NAME…………………………………… INDEX NO. ………………………..……………
DATE…….……………………………… CANDIDATE’S SIGNATURE………………..
CLASS: ……………………………………………
101/2
ENGLISH
PAPER 2
(COMPREHENSION, LITERARY APPRECIATION AND GRAMMAR)
TIME: 2 ½ HOURS
Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (K.C.S.E)
101/2
ENGLISH
PAPER 2
TIME: 2 ½ HOURS
| Question | Maximum Score | Candidates Score |
| 1 | 20 | |
| 2 | 25 | |
| 3 | 20 | |
| 4 | 15 | |
| Total Score | ||
This paper consists of 12 printed pages. Candidates should check the question paper to ascertain that all pages are printed as indicated and that no pages are missing.
(Comprehension, Literary Appreciation and Grammar)
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Ask any youngster what living with their parents is like and they will most likely tell you it is pure hell. They hate being told what to do, or taking orders or having to explain where they are going or coming from, especially girls. Young people hate asking for permission to go anywhere, and even worse being told that they must be back by a certain time. They hate having to ask for permission to use something or do something at home and consider these requirements an infringement on their freedom. So while parents believe they are inculcating good behavior in their children, the youngsters see it as dictatorship.
Another thorny issue is religion. I dearly remember what happened when I decided to attend a church different from my mother’s. She told me in no uncertain terms that if I wanted to continue going to my new church, I would have to move out because she would not allow it. I found my parents’ restrictions rather stifling and could not wait for the day I would move out of home. I fantasized about going on outings that were forbidden at home, returning home late, going wherever I wanted whenever I wanted, returning from work and just lazing on the couch, leaving my bed unmade or my clothes lying around with no one to tell me that my room was a mess.
When it came to resources, mum would scold us if we left the door of the jiko open while heating our bath water or left the food to cook for an unnecessarily long time on the kerosene stove. She would breathe fire about our wastefulness, while reminding us of the high cost of living. She would conclude by telling us that she would not allow it in her house. My dad would be equally furious if he found the lights on in a room that was not being used. On several occasions he threatened not to pay the electricity bill and leave us in darkness for a while so that we could learn to save resources. Sometimes my siblings would laugh and wonder what our parents were making such a fuss about. At other times we would be angry and grumble that they were stingy and did not want to see us happy; how we longed to get away from them.
But when the time to leave home finally came, I was apprehensive and wondered what life without my parents would be like. One moment I would be happy to be free, with no one to order me around, the next moment I would be having doubts. When you are young, you think you have the freedom to do as you please. But after doing something “forbidden” once or twice, you begin having second thoughts. You realize, since you never used to go on outings for instance, you won’t miss much by staying indoors most of the time instead of coming back late.
You now have to pay your bills and realize that you have to cut costs, you remove your bath water from the stove before it boils and do not allow milk to boil for a second longer than necessary, and of course you switch off the lights in any room that’s not being used. Suddenly, you realize that you are living by the very rules you resented in your parents’ home. You are learning to use resources wisely now that you have to take care of yourself. When you start a family, you impose the same restrictions on your children. If there is one thing you cannot run away from, it is responsibility. What I have learnt is that when your parents are tough with you, they are only teaching you to be responsible. As the saying goes “only the wearer of the shoe knows where the shoe pinches.” I now understand why my parents gave me a tongue lashing whenever I misused resources.
(2marks)
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(2marks)
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“Only the wearer of the shoe knows where the shoe pinches” (2marks) ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………
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Read the excerpt below and then answer the questions that follow. (25 marks)
Helmer: Miserable creature – what have you done?
Nora: Let me go. You shall not suffer for my sake. You shall not take it upon yourself.
Helmer: No tragic airs, please.(Locks the hall door.) Here you shall stay and give me an explanation. Do you understand what you have done? Answer me! Do you understand what you have done?
Nora: (Looks steadily at him and says with a growing look of coldness in her face) Yes, now I am beginning to understand thoroughly.
Helmer: (walking about the room) What a horrible awakening! All these eight years- she who was my joy and pride- a hypocrite, a liar – worse, worse – a criminal! The unutterable ugliness of it all! – For shame! For shame! (NORA is silent and looks steadily at him. He stops in front of her.) I ought to have suspected that something of the sort would happen. I ought to have foreseen it. All your father’s want of principle – be silent! – all your father’s want of principle has come out in you. No religion, no morality, no sense of duty -. How I am punished for having winked at what he did! I did it for your sake, and this is how you repay me.
Nora: Yes, that’s just it.
Helmer: Now you have destroyed all my happiness. You have ruined all my future. It is horrible to think of! I am in the power of an unscrupulous man; he can do what he likes with me, ask anything he likes of me, give me any orders he please – I dare not refuse. And I must sink to such miserable depths because of a thoughtless woman!
Nora: When I am out of the way, you will be free.
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Read the following narrative and then answer the questions that follow.
There was a great famine in the land where Obunde and his wife, Oswera, lived with their nine children. The only creatures who had some food were the ogres and before they would part with their food they demanded a lot of things.
One day, Oswera went to one ogre’s home and asked him for some food, for by then her children were almost dying of hunger.
“I have no more food except sweet potatoes,” the ogre told her.
“I shall be happy to have the potatoes. We have nothing, not a grain of food at my house and the children are starving. Please let me have some and I shall repay you after the harvest.”
“No, if you want food you must exchange with something right now. Will you give me one of your children in exchange for my potatoes?” Oswera hesitated, her children were dear to her, but then they would die without food.
“Yes, I shall let you have one of them, if only you could let us have some potatoes,” Oswera answered. Then she took a big basket full of potatoes and told the ogre the exact time he could go to her home to collect one of her children for a meal.
Oswera thought hard and decided she would not give a single one of her children to the ogre for a meal. She therefore cut young banana stalks and cooked them nicely.
When the ogre came, she gave them to him and the beast went away satisfied. Soon the potatoes were finished and she had to go back to the ogre again.
Oswera and Obunde kept cooking banana stalks for the ogre every time he came for one of their children, until one day she had no more banana stalks to cook for the animal.
“You have now eaten all my children, yet we still need the potatoes. What shall we give you now?” Oswera asked in despair.
“Then I shall come for you and your husband,” the ogre replied angrily as he helped Oswera to load her basket of potatoes on to her head.
“Yes come tomorrow at the usual time in the afternoon and get me. I shall have cooked myself for you,” Oswera said calmly.
The following day the ogre went promptly as Oswera had told him and he found the home almost deserted. He looked everywhere but apart from Obunde, there was no trace of anybody.
Then he looked at the usual place and found a huge bowl of a big meal Oswera had cooked for him. The Ogre did not realize they had prepared a dog instead of Oswera. When he had eaten the Ogre told Obunde he would come for him the following day. Obunde got very worried and that night he could not sleep. The following day he started crying:
“Ah Oswera my wife, how did you cook yourself and how shall I cook myself for the ogre?” He sat down in the dust of his compound and wept. Oswera became very annoyed with her husband.
“You, you stupid, foolish man! Why sit and cry there all day long? How do you think I cooked myself? Take one of the dogs and quickly prepare it for the ogre!”
Very quickly Obunde got up, caught, killed and prepared a dog for the ogre. Then he joined his wife and children in a huge hollow part of a tree in his compound where they had hidden.
That day the ogre knew he was going to have his last meal of juicy human flesh. Being a generous and unselfish ogre, he brought many of his fellow ogres. They were going to have a feast.
Suddenly as they were eating, they had a man singing happily. No they could not believe it! It was Obunde singing! And he was boasting of how he had cheated the ogre.
The greedy ogre ate banana stalks
Not my family
The greedy ogre ate a dog
Not Obunde Magoro!
The greedy ogre ate banana stalks
Not my family;
Now come and get Obunde,
His children and wife.
Obunde sang the words and the ogres got very angry. The first ogre rushed into the hollow of the tree, but Oswera had heated a long piece of iron until it was white. She pushed the iron into the ogre’s mouth. The beast fell down dead. The next one rushed into the hollow and Oswera killed him in all the same way. In this way she killed all the ogres and saved her husband and all their children.
My story ends there.
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Wambua loves swimming more than Kioko.
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ENGLISH PP2 MARKING SCHEME
Question 1 Comprehension
iii) hated
Question 2 Excerpt
-Torvald takes his letters and goes into his room and shuts the door.
-Nora gropes around as she touches Helmer’s domino/mask and then her shawl and says that she will never see her husband and children again.
-Helmer opens his door just when Nora is about to rush out and questions her about the content in the letter he is holding.
-Nora wants to run away to save Helmer the scandal and any form of suffering.
Family/ marriage conflict-Helmer and Nora are at logger heads because of Nora’s forgery.
Flashback- Helmer talks about Nora’s father who before his death had no morals.
-Later she decides to run away so as to save Helmer from the scandal.
-No sadness/ suffering
-The father was not a man of his words
-Immoral man
Question 3 Narrative
– moral lesson
– fantasy; she killed all the ogres single-handedly
– Direct address; “I have no more food except sweet potatoes.”
– Timelessness; we are not told when the story took place.
-Any appropriate proverb, for example Akili ni mali mtu ana zake. (Swahili proverb. It should be translated).
-They highlight the evil in the society/ have a moral lesson.
-They are stories with strange creatures that have ability to change their appearance.
-The ogres usually lure people with an intention of eating them up.
-Recording
-Participation
-Note taking
Question 4 Grammar
iii) Bored of my nagging, Jeff moved out of the house or Jeff, bored of my nagging, moved out of the house (If comma(s) is missing do not award)
iii) “Repeat the statement. I did not understand.”
iii) drives
-Wambua loves to swim more than she loves Kioko. (Award one mark only if the two meanings are brought out clearly)
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