| Band | Marks | What it looks like |
|---|---|---|
| Band 4 | 10–12 | Perceptive, detailed analysis. Convincing and compelling argument. Judicious use of quotations fully embedded. Methods analysed with precise terminology and thoughtful exploration of effect on the audience. |
| Band 3 | 7–9 | Clear, explained response. Relevant references support the argument. Language and structure examined with appropriate terminology. Effect on audience considered. |
| Band 2 | 4–6 | Some understanding of the text. Quotations used but not always analysed. Techniques identified but effects not fully explored. Argument not always sustained. |
| Band 1 | 1–3 | Simple, limited response. Some relevant points but little analysis. Quotations may be copied without comment. Response may retell the story. |
| Band | Marks | What it looks like |
|---|---|---|
| Band 4 | 5–6 | Perceptive understanding of how context shapes meaning. Context woven into the argument throughout, not added at the end. |
| Band 3 | 4 | Clear understanding of relevant context. Links made between context and the text with some explanation. |
| Band 2 | 2–3 | Some awareness of context. Mentions historical background but connections to the text are vague or undeveloped. |
| Band 1 | 1 | Simple reference to context with little or no connection to the text or the question. |
| Marks | What it looks like |
|---|---|
| 4 | Consistent accurate spelling and punctuation. Varied vocabulary and sentence structures used effectively throughout. |
| 3 | Generally accurate spelling and punctuation. Some variety in vocabulary and sentence structure. |
| 2 | Some accurate spelling and punctuation. Limited variety in vocabulary or sentence structure. |
| 1 | Frequent errors in spelling and punctuation. Simple vocabulary and sentence structures throughout. |
Most students mention that Macbeth was written for James I and that he was interested in witchcraft. The best responses go much further.
James I had published Daemonologie in 1597 — a personal treatise on witchcraft — and genuinely believed in the supernatural threat witches posed. The Witches in Macbeth are not theatrical decoration; for a Jacobean audience they represented real evil, and for James personally they represented a political threat he had written about publicly. The Gunpowder Plot of 1605, just a year before Macbeth was likely first performed, made the theme of treacherous subjects murdering their king acutely, terrifyingly topical.
But the richest contextual parallels concern Lady Macbeth and James's own history. Shakespeare's audience would have recognised in Lady Macbeth uncomfortable echoes of Elizabeth I — a woman who demanded to transcend her gender to access power. Elizabeth's famous Tilbury speech of 1588, in which she declared that she had the body of a weak and feeble woman but the heart and stomach of a king, resonates directly with Lady Macbeth's "unsex me here" — both women invoking a masculine power their bodies were seen to deny them. Elizabeth, like Lady Macbeth, was childless, and the question of succession haunted her reign as it haunts Macbeth's.
Most devastating of all is the parallel James himself would have felt: his mother, Mary Queen of Scots, was executed by Elizabeth — her own cousin — just as Duncan is murdered by Macbeth, his kinsman and guest. For James, watching a play about the murder of a king by someone close to him, performed at his own court, the personal resonance would have been profound. Shakespeare was writing not just about power in the abstract but about the specific, bloody history of the Stuart dynasty that now sat on the English throne.
Weaving these parallels into your response — the Elizabeth/Lady Macbeth echo, the Mary/Duncan parallel, James's personal investment in the themes of regicide and witchcraft — will place your answer at the very top of Band 4 for AO3.
Key tip: in every point you make, always lead with what the writer, Shakespeare, is doing — NOT what the characters are doing. "Shakespeare has Macbeth say..." not "Macbeth says..." — "Shakespeare presents Lady Macbeth as..." not "Lady Macbeth appears..." This will elevate your understanding of the play to any marker.
DO NOT REFER TO "THE READER" — SHAKESPEARE'S PLAY IS PERFORMED TO "AN AUDIENCE". Writing "the reader feels..." immediately signals to an examiner that you have forgotten you are writing about a play. Always write "the audience feels...", "Shakespeare makes the audience...", or "this would unsettle a Jacobean audience..."
SO MAKE SURE YOU GIVE YOURSELF A FEW MINUTES TO CHECK THROUGH YOUR ANSWER BEFORE MOVING ON.