German is predominantly spoken in Germany and is the primary language of Austria and Liechtenstein. It also serves as an official language in Switzerland, Belgium and Luxembourg. German also holds historical significance in Poland, Denmark, South Tyrol in Italy and Namibia, where it is still spoken.
The German GCSE exam covers several main skill areas:
Listening. Involves answering questions in English and German, multiple-choice, gap-fill, and short-answer questions.
Role play (e.g., ordering food, booking a hotel); Photo card discussion; General conversation on prepared topics.
Comprehension. Questions on texts, emails, and adverts.
Translation from German to English and from English to German.
Writing. Short and long writing tasks (e.g., descriptions, opinions.)
Common topics in the exam include:
Identity and Culture (family, technology, free time).
Local and Global Issues (environment, travel, social problems).
School and Future Plans (education, jobs, ambitions).
The A-Level German exam tests fluency and comprehension in German. It focuses on speaking, listening, reading, writing, and cultural knowledge.
A typical exam structure is:
Paper 1 - Listening Reading and Writing
Listening: Answer questions in German and English.
Reading: Comprehension of articles, interviews, and extracts.
Translation from German to English and English to German.
Paper 2 - Writing
Essay 1 : Literature analysis (novel/play).
Essay 2: Film analysis.
Examples of texts/films studied:
Der Vorleser (The Reader)
Good Bye, Lenin!
Das Leben der Anderen (The Lives of Others)
Paper 3 - Speaking
Discussion of a stimulus card (e.g., German society, politics).
Independent research project (IRP) - a topic of choice (e.g., Berlin Wall, German cinema, immigration).