There's been a complete overreaction to the AOS question. I don't know what people get taught at other schools, but at my school we were always taught to use the minimum required amount of related texts. If they asked for at least one, then you used one. If they asked for at least two, then you used two. No more than what they asked and no less than what they sked.
I'd actually never heard about that one until the night before.
My teacher was always telling us two things:
1. if they ask for "one or more", they want two, as it shows a deeper understanding
2. Answer
the question.
So I'd been assuming that in a "one or more", 2 would get higher marks than 1. My boyfriend told me the night before that it wasn't the case [his teacher being a marker, mine not].
But it simply said "one", anyway.
As to the article; nice. Pretty much true.
I suppose I feel kind of uncomfortable that they're overtly stalking the site for quotes to use, but yeah.
Some of the main exams, like English and maths [of all varieties] may actually be ranked better, with those who have both intelligence and hardwork, then hardwork [or memorising, if you will, in many cases], then intelligence, and then everyone else. Instead of just memorising > everyone else. That top group'll be split, making it two top groups, which I think is a good thing.