Award-Winning IB Language A: Literature SL
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Award-Winning IB Language A: Literature SL Tutors

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Rachel
IB Literature SL demands more than plot summaries; examiners want to see students dissect how authorial choices in structure, imagery, and narrative voice create meaning. Rachel's deep background in literary analysis and cross-cultural study of ideas gives her a sharp eye for the kind of close readi...
Duke University
Bachelor in Arts

Certified Tutor
IB Literature SL demands more than plot summaries — students need to produce polished literary commentary that analyzes how authors use language, structure, and form to create meaning. Jessica's deep love of novels and nonfiction, combined with her writing expertise, means she can teach students to ...
University
Bachelor's

Certified Tutor
10+ years
Arianna
Succeeding in IB Language A: Literature SL means going beyond plot summary to analyze how authors use narrative technique, figurative language, and structural choices to build meaning. Arianna teaches students to write commentary that connects specific textual evidence to larger thematic arguments —...
Dartmouth College
Bachelor of Science

Certified Tutor
10+ years
Ezra
Philosophy trains you to dissect arguments; IB Literature SL trains you to dissect texts — and Ezra's philosophy degree means he's unusually good at teaching students how authorial choices function as arguments about theme, identity, and form. He breaks down the Paper 1 commentary into a structured ...
Reed College
Bachelors, Philosophy

Certified Tutor
Naomi
IB Literature SL demands more than plot summaries — the exam expects students to analyze how authors use language, structure, and literary conventions to shape meaning. Naomi's English degree gave her deep practice with exactly this kind of close textual analysis across multiple genres and periods. ...
Brandeis University
Bachelors, English, Philosophy

Certified Tutor
10+ years
Shua
IB Literature SL demands more than plot summaries — the Paper 1 unseen commentary, in particular, requires students to analyze literary devices and structure an argument on the spot. Shua's own writing practice and love of reading give him a sharp instinct for close textual analysis, and he teaches ...
Swarthmore College
Bachelors, Economics

Certified Tutor
2+ years
Caresse
As a passionate educator with a Doctorate in Comparative Literature from Princeton University, I have over 10 years of experience in both tutoring and classroom instruction. My expertise spans AP English Language and Composition, AP English Literature and Composition, Creative Writing, and more. I b...
Princeton University
Doctorate (e.g., PhD, MD, JD, etc.)
Princeton University
Master's/Graduate

Certified Tutor
9+ years
Jai
I'm a recent Stanford graduate (Electrical Engineering and Computer Science), and have been working at a major Management Consulting firm for a few years now. I personally scored a 2360 (out of 2400) on the SAT and 35 on the ACT and was successful in gaining admission to several top universities. I'...
Stanford University
Bachelors in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science

Certified Tutor
I am a licensed physician from Florida who is currently changing careers. I graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 2009 and have extensive tutoring and editing experience. While a student, I became a certified writing tutor through the Critical Writing Department. Since I completed my writ...
Nova Southeastern University
PHD, Medicine
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelors, History
University of Pennsylvania
undergraduate

Certified Tutor
Kate
I'm available to tutor biology, chemistry, physics, math from Algebra up through AP Calculus, SAT test prep, and French. I've been tutoring students in science and math for 7 years. I also spent 8 months working and studying in France, and have tutored high school and adult students in French. When ...
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Masters, Environmental Engineering
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Bachelors
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Frequently Asked Questions
IB Language A: Literature SL essays require a balance between close textual analysis and broader interpretive claims. For Paper 1 (unseen texts), examiners expect you to identify literary techniques, explain their effects, and connect them to your overall argument—not just list devices. For Paper 2 (studied texts), you need to develop a sustained thesis that addresses the prompt directly while integrating specific evidence from the text. A tutor can help you move beyond plot summary to analytical writing by teaching you how to construct topic sentences that make claims, embed quotations smoothly, and use your analysis to build toward a compelling conclusion rather than repeating the same observations.
Many students can spot a metaphor or alliteration but struggle to explain why the author chose that device and what effect it creates on the reader. In IB Language A: Literature SL, examiners reward analysis that goes beyond naming—you need to explain the *impact*. For example, instead of "The author uses short sentences," write "The author's use of short, fragmented sentences creates a sense of urgency and mirrors the protagonist's fragmented thoughts." Personalized tutoring helps you develop this analytical habit by giving you feedback on your own writing, showing you where you're stating the obvious versus where you're making insightful connections between form and meaning.
The unseen text on Paper 1 tests your ability to apply analytical skills to unfamiliar material under time pressure. Rather than memorizing texts, you should practice close reading strategies: annotating for tone shifts, tracking how imagery develops throughout a passage, and identifying the relationship between form and meaning. A tutor can guide you through timed practice with various genres and styles—poetry, prose extracts, dramatic monologues—so you develop confidence recognizing patterns and constructing arguments quickly. Building a flexible analytical toolkit (questions to ask about any text, frameworks for discussing voice and perspective) is far more valuable than trying to predict what might appear.
A common mistake is analyzing Text A in one paragraph, then Text B in another, without genuine comparison. IB examiners want to see integrated analysis where you're constantly drawing connections and contrasts. This means structuring paragraphs thematically or by literary element rather than by text—for example, a paragraph on how both texts use isolation as a motif, with evidence from each work woven together. Personalized instruction helps you practice this integrated approach by reviewing your drafts and showing you where you're comparing versus where you're just summarizing separately. Over time, you'll internalize how to build arguments that treat your texts as a conversation rather than isolated pieces.
The Individual Oral (IO) requires you to deliver a 10-minute prepared commentary on an extract, then respond to questions—a format that demands both deep preparation and flexibility. You need to select an extract that allows for rich analysis, develop a coherent argument about how language and literary devices work in that passage, and practice articulating your ideas clearly under the pressure of timed speaking. A tutor can help you choose strategically significant extracts, structure your commentary so it flows logically, and practice responding to unexpected questions without losing your thread. They can also give you feedback on pacing, clarity, and whether your analysis feels confident and specific rather than vague or overly general.
Moving up a grade band typically requires shifting from solid analysis to sophisticated, nuanced interpretation. This means revising not just for clarity but for depth: Are your topic sentences making original claims, or are they obvious? Are you acknowledging complexity and alternative readings, or presenting your interpretation as the only valid one? Do your conclusions synthesize ideas, or just restate your introduction? A tutor can work through your essays with you, identifying where you're playing it safe and pushing you to develop bolder, more defensible arguments. They can also help you recognize patterns in examiner feedback—if you're consistently losing marks on comparative analysis or on discussing the author's purpose, targeted revision with expert guidance accelerates improvement far more than revising alone.
Paper 1 (unseen text, 1.5 hours) and Paper 2 (studied texts, 1.5 hours) both require you to plan before writing, and many students underestimate how much time close reading takes. For Paper 1, spending 15-20 minutes annotating and outlining your argument prevents rushed, surface-level analysis. For Paper 2, you need time to decide which texts and evidence best address the prompt, not just write about the first idea that comes to mind. A tutor can help you develop a consistent exam strategy through timed practice, showing you where you tend to lose time and how to streamline your planning process without sacrificing analytical depth. They can also help you recognize when you're over-explaining a point versus when you need more evidence, so you allocate words strategically.
Terminology matters because it allows you to discuss literary effects precisely and concisely—examiners expect you to know terms like *volta*, *juxtaposition*, *register*, and *narrative perspective*. However, using terminology for its own sake (naming devices without explaining their effect) actually weakens your writing. The goal is to use terminology as a tool for analysis, not as decoration. For example, "The volta in line 9 shifts the speaker's tone from resignation to defiance, signaling a turn in their emotional journey" is stronger than "There is a volta." A tutor helps you build terminology naturally into your analytical voice by having you practice integrating it into your own arguments and giving feedback when you're using terms accurately versus when you're forcing them awkwardly.
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