IGCSE English Language 4EB1 Reading Skills
1.1.2 Lifting Carefully
Exam focus: how to copy a short phrase accurately from a text when the question only needs a precise retrieval answer.
AO1 retrievalPrecisionShort-answer discipline
Watch near the start: retrieval marks and short answers
Before learning the procedure, watch for how exam questions reward focused reading. Your viewing task is to notice when a short answer is enough and when explanation is unnecessary.
Learning objectives
- Explain what lifting carefully means in short-answer reading questions.
- Assess when direct quotation is the best strategy for 1 to 2 mark retrieval questions.
- Evaluate common mistakes such as copying too much, adding explanation, or missing the exact focus of the question.
- Apply the skill of selecting a precise phrase from a text and trimming it to answer the question exactly.
Big picture overview
Lifting carefully is a core reading strategy for questions that ask you to find information directly from the text. Many marks are lost not because students misunderstand the passage, but because they over-write, copy the wrong part, or include too much around the answer.
Exam routine: read the question carefully → find the exact detail → copy only the words needed → check the phrase matches the question focus.
Plain English first, then the exam term
| Plain English | Exam term | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Copy only the words that answer the question. | Selective quotation | Shows precise retrieval and avoids unnecessary writing. |
| Do not add extra explanation if the question only wants a phrase. | Concise response | Saves time and keeps the answer focused. |
| Make sure the copied words match the exact point being asked. | Direct relevance | Prevents losing marks for an almost-right answer. |
Video checkpoint: command words before lifting
This video reinforces why students must identify the question type before choosing evidence. Watch for the difference between finding a phrase and explaining a phrase.
What lifting carefully means
In simple terms: if the question asks you to find a word or phrase from the text, copy just the important words that directly answer it.
In exam terms: this is accurate text selection for retrieval questions. You are not expected to analyse language or rewrite the answer in your own words unless the question specifically asks you to do so.
Best practice: choose the shortest complete phrase that gives the right answer.
How to lift carefully: a simple procedure
| Step | What to do | Exam benefit |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Identify the focus | Underline the key word in the question, such as reason, feeling, detail, or action. | Stops you copying the wrong section. |
| 2. Find the matching line | Locate the exact words in the text that answer the question. | Improves accuracy. |
| 3. Trim the quote | Remove extra words at the beginning or end if they are not needed. | Keeps the response tight and focused. |
| 4. Check the match | Ask: does this phrase directly answer what was asked? | Avoids irrelevant detail. |
Why this skill is important for AO1 style marks
| Subskill | Principle | Why exam useful |
|---|---|---|
| Retrieval | Find a fact or phrase directly from the text. | This is the fastest way to gain easy marks. |
| Precision | Use only the exact words needed. | Prevents loss of marks through unnecessary detail. |
| Relevance | Keep the answer directly linked to the question focus. | Shows you understand what the examiner wants. |
Worked examples: good lifting and poor lifting
| Question | Weak answer | Better answer |
|---|---|---|
| What phrase shows the writer was tired? | He was very tired after walking all day and wanted to sleep. | wanted to sleep |
| Find one word that suggests fear. | He felt fear because the room was dark. | dark |
| Give two words that show the place was empty. | It was empty and nobody was there at all. | nobody was there |
Exam tip: if the question asks for one word, give one word. If it asks for a short phrase, give a short phrase.
Interactive checkpoint 1: trim the quote
Text: “She slowly dragged her heavy bag across the platform and collapsed onto the nearest bench.”
Question: Find a phrase that shows she was tired.
Interactive checkpoint 2: build the lifted phrase
Click the words that should be kept for the answer: Find one phrase showing the character is in a rush.
Application: scenario-based practice
Scenario: a reading question asks, What phrase shows that the character is in a rush?
- Find the part of the text that describes movement or speed.
- Look for a phrase with words such as hurried, quickly, rushed, or without stopping.
- Copy only the phrase that proves the rush.
- Do not explain why it shows rush unless the question asks you to explain.
Model answer: without stopping
Scenario 2: a question asks, Find one word that shows the room was dirty. Model answer: dusty
Teacher insight video: wider Edexcel expectations
This official-style Pearson support video helps place short-answer reading inside the wider qualification. Use it to understand why precision and command-word awareness matter.
Evaluation toolkit for lifting carefully
| Aspect | Strong point | Weak point | Exam judgement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accuracy | Very effective when the answer is clearly in the text. | Fails if the student copies the wrong section. | Best for direct retrieval questions. |
| Efficiency | Saves time and keeps answers brief. | Can become too short if the question needs more than one detail. | Highly effective in timed exams. |
| Precision | Protects marks by matching the wording closely. | May not show understanding if overused in explanation questions. | Use only when the command word allows it. |
- This is highly effective for short retrieval questions because ...
- However, it becomes weak if the student copies too much or selects the wrong line.
- Overall, careful lifting is the best strategy when the question demands precision rather than explanation.
- This approach is fair and efficient because it rewards close reading.
30-second retrieval sprint
Text: “The abandoned house was covered in dust, with broken windows and peeling paint.”
Question: Find one word showing the house was not looked after.
How this appears in exams
| Question type | Typical marks | What the examiner wants | Common pitfall |
|---|---|---|---|
| Find a word or phrase | 1 to 2 marks | A direct, accurate lifted answer | Adding explanation or extra words |
| Give evidence from the text | 1 to 2 marks | The exact phrase that proves the point | Paraphrasing instead of quoting precisely |
| Short retrieval with focus | 1 to 2 marks | Only the detail needed for the answer | Copying a full sentence when only a phrase is needed |
Annotated model exam answer
Question: What phrase shows the speaker is in a hurry?
Model answer: rushed out the door
- AO1: The phrase is copied precisely from the text and directly retrieves the evidence.
- AO2: The answer matches the question focus of hurry and selects the exact part that proves it.
- Exam judgement: No evaluation is needed here because the question is a retrieval question. The best answer is concise and accurate.
End-of-lesson reinforcement: whole-paper overview
Use this short overview to place careful lifting inside the wider Reading Skills journey.
Retrieval practice
Quick definition checks
- What does lifting carefully mean?
- When should you use a short quote instead of explanation?
- Why is copying the exact wording important?
Explain in 30 seconds
- Explain how to answer a 1 mark retrieval question.
- Explain why you should not write a long answer for a short phrase question.
- Explain how to check that your lifted quote is relevant.
Progress tracker
Click once after completing each part: intro video, procedure table, worked examples, interactive tasks, final retrieval practice.
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Final revision summary
- Use lifting carefully for short retrieval questions.
- Copy only the exact words needed.
- Keep answers short, precise, and directly relevant.
- Do not explain unless the question asks you to explain.
- Trim away extra words so the quotation is focused.
- Check that your answer matches the question wording exactly.
Final exam rule to remember
For 1 to 2 mark retrieval questions: if a short phrase is enough, copy it precisely, keep it short, and make sure it answers only what was asked.