Where IGCSE Arabic really lives: papers, topics, and pitfalls
Last Thursday my Year 11 set chose between a travel advert and an email about healthy habits. Both were “on topic,” yet half the class slipped into WhatsApp tone and missed a bullet. That’s the IGCSE Arabic crunch point. Cambridge 0544 and Edexcel 4AR1 both cover familiar areas—personal life, school, leisure, the world of work—but the assessment rewards precise task fulfilment in Modern Standard Arabic, appropriate register, and coverage of every prompt bullet, not just flow.
Listening and Reading are usually fine once students know question stems, but Writing and Speaking expose fit issues. I see three repeats: informal register in formal emails; dialect drift in Speaking beyond the warm-up; and thin development (one idea repeated three ways). A resource can be colourful and “on topic” and still be a poor match for the way marks are awarded. I preview anything I use against the paper-style wording and the board’s emphasis on coverage, accuracy, and organization. If you want to browse what other language teachers are sharing, the world languages section is a decent starting point, and you can filter quickly in the community library.