OCR and Edexcel GCSE English Language cover the same core skills — reading and writing — but differ in paper structure, mark weightings, and text types. Neither qualification includes coursework. The choice is made by your child's school, and knowing which board they are entered for is essential for choosing the right revision materials.
Why the exam board matters for English Language
Unlike subjects where content is entirely dictated by Ofqual, GCSE English Language has some flexibility in how awarding bodies design their papers. Both OCR and Edexcel must assess reading (comprehension, analysis, evaluation) and writing (composition and communication), but the paper structures, text sources, and mark weightings differ in ways that affect how students should prepare.
Understanding which board your child's school uses — and what that board's papers actually look like — helps you choose the right past papers, revision guides, and practice tasks. The two most commonly used boards alongside AQA are OCR and Edexcel, and their approaches are distinct enough to matter.
OCR GCSE English Language (J351): how it works
OCR's GCSE English Language qualification (J351) is assessed across two components, with marks split unevenly between them.
Component 1 — Communicating Information and Ideas (80% of total marks)
This component covers reading literary fiction and non-fiction prose. Students answer reading questions on an unseen fiction extract, then complete a longer writing task. The component is 2 hours long.
- Reading section: students respond to a literary fiction extract, demonstrating comprehension, analysis, and evaluation.
- Writing section: students complete an extended piece of writing, typically in a narrative or descriptive mode.
- Total marks: 80 (reading) + 80 (writing) = 160 marks, worth 80% of the final grade.
Component 2 — Exploring Effects and Impact (20% of total marks)
This shorter component focuses on non-fiction reading and transactional writing.
- Reading section: students respond to a non-fiction or literary non-fiction text.
- Writing section: students produce a piece of transactional writing (such as a letter, speech, or article).
- Duration: 1 hour 15 minutes.
- Total marks: 40, worth 20% of the final grade.
There is no spoken language endorsement within the percentage marks, though speaking and listening is assessed separately and reported on the certificate.
Edexcel GCSE English Language (1EN0): how it works
Edexcel's GCSE English Language qualification (1EN0) is assessed across two papers of equal length and equal weighting.
Paper 1 — Fiction and Imaginative Writing
- Section A (Reading): students analyse an extract from a 20th or 21st-century literary text.
- Section B (Writing): students produce a piece of creative or imaginative writing.
- Duration: 1 hour 45 minutes. Worth 40% of the total qualification.
Paper 2 — Non-Fiction and Transactional Writing
- Section A (Reading): students read and analyse two non-fiction texts, including at least one from the 19th century.
- Section B (Writing): students produce a transactional text (letter, speech, report, article) for a specific audience and purpose.
- Duration: 1 hour 45 minutes. Worth 60% of the total qualification.
No coursework or controlled assessment is included at GCSE English Language for Edexcel. A spoken language endorsement is reported separately on the certificate, but it does not count towards the graded qualification.
Side-by-side comparison
| Criterion | OCR J351 | Edexcel 1EN0 |
|---|---|---|
| Awarding body | OCR | Pearson Edexcel |
| Qualification code | J351 | 1EN0 |
| Number of components | 2 | 2 |
| Component 1 weighting | 80% | 40% (Paper 1) |
| Component 2 weighting | 20% | 60% (Paper 2) |
| Component 1 duration | 2 hours | 1 hour 45 minutes |
| Component 2 duration | 1 hour 15 minutes | 1 hour 45 minutes |
| Fiction reading | Component 1 | Paper 1 |
| Non-fiction reading | Component 2 | Paper 2 |
| 19th-century text | Not specified | Required in Paper 2 |
| Coursework element | None | None |
| Spoken language | Reported separately | Reported separately |
| Grading | 9–1 | 9–1 |
Key differences that affect revision
The most significant practical difference for students is the weighting. OCR places 80% of the marks on Component 1, which means a student who struggles with the non-fiction component (Component 2) has a smaller portion of their grade at risk. Edexcel's two papers are more balanced, with Paper 2 carrying the larger weighting at 60%.
For Edexcel students, the 19th-century non-fiction text in Paper 2 is a distinct revision consideration. Students need familiarity with Victorian-era prose style — formal register, longer sentences, unfamiliar vocabulary — and techniques for reading challenging unseen texts confidently. OCR does not specify a 19th-century text requirement in the same way.
Both boards assess a similar range of writing skills, but Edexcel Paper 1 focuses on imaginative/creative writing while Paper 2 focuses on transactional writing with a clear audience and purpose. OCR's split is similar but with a stronger emphasis on extended narrative in Component 1.
Frequently asked questions
Can parents choose which GCSE English Language exam board their child sits?
No. The school selects the exam board for its cohort. If you are unsure which board your child is entered for, ask their English teacher — the board is printed on every mock paper and in the school's public exam information. The differences in paper structure mean it is important to practise with the correct board's past papers.
Is there coursework in GCSE English Language?
No — neither OCR nor Edexcel includes coursework in their GCSE English Language qualifications. This applies across all major exam boards after the post-2017 GCSE reforms. The spoken language component (a presentation or discussion) is assessed by the school and reported as a separate endorsement on the certificate, but it does not count toward the 9–1 grade.
Does the 19th-century text in Edexcel Paper 2 require specific knowledge?
Students do not need to have studied specific 19th-century texts beforehand — the extract is unseen. What they need is practice reading Victorian-era non-fiction prose, which can feel stylistically unfamiliar. Reading short extracts from period journalism, letters, or speeches during revision builds the confidence needed to analyse an unseen text on the day. Teachers usually provide examples of the kind of texts that appear.
How should revision differ between OCR and Edexcel English Language?
For OCR, because Component 1 carries 80% of the marks, students should prioritise fiction reading analysis and extended narrative writing — practising under the 2-hour time constraint. For Edexcel, revision should be more evenly spread across imaginative writing (Paper 1) and non-fiction reading and transactional writing (Paper 2), with particular attention to the 19th-century text style. In both cases, practising with real past papers under timed conditions is the single most effective preparation.
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