IGCSE English Language 4EB1 Comparison Openings
How to create immediate, focused and analytical openings for Question 7 comparison responses.
Start here: compare immediately
In Question 7, the opening should establish comparison straight away. Examiners reward students who immediately compare the texts instead of describing them separately.
Learning objectives
- Explain how to build a strong comparison opening.
- Assess why concise openings improve examiner impression and organisation.
- Evaluate which comparison openings are most effective.
- Apply comparative sentence structures in Question 7 responses.
Big picture overview
A strong opening does three things quickly:
| What the opening should do | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Identify the shared topic | Shows understanding of both texts |
| Identify the key difference | Creates a focused argument |
| Use comparative language immediately | Shows comparison rather than summary |
Formative check 1: comparison or summary?
Student opening: “Text One is about travel. Text Two is also about travel.”
1. The purpose of a comparison opening
A comparison opening acts like a roadmap. It tells the examiner what the comparison will focus on throughout the answer.
| Weak opening | Improved opening |
|---|---|
| Text One is about a city. Text Two is also about a city. | Both texts present city life, although Text One presents it positively while Text Two focuses more on stress and overcrowding. |
Relevant video: comparing viewpoints quickly
This video is relevant because it explains how to compare viewpoints from the very start of the response.
Formative check 2: strongest comparison opening
2. The best comparison opening patterns
| Pattern | Why it works |
|---|---|
| Both writers present ___, although their attitudes differ. | Shows similarity and contrast together. |
| While Text One presents ___, Text Two focuses more on ___. | Highlights the main difference immediately. |
| Both texts deal with ___, but they explore it differently. | Useful for shared topics. |
| Although both texts ___, Text One ___ whereas Text Two ___. | Creates balanced comparison. |
Formative check 3: best connective
Which connective creates the clearest contrast?
3. Comparative vocabulary improves sophistication
Strong openings use precise vocabulary for attitude and tone.
| Weak vocabulary | Stronger vocabulary |
|---|---|
| good | optimistic, admiring, enthusiastic |
| bad | critical, doubtful, hostile |
| sad | melancholic, reflective, regretful |
| happy | celebratory, hopeful, positive |
Relevant video: improving analytical vocabulary
This video is useful because stronger vocabulary improves comparison accuracy and sophistication.
Formative check 4: precise vocabulary
Sentence: “Text One has a good tone.”
4. Avoid common opening mistakes
| Common mistake | Why it weakens the answer | How to improve it |
|---|---|---|
| Long introduction | Delays comparison | Compare immediately |
| Text One then Text Two structure | Feels like two summaries | Compare both texts in the same sentence |
| No clear contrast | Makes the response unfocused | Identify the key difference early |
| Vague vocabulary | Reduces sophistication | Use precise tone words |
Formative check 5: weak or effective?
Opening: “Text One is about travel. The writer explains many details about the journey. Text Two is also about travel and describes some places.”
5. AO2 application practice
Scenario 1: Text One presents a journey as exciting. Text Two presents it as dangerous.
Model opening: Both texts describe travel, although Text One presents the journey as exciting whereas Text Two focuses more on danger and uncertainty.
Scenario 2: Both texts discuss technology. One celebrates it, the other criticises it.
Model opening: While both texts discuss technology, Text One presents it positively while Text Two focuses more on its negative effects.
Scenario 3: One text sounds nostalgic while the other sounds regretful.
Model opening: Although both texts reflect on the past, Text One sounds nostalgic whereas Text Two adopts a more regretful tone.
Formative check 6: write your own opening
Scenario: Both texts discuss competition. One presents it positively while the other presents it negatively.
6. AO3 evaluation toolkit
| Evaluation focus | Question to ask | Useful phrase |
|---|---|---|
| Clarity | Is the comparison immediate? | This is effective because the comparison is established immediately. |
| Precision | Is the vocabulary accurate? | The wording is precise and convincing. |
| Balance | Does it represent both texts fairly? | The comparison is balanced because... |
| Focus | Does it identify the key contrast? | The opening quickly establishes the key difference. |
Formative check 7: strongest evaluation
Comment: “This opening is effective because it establishes the key contrast immediately and avoids unnecessary summary.”
7. Annotated model opening
Question: Compare how the writers present city life.
Model opening: Both texts present city life vividly, although their attitudes differ significantly. Text One presents the city as energetic and exciting, whereas Text Two focuses more on pressure and overcrowding. This opening is effective because it establishes the key contrast immediately and avoids unnecessary summary.
- Compares immediately.
- Includes both similarity and difference.
- Uses comparative connectives.
- Uses precise tone vocabulary.
- Adds evaluation.
Comparison opening toolkit
| Purpose | Sentence starter |
|---|---|
| Similarity + contrast | Both texts present ___, although... |
| Main difference | While Text One..., Text Two... |
| Tone comparison | Text One adopts a ___ tone whereas Text Two... |
| Purpose comparison | Both writers discuss ___, but they present it differently because... |
| Evaluation | This opening is effective because... |
Retrieval practice
Quick definition checks
- Comparison opening: the first sentence or two establishing similarity and difference.
- Comparative connective: a word such as while, whereas, although or however.
- Tone: the emotional voice or attitude of the text.
Explain in 30 seconds prompts
- Why should comparison happen immediately?
- Why is “whereas” useful?
- Why are long introductions weak?
Final revision summary
- Start with comparison immediately.
- Identify both the shared topic and the key difference.
- Use comparative connectives such as while, whereas and although.
- Keep openings concise and analytical.
- Use precise vocabulary for tone and attitude.
- Avoid long summary introductions.
- Do not write about Text One then Text Two separately.