Cambridge Assessment International Education: Spanish 3035/22 October/November 2017
Cambridge Assessment International Education: Spanish 3035/22 October/November 2017
Cambridge Assessment International Education: Spanish 3035/22 October/November 2017
SPANISH 3035/22
Paper 2 Reading Comprehension October/November 2017
MARK SCHEME
Maximum Mark: 60
Published
This mark scheme is published as an aid to teachers and candidates, to indicate the requirements of the
examination. It shows the basis on which Examiners were instructed to award marks. It does not indicate the
details of the discussions that took place at an Examiners’ meeting before marking began, which would have
considered the acceptability of alternative answers.
Mark schemes should be read in conjunction with the question paper and the Principal Examiner Report for
Teachers.
Cambridge International will not enter into discussions about these mark schemes.
Cambridge International is publishing the mark schemes for the October/November 2017 2017 series for
most Cambridge IGCSE®, Cambridge International A and AS Level components and some Cambridge
O Level components.
1.1 Please note it is not possible to list all acceptable alternatives in the Detailed Mark Scheme provided in Section 3.
The following marking principles underpin the detailed instructions provided in Section 3 of the Mark Scheme. Where a decision is taken
to deviate from these principles for a particular question, this will be specified in the Mark Scheme. Often the general principles will
have to be weighed up against each other, e.g. the answer might pass the look-alike test (1.5(b)), but if the candidate has produced an
answer that is another word in the target language they will not score (1.6).
(a) If a candidate changes his/her mind over an answer and crosses out an attempt, award a mark if the final attempt is correct.
(b) If a candidate crosses out an answer to a whole question but makes no second attempt at it, mark the crossed out work.
1.3 Reading tasks: more than the stipulated number of boxes ticked/crossed by the candidate:
(a) If more than one attempt is visible, but the candidate has clearly indicated which attempt is his/her final answer (e.g. by crossing
out other attempts or by annotating the script in some way), mark in the usual way.
(b) If two attempts are visible (e.g. two boxes ticked instead of the 1 box stipulated), and neither has been crossed out/discounted by
the candidate, no mark can be awarded.
(c) Where candidates must tick a number of boxes (e.g. tick the 6 true statements) and tick too many, apply the following rule: deduct
the number of ‘extra’ answers indicated by the candidate from their number of correct answers. The remaining number is the mark
awarded, e.g. the candidate is asked to tick 6 statements, but ticks 8. 5 of the ticks are correctly placed, but 2 are ‘extras’ (8 ticks
placed by candidate minus 6 ticks required by rubric = 2 ‘extras’). Therefore the candidate is awarded a mark of 3.
(d) Answers in pen do not take precedence over answers in pencil, e.g. if a candidate is asked to tick 1 box and ticks two, one in pen
and the other in pencil, the mark cannot be awarded unless there is explicit indication from the candidate as to which is his/her final
answer.
1.5 Answers requiring the use of Spanish (rather than a non-verbal response) should be marked for communication. Tolerate inaccuracies
provided the message is clear.
(a) ‘If in doubt, sound it out’: if you read what the candidate has written, does it sound like the correct answer?
(b) Look-alike test: does what the candidate has written look like the correct answer?
(c) Accept incorrect gender or person unless Mark Scheme specifies otherwise.
(d) Accept incorrect possessive adjectives, e.g. mi, tu, su, etc., unless Mark Scheme specifies otherwise.
(g) Tolerate incorrect use of infinitive unless Mark Scheme specifies otherwise.
1.6 Unless the Mark Scheme specifies otherwise, do not accept incorrect Spanish if the word given means something else in Spanish.
(Incorrect Spanish which constitutes a word in any language other than Spanish is marked (i) on the basis of whether it is accepted or
refused in the Mark Scheme and (ii) if not mentioned in the Mark Scheme, on the basis of 1.5 above).
1.7 Where words are combined or split inappropriately do not award the mark, e.g. ‘supadre’ and ‘elar ticulo’ (inappropriate splitting or
combination is an indication that the candidate has not understood).
(a) INV = invalidation and is used when additional material included by the candidate is judged to invalidate an otherwise correct
answer thus preventing him/her from scoring the mark (INV = 0).
(b) tc = ‘tout court’ and means that on its own the material is not sufficient to score the mark.
(c) HA = harmless additional material which in conjunction with the correct answer does not prevent the candidate from scoring the
mark.
(d) BOD = benefit of the doubt and is used to indicate that the Examiner has considered the answer/that part of the answer and judged
it to be more correct than incorrect: the benefit of the doubt is given to the candidate and the mark is awarded
Award 0:
If there is any attempt that earns no credit. This could, for example, include the candidate copying all or some of the question, or any
working that does not earn any marks, whether crossed out or not.
It is the candidate’s responsibility to answer questions in such a way as to demonstrate to the Examiner that s/he has understood the
reading text. Where candidates introduce extra, irrelevant material to an otherwise correct answer the danger is that the Examiner is being
forced to ‘choose’ the correct answer and s/he cannot be certain that the candidate has shown understanding. Where the Examiner is put
in this position the mark cannot be awarded. The Detailed Mark Scheme cannot cover all eventualities and where specific instructions are
not provided, Examiners must check the reading text to ensure the correct elements which would qualify for the mark are not contradicted
or distorted by any extra material.
(a) Extra material, mentioned in the this is acceptable and is not penalised
Mark Scheme, which reinforces
the correct answer or in itself
constitutes an alternative correct
answer:
(b) Extra material which constitutes the Examiner needs to decide, by consulting the transcript/text and the Team Leader if
an alternative answer, but necessary, whether the alternative answer constitutes:
which is not explicitly (i) an alternative correct answer, in which case this falls into category (a) and the answer should
mentioned in the Mark be rewarded
Scheme: (ii) or an answer which on its own would be refused, in which case this falls into category (c)
and the answer should be refused
(c) Extra material which constitutes this puts the Examiner in the position of having to ‘choose’ which is the candidate’s ‘final’
an alternative answer answer – the Examiner cannot be sure what the candidate has understood – and the mark
specifically refused in the cannot be awarded
Mark Scheme:
(d) Extra material which distorts or this affects communication – the Examiner cannot be sure what the candidate has understood
contradicts the correct answer: – and the mark cannot be awarded
(e) Extra material introduced by the this affects communication – the Examiner cannot be sure what the candidate has understood
candidate and which does not – and the mark cannot be awarded. It can sometimes be difficult to draw the line between what
feature in the original text: is a deduction made by an able candidate on the basis of what they have read and pure
guesswork. Therefore where a particular answer is not covered in the Mark Scheme,
Examiners should consult their Team Leader
Section 1 Exercise 1
1 B 1
2 B 1
3 C 1
4 D 1
5 A 1
Section 1 Exercise 2
6 B 1
7 F 1
8 A 1
9 C 1
10 D 1
11 C 1
12 B 1
13 B 1
14 B 1
15 A 1
Section 2 Exercise 1
In this exercise, reward the candidate for being able to locate the answer in the passage.
Ignore extra material (whether Spanish is accurate or inaccurate) unless the Mark Scheme specifies otherwise.
Accept lifting unless it is specifically refused in the Mark Scheme.
Read Section 1: General Marking Principles.
Accept mi, mis, tu, tus, su, sus, etc.
ACCEPT: wrong genders throughout
24 un plan 1
Note. For questions with 2 interchangeable answers: 2 correct answers on line 1, line 2 blank = 2; 2 correct answers on line 1, line 2
wrong = 1 (or vice versa)
Look for signs of genuine comprehension. Usually, candidates who lift indiscriminately fail to demonstrate comprehension and will not score the
mark. However, careful lifting of the details required to answer the question does demonstrate comprehension and should be rewarded. This
Detailed Mark Scheme provides specific guidance but in cases not covered, see General Marking Principles, Section 3.10.
In this section, take into account the whole of the candidate’s answer. We are still applying the sound-alike rule.
Section 1Exercise 1
1 Mark available per question for True or False + 1 Mark available for correction of each False statement.
First award marks for the True/False element and then award marks for the justification of the False statements.
True/False element: all 5 statements appear on screen. Enter mark as appropriate for correct identification of each statement as True or False.
If neither True nor False is ‘ticked’ for a question, enter N/R (no response).
If both True and False are ‘ticked’ (and there is no clarification of candidate’s ‘final’ answer), enter 0.
Justification for false statements: only the 3 False statements appear on screen.
If the candidate correctly identified the statement as False, mark the justification and enter the mark.
If True is ‘ticked’, award N/R (or 0 if justification is provided)
If True and False are both ‘ticked’ (and there is no clarification of candidate’s ‘final’ answer), award 0 (ignore any justification)
If neither True nor False is ‘ticked’, mark justification and enter mark (no mark awarded for True/False element)
TRUE FALSE
8
8
8
8
8
26 un amigo ((que vive) allí) la invitó (a pasar unas vacaciones en su casa) 1 REFUSE MERE ADDITION
para pasar/pasó unas vacaciones (con un amigo) OF NEGATIVE
(fue) de vacaciones REFUSE (en) vacaciones tc
REFUSE pasar unas
vacaciones tc
28 desde pequeña (aparecía con su madre en fotos (en las revistas)) 1 REFUSE MERE ADDITION
su madre empezó/comenzó su carrera a los 19 años/a trabajar de modelo a la edad de OF NEGATIVE
19 años
la madre de Carolina empezó/comenzó su carrera a los 19 años/a trabajar de modelo a
la edad de 19 años
Fue su madre que empezó a los 19 años
35 es esencial«transporta 1
(para) reducir la cantidad de comida que se transporta
37 (a menudo los vecinos) (tienen dificultades para) ponerse de acuerdo 1 REFUSE answers with
ponernos
Note. For questions with 2 interchangeable answers: 2 correct answers on line 1, line 2 blank = 2; 2 correct answers on line 1, line 2 wrong = 1 (or
vice versa)
38 mi / una 1
39 desde 1
40 ser/hacerme 1
41 cada / en 1
42 de 1
43 pasado 1
44 los 1
45 Después / los 1
46 había 1
47 Mejores 1
48 para 1
49 ganar 1
50 sin 1
51 llegó / fue 1
52 me 1
53 mismo 1
54 muy 1
55 que 1
56 creer 1
57 tanto 1