (online and face-to-face) and student support materials. Exams officers can trust in reliable, efficient administration of exams entry and excellent, personal support from CIE Customer Services. Learn more at www.cie.org.uk/teachers.
Excellence in education
Cambridge qualifications develop successful students. They not only build understanding and knowledge required for progression, but also learning and thinking skills that help students become independent learners and equip them for life.
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1. Introduction
This is one of a number of Cambridge IGCSE foreign language syllabuses for a full list, visit the CIE website at www.cie.org.uk.
Cambridge IGCSE Dutch (0515) and German (0525). Examination in June 2011. Cambridge IGCSE French (0520) and Spanish (0530). Examination in June and November 2011.
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1. Introduction
Cambridge IGCSE Dutch (0515) and German (0525). Examination in June 2011. Cambridge IGCSE French (0520) and Spanish (0530). Examination in June and November 2011.
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2. Assessment at a glance
Cambridge IGCSE French Cambridge IGCSE Spanish Syllabus code 0520 Syllabus code 0530 2.1 Scheme of assessment
All candidates have access to all elements of the examination. However, for the examination to be appropriate to candidates across the full ability range, separate options are available for Core Curriculum candidates and Extended Curriculum candidates: Core curriculum Grades available: C, D, E, F, G Paper 1 Listening 45 minutes: Sections 1, 2 and 3 Reading and Directed Writing 1 hours: Sections 1, 2 and 3 Speaking 15 minutes Extended curriculum (Core + Supplement) Grades available: A*, A, B, C, D, E, F, G Paper 1 Listening 45 minutes: Sections 1, 2 and 3 Reading and Directed Writing 1 hours: Sections 1, 2 and 3 Speaking 15 minutes Continuous Writing 1 hours
Paper 2
Paper 2
Paper 3*
Paper 3*
Paper 4
Papers 1, 2 and 3 are common to both routes, but candidates cannot achieve higher than a grade C without taking Paper 4. All Extended Curriculum candidates will be graded twice: once on their performance on the Core Curriculum Papers (1, 2 and 3) and once on their performance on the Extended Curriculum Papers (1, 2, 3 and 4). Candidates are awarded the higher of the two grades they achieve. * Individual Centres are responsible for conducting the tests and for the initial assessment, which is then subject to moderation by CIE. Please note sidelined changes in Section 4 and Section 5.
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2. Assessment at a glance
This syllabus should be read in conjunction with the relevant language-specific Defined Content Booklet, available from the CIE website at www.cie.org.uk.
Cambridge IGCSE Dutch (0515) and German (0525). Examination in June 2011. Cambridge IGCSE French (0520) and Spanish (0530). Examination in June and November 2011.
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2. form a sound base of the skills, language and attitudes required for further study, work and leisure 3. offer insights into the culture and civilisation of countries where the language is spoken 4. encourage fuller integration into the local community, where relevant 5. develop a fuller awareness of the nature of language and language learning 6. encourage positive attitudes toward language learning and towards speakers of other languages and a sympathetic approach to other cultures and civilisations 7 . provide enjoyment and intellectual stimulation 8. complement other areas of study by encouraging skills of a more general application (e.g. analysis, memorising, drawing of inferences).
Cambridge IGCSE Dutch (0515) and German (0525). Examination in June 2011. Cambridge IGCSE French (0520) and Spanish (0530). Examination in June and November 2011.
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Core curriculum
Paper 1 Listening (marks) Paper 2 Reading & directed writing (marks) Paper 3 Speaking (marks) Paper 4 Continuous writing (marks) Whole assessment (%)
48 45 100 20
33 23 33 11
Extended curriculum
Paper 1 Listening (marks) Paper 2 Reading & directed writing (marks) Paper 3 Speaking (marks) Paper 4 Continuous writing (marks) Whole assessment (%)
48 45 100 20 50
25 17 25 33
Cambridge IGCSE Dutch (0515) and German (0525). Examination in June 2011. Cambridge IGCSE French (0520) and Spanish (0530). Examination in June and November 2011.
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In addition: Syllabus 0515 Dutch must not be offered in the same session with: 0503 First Language Dutch. Syllabus 0520 French must not be offered in the same session with: 0501 First Language French. Syllabus 0525 German must not be offered in the same session with: 0505 First Language German. Syllabus 0530 Spanish must not be offered in the same session with: 0502 First Language Spanish. Please note that IGCSE, Cambridge International Level 1/Level 2 Certificates and O Level syllabuses are at the same level.
Cambridge IGCSE Dutch (0515) and German (0525). Examination in June 2011. Cambridge IGCSE French (0520) and Spanish (0530). Examination in June and November 2011.
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4. Description of papers
All examination papers are set entirely in the target language: this includes rubrics and all questions. All questions requiring written answers, including questions testing Listening and Reading Comprehension, are to be answered in the target language. Dictionaries are not permitted in the examination. For detailed guidance on how the papers are marked, please refer to the published mark schemes available on the CIE Teacher Support website.
Cambridge IGCSE Dutch (0515) and German (0525). Examination in June 2011. Cambridge IGCSE French (0520) and Spanish (0530). Examination in June and November 2011.
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4. Description of papers
Section 3 (16 marks) Candidates hear recordings of discussions between two or three people. They listen for main points and detail. There will be questions to test appreciation of the speakers use of language to express agreement or disagreement, apologies or complaints, attitudes, emotions and ideas etc., as well as understanding the gist of their conversation.
Cambridge IGCSE Dutch (0515) and German (0525). Examination in June 2011. Cambridge IGCSE French (0520) and Spanish (0530). Examination in June and November 2011.
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4. Description of papers
Section 2 (25 marks) Exercise 1 (10 marks): one text with questions testing general understanding, e.g. identifying the main points. Exercise 2 (15 marks): a directed writing task. 80100 words in total are required. 10 marks are available for Communication and 5 marks for Quality of Language.
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4. Description of papers
Section 3 (20 marks) Exercises 1 and 2 (20 marks): two longer texts with questions testing general and specific comprehension. Questions may also require candidates to identify attitudes, emotions and ideas, the main points or themes, and to make inferences and draw conclusions.
The Role Play tasks are provided by CIE, but individual Centres are responsible for conducting the tests and for the initial assessment. This assessment is then subject to moderation by CIE.
Each Centre decides on a convenient period within these dates for its Speaking examinations. Each Centre selects its own teacher/Examiner to conduct and assess the Speaking examination. This is normally a teacher from within the Languages Department, but could be someone local from outside the Centre. In the interests of standardisation, only one teacher/Examiner should be appointed per Centre. Where a Centre wishes to use additional teacher/Examiners because it has large numbers of candidates, permission to do so must be sought from the Languages Group at CIE well before the start of each Speaking examination period. Permission to use more than one teacher/Examiner will only be granted on the understanding that teacher/Examiners at the Centre work together to ensure a common approach to the conduct of the Speaking examination and the application of the mark scheme. The sample the Centre submits to CIE should include the work of each teacher/Examiner and a Speaking examination Working Mark Sheet should be submitted for each teacher/Examiner, with candidate names and numbers clearly entered.
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4. Description of papers
Confidential test materials (Teachers Notes Booklet and Role Play Cards) are sent to Centres approximately two to three weeks before the start of the assessment period and will include full instructions on how to conduct and assess the Speaking examination. These should be opened four working days before the Centres assessment starts and studied carefully by the teacher/Examiner before conducting his/her first Speaking examination. Teacher/Examiners who have prepared their own roles fully and are confident in what they are doing are better able to help candidates should they experience any difficulty. Once the materials have been opened, they remain confidential and must be kept in a secure place by the Centre until the end of the examination period. In order to allow CIE to check accurately the standard of assessment, each teacher/Examiner must record and send to CIE a sample from each Centre at which he or she examines: Centres entering 116 candidates must send the recordings of all candidates Centres entering 17 or more candidates must send: (i) the recordings of the first 10 candidates according to candidate number and (ii) the recordings of 6 candidates across the ability range, e.g. 2 good, 2 middling, 2 weak. The candidates selected should be representative of the range of marks awarded by the Centre and should be spread as evenly as possible across that range. If possible, the recordings of the strongest and the weakest candidates at the Centre should be included, with the other recordings spaced at equal intervals in between. Note Centres entering 17 or more candidates must send a total of 16 recordings. The category (ii) candidates must be chosen from candidates who do not fall into category (i). In Centres with just over 17 candidates, CIE accepts this may mean that the category (ii) candidates are not fully representative of the range. Moderation samples must be recorded at normal speed onto either a C90 audiocassette or a standard format CD. Mini cassettes/mini CDs must not be used. The Centre is responsible for supplying cassettes/CDs for the recording of its moderation sample: these will not be supplied by CIE. All recording equipment, including cassettes/CDs, must be of as high a standard as possible to ensure that moderation samples are clearly audible. Where Centres make use of digital recording software, each candidates file must be saved individually and saved as .mp3 so that it can be accessed for the purposes of moderation. Centres will receive a brief report on the outcome of moderation (Form CW/C/REP). A Speaking Test Training Handbook/Distance Training Pack can be ordered from CIE Publications which provides guidance on the conduct and assessment of the Speaking examination. Although accreditation by CIE is not mandatory for teachers conducting and assessing IGCSE foreign language Speaking examinations, CIE recommends that Centres new to the syllabus complete this training.
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4. Description of papers
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4. Description of papers
The teacher/Examiner must try to lead the candidate into using other tenses. For a mark of 7 or above to be awarded on Scale (b), Linguistic Content, candidates must show that they can convey past and future meaning and teacher/Examiners need to ask questions which allow them to do this. In order to extend the candidate as far as possible, the teacher/Examiner should probe, explore, ask for explanations, enlargements, descriptions (how? when? why? tell me a bit more about etc.). For the Mark Scheme, see Appendix, Table B of the Marking Instructions. Test 3: General Conversation (approximately 5 minutes, 30 marks) The Topic Conversation will lead into the General Conversation. The teacher/Examiner will start out from any point of interest noted earlier or ask general questions relating to the candidates everyday life, school, home, town, journey to and from school, free time (evenings, weekends), holidays, hobbies. All candidates can reasonably be expected to have the command of vocabulary and idiom necessary for this. The teacher/Examiner should aim to cover at least two or three of the Defined Content Topics in this section of the examination (listed in the Curriculum Content section). Precise factual information or knowledge is not required and candidates must not be penalised for lack of such knowledge. Questions must be adjusted to the candidates ability and the teacher/Examiner should be ready to pass on quickly to another subject if candidates are obviously out of their depth. Candidates are expected to give natural replies to questions; their answers need not therefore be in the form of complete sentences. The teacher/Examiner should avoid asking questions which can be answered with yes or no and should instead use a variety of interrogatives, e.g. when? how? why? how many? how long? with whom? with what? etc. As in the Topic Conversation, the teacher/Examiner must try to lead the candidate into using other tenses (themes could be visits to other countries, plans for the future, etc.) and he or she can then be extended as far as possible. For a mark of 7 or above to be awarded on Scale (b), Linguistic Content, candidates must show that they can convey past and future meaning and teacher/Examiners need to ask questions which allow them to do this. For the Mark Scheme, see Appendix, Table B of the Marking Instructions. Impression (10 marks) At the end of the Speaking examination, based on the candidates overall performance, the teacher/Examiner awards a mark for pronunciation, accent and fluency. For the Mark Scheme, see Appendix, Table C of the Marking Instructions.
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4. Description of papers
Candidates are expected to communicate as accurately as possible, and should, in so doing, make use of a wider variety of idiom, vocabulary, structure and appropriate tenses than is required on Paper 2. A system of positive marking is used. Examiners reward material worthy of credit and do not indicate errors. Irrelevant material is not rewarded. Each of the two questions is marked out of 25 under the following three headings: Communication Quality of Language General Impression 5 marks 15 marks 5 marks
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5. Curriculum content
Candidates may follow the Core Curriculum or the Extended Curriculum which includes both the Core and Supplement. Candidates aiming for grades A* to C will follow the Extended Curriculum.
The table below summarises the relationship between the Defined Content and the question papers. Paper Section Topic Areas Minimum Core Vocabulary Structures and Grammar Part 1 Part 1 Parts 1 and 2 Part 1 Part 1 Parts 1 and 2 Part 1 Part 1 Parts 1 and 2
Paper 1
1 2 3
A, B, C A, B, C, D*, E* A, B, C, D, E A, B, C A, B, C, D*, E* A, B, C, D, E A, B, C A, B, C, D, E A, B, C, D, E
Paper 2
1 2 3
Paper 3
Paper 4
* Where Section 2 of this paper features passages based on Topic Areas D and E, only vocabulary from the Minimum Core Vocabulary List will be tested.
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5. Curriculum content
5.2 Tasks
Please refer to the relevant language-specific Defined Content Booklet for further details of the grammatical knowledge expected of candidates in the the Core and Extended levels of the examination.
Paper Core All students should be able to: 1. Listening demonstrate understanding of specific detail in short, formal public announcements, informal announcements, short conversations and interviews demonstrate general comprehension of the above Supplement Students aiming for grades A* to C should, in addition, be able to: demonstrate general and specific understanding of longer and more complex material identify the important points or themes of the material, including attitudes, emotions and ideas that are expressed draw conclusions from, and identify the relationships between ideas within the material show comprehension of a wider range of texts, including magazines and newspapers likely to be read by young people demonstrate the ability to identify the important points or themes within an extended piece of writing draw conclusions from, and see how ideas relate within an extended text
demonstrate understanding of words within short texts such as public notices, instructions and signs extract relevant specific information from texts such as brochures, guides, letters and forms of imaginative writing considered likely to be within the experience of and reflecting the interests of young people show a general understanding of more extended texts scan for particular information, organise the relevant information and present it in a given format carry out basic writing tasks (such as asking for detailed information, giving some personal information, reporting) perform Role Playing tasks which involve both taking the initiative and responding to questions, with both strangers and friends report, express opinions and respond to questions on a topic of the candidates choice respond to unprepared questions in a general conversation on topics of interest to the candidate
3. Speaking
play a part in discussion; choose and organise ideas and present them clearly adapt to the needs of the audience and the situation
4. Continuous Writing
express thoughts, feelings and opinions in order to interest, inform or convince demonstrate adequate control of vocabulary, syntax and grammar, punctuation and spelling
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5. Curriculum content
Holidays and special occasions Area C The world around us Home town and local area Natural and made environment People, places and customs Area D The world of work Continuing education Careers and employment Language and communication in the work place Area E The international world Tourism at home and abroad Life in other countries and communities World events and issues
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6. Grade descriptions
Grade A Listening
Reading
Speaking
Writing
Candidates understand gist and identify main points and detail in a variety of types of authentic spoken language. They recognise points of view, attitudes and emotions and are able to draw conclusions. Candidates understand gist and identify main points and detail in a variety of types of authentic texts. They recognise points of view, attitudes and emotions and are able to draw conclusions. They show an ability to understand unfamiliar language and to extract meaning from more complex language. Candidates initiate and develop conversations and discussions, and narrate events. They express and justify ideas and points of view, and produce longer sequences of speech using a variety of vocabulary, structures and verb tenses. They speak confidently, with good pronunciation and intonation. The message is clear although there may still be some errors, especially when candidates use more complex structures. Candidates give information and narrate events both factually and imaginatively. They express and justify ideas and points of view. They produce longer sequences using a range of vocabulary, structures and verb tenses. Their spelling and grammar are generally accurate, and the style is appropriate to the purpose.
Grade C Listening
Reading
Speaking
Writing
Candidates identify and note main points and extract details and points of view from language spoken at normal speed. The spoken texts include past and future events. They are drawn from a variety of topics which include familiar language in unfamiliar contexts. Candidates identify and extract details and points of view from authentic and simulated texts, drawn from a variety of topics and which include past, present and future events. They show an ability to understand unfamiliar language. Candidates develop conversations and simple discussions which include past, present and future events, involving the use of different tenses. They express personal opinions and show an ability to deal with some unpredictable elements. Although there may be some errors, they convey a clear message, and their pronunciation and intonation are generally accurate. Candidates express personal opinions and write about a variety of topics which may be factual or imaginative and which may include different tenses or time frames. They use an appropriate register. The style is basic but despite some errors the writing conveys a clear message.
Writing
Candidates identify and note main points and extract some details from simple language spoken clearly at near normal speed. Candidates identify main points and extract some information from short, simple texts. They use context to work out the meaning of words. Candidates take part in simple conversations showing some ability to communicate simple ideas in straightforward language. Their pronunciation is generally accurate, and although there may be some grammatical inaccuracies, the main points are communicated. Candidates write short sentences and communicate simple ideas. Although there may be mistakes in spelling and grammar, the main points are communicated.
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7 Marking instructions for the Speaking Examination .1 and the Working Mark Sheet
7 .1.1 Marking instructions for the Speaking Examination General principles
You are urged to use the full range of marks, bearing in mind that it is not necessary for a candidate to be of native speaker standard to be given maximum marks within any single category. Adopt a positive approach: award marks based on what the candidate can do rather than deducting marks for errors. Above all else, please be consistent in your marking. The moderation process allows for adjustments to be made to consistently harsh or consistently generous marking. If you are unsure of the mark to award, err on the side of generosity.
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Cambridge IGCSE Dutch (0515) and German (0525). Examination in June 2011. Cambridge IGCSE French (0520) and Spanish (0530). Examination in June and November 2011.
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Table B Mark Scheme for Test 2: Topic Presentation/Conversation and Test 3: General Conversation (2 30 marks)
As detailed in Table B, each of Tests 2 and 3 is marked on two scales: Scale (a): Comprehension/responsiveness This assesses the candidates response in terms of comprehension of the teacher/Examiner, immediacy of reaction/response, fluency of response, and presentation of material in the topic. Scale (b): Linguistic content This assesses the linguistic content of the candidates answers in terms of the complexity, accuracy and range of structures, vocabulary and idiom. Category Outstanding (a) A spontaneous interchange between candidate and Examiner. Responds confidently to all question types. Fluent. Not necessarily of native speaker standard. (b) Very accurate use of structures, vocabulary and idiom with occasional errors in more complex language. Not necessarily of native speaker standard. Very good (a) Generally understands questions first time, but may require occasional rephrasing. Can respond satisfactorily to both straightforward and unexpected questions. (b) Wide range of mostly accurate structures, vocabulary and idiom. Good (a) Has no difficulty with straightforward questions and responds fairly well to unexpected ones, particularly when they are re-phrased. (b) Good range of generally accurate structures, varied vocabulary. Satisfactory (a) Understands straightforward questions but has difficulty with some unexpected ones and needs rephrasing. Fairly fluent, but some hesitation. (b) Adequate range of structures and vocabulary. Can convey past and future meaning: some ambiguity. Weak (a) Has difficulty even with straightforward questions, but still attempts an answer. (b) Shows elementary, limited vocabulary and faulty manipulation of structures. Poor (a) Frequently fails to understand the questions and has great difficulty in replying. (b) Shows very limited range of structures and vocabulary. 03 46 79 1011 1213 Mark 1415
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78
56
34
12
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Cambridge IGCSE Dutch (0515) and German (0525). Examination in June 2011. Cambridge IGCSE French (0520) and Spanish (0530). Examination in June and November 2011.
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Centre Name
German (0525/03) Spanish (0530/03) (please tick one)
June/November
2 0 1 1
Internal and/or External Moderation
Role Play A
Conversation Conversation
Candidate Number
Task
(max 15) 3 4
10
15
Mark (Max)
15
15
15
15
10
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Signature
Date
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Tick to confirm that the required moderation documents are enclosed: (i) Moderator copy of MS1 or printout of Internal Marks Report from CAMEO. (ii) Copy of completed Working Mark Sheet(s) (WMS).*
(* One WMS per Examiner in Centres using more than one Examiner)
If any other documents are enclosed for CIE's attention, please list them below: 2 Tick to confirm that documentation has been checked for arithmetical and transcription errors: (i) Addition of marks on WMS has been checked and Total Mark is correct for each candidate. (ii) Total Mark for each candidate has been correctly transferred to the MS1 or CAMEO. 3 Tick to confirm that the recording quality of Moderation samples has been checked: All sample recordings are clearly audible. Samples are recorded on standard size CDs/cassettes and recorded at normal speed. Digital recordings only: each candidate saved individually and files saved as .mp3. 4 Tick to confirm that the correct number of candidates has been submitted for moderation: For Centres with 16 or fewer candidates, the following are enclosed: Recordings of the complete Speaking test for all candidates. For Centres with 17 or more candidates, the following are enclosed: (i) Recordings of the complete Speaking test for 6 candidates across the range AND
(ii) Recordings of the complete Speaking test for the first 10 candidates by candidate number. 5 CENTRES USING MORE THAN 1 EXAMINER tick to confirm Internal Moderation procedures: Internal moderation carried out and details of Internal Moderation procedures enclosed. Materials checked by: (name) (signature) Date:
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University of Cambridge International Examinations 1 Hills Road, Cambridge, CB1 2EU, United Kingdom Tel: +44 (0)1223 553554 Fax: +44 (0)1223 553558 Email: international@cie.org.uk Website: www.cie.org.uk University of Cambridge International Examinations 2008
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