The HL Essay is the written internal assessment that only HL students of Language and Literature complete, and it is where the course's distinctive skill is rewarded most directly: analysing how a maker's choices shape meaning. Most students do not lose marks because they cannot write; they lose them because their line of inquiry is too broad, or because they describe what a text says rather than analyse how it works. This guide takes you through the whole task: what the HL Essay is, how it is marked, exactly how to plan and write each part, and what separates a top-band essay from an average one.
The Language & Literature HL Essay at a glance
The HL Essay is a 1,200–1,500 word formal essay that develops one focused line of inquiry into a single text: either one literary work or one non-literary body of work studied in the course. It is HL only, and is marked out of 20 across four equally weighted criteria. What makes Language and Literature distinctive is the non-literary option — a coherent body of work such as a politician's speeches, a columnist's articles or an advertising campaign — which you analyse for its rhetorical, structural and stylistic features just as closely as you would the form and language of a literary text. The line of inquiry, framed early and sustained throughout, is the spine the whole essay hangs from.
How the HL Essay is marked: the four criteria
Every mark comes from one of these four criteria, each worth 5. Write your essay criterion by criterion and check what each one actually rewards:
A — Knowledge, understanding & interpretation (5 marks)
A focused line of inquiry into a literary work or a non-literary body of work, supported by perceptive understanding and interpretation of the text and well-chosen references. The examiner wants a clear, arguable angle, not coverage of everything the text does.
Trap: a broad survey of the whole text instead of a focused inquiry — trying to say a little about everything rather than a lot about one thing.
B — Analysis & evaluation (5 marks)
How the maker's choices shape meaning or position an audience. For a literary text this is form, structure and language; for a non-literary body of work it is rhetoric, register, image, layout and mode of address. You evaluate the effect of those choices on the reader or audience.
Trap: describing content instead of analysing technique — paraphrasing what the text says rather than showing how a deliberate choice creates an effect.
C — Focus & organisation (5 marks)
A coherent, well-developed argument that stays on the line of inquiry and builds logically from point to point. Each paragraph should advance the case, with clear links that give the essay a single through-line.
Trap: a list of points with no through-line — a string of separate observations that never accumulate into one developing argument.
D — Language (5 marks)
Clear, formal, precise academic writing. Vocabulary and critical terminology are accurate, sentences are controlled, and the register suits a formal essay throughout.
Trap: informal or imprecise prose — chatty phrasing, loose word choice, or misused critical terms that blur the analysis.
Build it section by section
The HL Essay frame walks you through each criterion with the rubric beside you, ✗-weak vs ✓-strong examples, a line-of-inquiry focus check, and a live "what's missing for top band" prompt. The planning sections are free.
Open the HL Essay frame →How to write a Language & Literature HL Essay, step by step
- Choose a literary work or a non-literary body of work. Pick one text you know well and that rewards close analysis — a literary work, or a non-literary body of work such as a politician's speeches, a columnist's articles or an advertising campaign.
- Develop a focused line of inquiry. Frame one arguable, narrow question about how the maker's choices shape meaning or position an audience — for example, "how a charity's advertising uses imagery to construct guilt" — not a broad survey of the text.
- Gather evidence. Collect the specific passages, images or features that bear on your inquiry, choosing a few rich examples over many thin ones.
- Analyse the maker's choices. For each piece of evidence, show how a deliberate choice — rhetoric, structure, image, register, mode of address — constructs meaning or positions the audience, in relation to your inquiry.
- Structure a coherent argument. Order your points so they build a single developing case with a clear through-line, not a list of separate observations.
- Write 1,200–1,500 words in a formal academic register. Draft in precise, formal English, keeping within the word limit and making every sentence advance the argument.
- Reference. Cite every source and quotation in a consistent style; the reference list does not count towards the word limit.
HL Essay structure: what goes in each section
There is no single mandated layout, but the clearest structure that maps onto the criteria is:
- Introduction — name the text, state the line of inquiry, and signal the argument to come.
- Context of the text — the brief, relevant background on the work or body of work that the inquiry needs.
- Analytical body paragraphs — each takes a feature of the maker's craft and analyses how it shapes meaning in relation to the inquiry.
- Development and complication — acknowledge tension, nuance or an alternative reading, and weigh it.
- Evaluation — judge the overall effect of the maker's choices on the reader or audience.
- Conclusion — answer the line of inquiry with earned nuance, drawing the argument together.
- References — a consistent citation style throughout, outside the word count.
What a strong vs weak HL Essay looks like
The fastest way to lift your marks is to see the difference. Here is the same work done two ways.
The line of inquiry
Analysis vs description
A coherent argument
Need a line of inquiry first?
Browse 24 examiner-picked lines of inquiry for the HL Essay, on a literary work or a non-literary body of work, each naming the focus, an example text and why it scores — then take one straight into the frame.
See 24 HL Essay ideas →Common mistakes that cost marks
- Too broad a line of inquiry. A question that tries to cover everything the text does leaves no room for depth — narrow it to one arguable angle.
- Describing instead of analysing. Paraphrasing content caps Criterion B; the examiner wants how a choice creates an effect, not what the text says.
- A list with no through-line. Separate observations that never accumulate into one argument pull down focus and organisation.
- Ignoring the non-literary craft. Treating a campaign or speech set as content to summarise, rather than as rhetorical and visual choices to analyse, wastes the distinctive option.
- Informal prose. Chatty phrasing and loose terminology limit the language mark; the register must stay formal and precise.
- Going over 1,500 words. Examiners stop reading at the limit, so padding costs you the strongest material at the end.
- Thin evidence. Quoting without analysing, or analysing too few features, leaves the inquiry unsupported.
HL Essay — frequently asked questions
How long is the Language & Literature HL Essay?
The HL Essay is 1,200–1,500 words. Quotations count towards the limit, but the reference list does not. Examiners stop reading at the limit, so every word must earn its place.
How is the HL Essay marked?
Out of 20 across four equal criteria, each worth 5: A Knowledge, understanding and interpretation; B Analysis and evaluation; C Focus and organisation; D Language. The HL Essay is HL only.
What can I write the HL Essay on?
Either one literary work or one non-literary body of work studied in your course — for example a set of speeches, a columnist's articles or an advertising campaign — explored through a single focused line of inquiry.
What makes a strong line of inquiry?
A focused, arguable inquiry into how the maker's choices shape meaning or position an audience — narrow enough to analyse closely in 1,200–1,500 words, not a broad survey of the whole text.
How do I get top marks in the HL Essay?
Sustain a focused line of inquiry, analyse how the maker's choices construct meaning rather than summarising content, build a coherent argument with a clear through-line, and write in precise, formal academic English within the word limit.
Write your HL Essay, section by section
Examiner-written frame with the real criteria, worked examples, a line-of-inquiry focus check, a live readiness prompt and DOCX/PDF export. The planning sections are free.
Start your HL Essay →Guidance written by experienced IB English examiners and aligned to the current Language and Literature guide. Not affiliated with or endorsed by the International Baccalaureate Organization.
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