Eksamen: SPR3029 | Dato: Høst 2024 | Varighet: 5 timer | Læreplan: LK20
Struktur: Oppgave 1 – Tekstforståelse (~33 %), Oppgave 2 – Tekstsamhandling (~33 %), Oppgave 3 – Tekstproduksjon (~33 %)
The main message of the text is that every young American has a responsibility to exercise their right to vote, regardless of their disillusionment with politics. Morris argues that voting is not a privilege but a right, and that young people have the power to change history when they show up to the ballot box.
Morris uses several language features and structural techniques to make her argument compelling and relatable to a young audience.
The text opens with a personal anecdote about her immigrant mother, establishing ethos and emotional connection. By presenting herself as “the daughter of immigrants” and “the only person in your family who can vote,” Morris creates solidarity with her intended audience.
A key structural technique is concession. Morris anticipates and validates her readers’ objections: “You may be so overwhelmed with the current culture war that you are uncomfortable with voting.” The anaphora (“You may...”) repeated four times builds a rhythm that acknowledges skepticism before countering it.
Morris makes effective use of emphatic italics to stress individual agency: “That is within your power, your reach.” This makes the text feel like a personal appeal rather than a political lecture.
The text also uses unexpected contrast. By connecting voting to “fixing potholes in the road,” Morris makes politics feel concrete and immediate rather than abstract.
The closing statement functions as a rallying cry: “People don’t take our generation seriously, but they should – because when we show up to vote, we show up to change history.” The shift from “I” to “we” unites writer and reader in collective action.
John Lewis, a veteran of the American civil rights movement, described voting as “the most powerful nonviolent change agent” in a democracy. While this may sound idealistic, the provided material suggests that young people’s participation in elections matters enormously.
Text A highlights that young voters bring diversity and fresh perspectives. Their “multifaceted perspectives” on issues like “the economy, gun reform, and abortion justice” introduce “innovative solutions into our democracy.” A democracy that only reflects older generations’ views is incomplete.
The polling data in Text B adds nuance. While 57% of young Americans said they were “extremely likely” to vote in 2024, a significant portion remains disengaged. Young people’s top concerns – inflation, jobs, gun violence, and climate change – directly affect their futures. Climate-concerned youth were 20% more likely to vote, suggesting personal stakes drive participation.
In my view, voting is important not just for its practical outcomes but for what it represents. When young people vote, they signal that they are stakeholders in society, not passive bystanders. Every unfilled ballot is a voice unheard, and when enough voices are silent, the political system stops reflecting the will of the people.
The World Bank describes education as “one of the strongest instruments for reducing poverty.” In the United States, this claim is both supported by evidence and complicated by deep-rooted inequalities in the education system itself.
The American Dream has always been closely linked to education. Adults with a bachelor’s degree earn approximately 65% more than those with only a high school diploma. In this sense, education clearly functions as a “driver of development.”
However, public schools in the US are largely funded by local property taxes, meaning schools in wealthy areas receive significantly more funding than those in poor communities. This creates a cycle where children born into poverty attend underfunded schools and are less likely to attend university – perpetuating the very inequality education is supposed to address.
Race further complicates this picture. The legacy of segregation continues to shape educational outcomes. Black and Hispanic students are disproportionately concentrated in underfunded schools, and the school-to-prison pipeline remains a pressing concern.
Despite these challenges, education has been a powerful tool for social change. The civil rights movement placed school desegregation at the centre of its agenda, recognising that equal access to education was essential for racial equality.
In conclusion, for education to truly function as the “instrument for reducing poverty” that the World Bank envisions, the US must confront the structural inequalities embedded in how education is funded, delivered, and accessed.
In the 2020 US presidential election, only 48% of 18-to-24-year-olds voted. Berthin’s article raises an important question: why do so many young Americans not exercise their democratic right?
One reason is distrust in political institutions. Berthin notes that young people report to researchers that political leaders are not acting in their interests. When both major parties are seen as failing on climate change, student debt, and gun violence, voting feels like choosing the lesser of two evils.
A second factor is what Berthin calls transition fatigue. Today’s young people have not had to fight for the right to vote, which may make that right feel less precious. Importantly, this does not mean apathy – young people remain civically active through demonstrations and online advocacy. The problem is not lack of engagement but lack of faith in elections as the vehicle for change.
A third reason is practical barriers. In the US, voter registration is not automatic, Election Day is not a holiday, and voter ID laws disproportionately affect young and minority voters.
Finally, there is representation. The average age of a US senator is over 65. This generational disconnect can make electoral politics feel irrelevant to young voters.
The challenge for democracy is not to scold young people for not voting but to reform the system so that voting feels meaningful, accessible, and connected to the issues they care about.
In the excerpt, Peeta Mellark articulates a deeply human fear: that the forces controlling his life will also change who he is. His struggle resonates powerfully with Winston Smith’s resistance in George Orwell’s 1984.
Peeta’s central concern is not survival but selfhood. He articulates a wish to die as himself, recognising that the Games are designed to dehumanise tributes. He also expresses a desire to find some way of demonstrating to the Capitol that they do not own him. For Peeta, the real victory is refusing to be transformed by violence.
Winston Smith faces a similar struggle under Big Brother’s totalitarian regime. His act of rebellion begins with writing in a diary – a private assertion of individual consciousness. Like Peeta, Winston believes preserving one’s inner self is the most important form of resistance.
However, their outcomes differ dramatically. Peeta, despite being tortured, ultimately retains elements of his true self. Winston is broken by the Party’s torture and ends by loving Big Brother – his identity completely destroyed. Orwell’s bleaker vision suggests totalitarian power can crush any resistance, while Collins offers a more hopeful narrative where human connection can restore what authoritarianism takes away.
Both texts raise a fundamental question: what makes us who we are, and can that be taken from us? Together, they illuminate both the fragility and resilience of personal identity under oppression.
Dubey’s poem explores the tension between linguistic standards inherited from colonialism and the reality of speaking English as an Indian. Through a comparison between “his” English and “mine,” Dubey raises questions about identity, authenticity, and the politics of language.
The poem is structured around a binary contrast. The other man's English is presented as the polished standard of British royalty – impeccable and authoritative. The speaker's own English is described as halting and rustic, marked by an Indian cadence. However, this self-deprecation is not straightforward – the speaker is a professor of English. The irony suggests that the perceived inadequacy is not linguistic but cultural.
The poem's most powerful moment is its declaration that the speaker's English belongs to him alone – that it is, simply, Indian English. The repetition of the possessive is an act of reclamation. Indian English is not a failed version of British English – it is its own variety.
The contrast between the two figures in the final lines deepens the theme. The other speaker has become American – assimilated into a different anglophone identity. The speaker, by contrast, has remained rooted in his village and rural Indian context. The exclamation that follows is ambiguous: it could signal shame but equally signal defiant pride. The speaker has refused to assimilate.
In conclusion, Dubey’s poem is a nuanced meditation on the politics of English in a postcolonial world. It acknowledges linguistic hierarchies while quietly insisting that Indian English is a legitimate form of self-expression. The poem asks: in a world shaped by colonialism, what does it mean to speak in your own voice?
Om oppgaveteksten: Oppgaveteksten i dette løsningsforslaget er gjengitt fra Utdanningsdirektoratets (UDIR) eksamen i Engelsk 1 (høsten 2024). Vi gjengir oppgaveteksten bevisst, slik at du kan følge løsningen uten å veksle mellom dokumenter. Eksamensoppgaver fra offentlige myndigheter er uten opphavsrettsvern etter åndsverkloven § 14 og kan gjengis fritt. Selve løsningsforslaget, forklaringene og figurene er utarbeidet av Eksamenssett.no. Opphavsrettsbeskyttede bilder og illustrasjoner fra originaleksamen er fjernet.