A wide variety of teaching and learning resources across all 3 main categories that constitute GCE Ordinary Level English Literature Syllabus: Drama, Prose and Poetry. These include Shakespeare's As You like It, George Elliott's Silas Marner,  Tah Protus' Immortal Seed, selected poems from Cameroon Anthology of Poetry and The Sheldon Book of Verse Book 111

Students will benefit from:
1. clear explanation of GCE O Level Syllabus and revision techniques/strategies to get the best grades
2. topic-by-topic coverage of the information they need
frequent questions with immediate feedback to test and reinforce their knowledge
3. activities and projects to extend their learning
4. sample GCE-like practice questions and full past GCE questions with full anwers and examiner's tips
5. teaching and learning clinics with qualified, experienced teachers at the Optimus Education Foundation Academy (OPEF ACADEMY) across the country.

6. constant feedback from practice tests and how to improve  to achieve the best possible grade in exams.

Effective revision helps to improve performance in exams. Gain the Knowledge, Values, Confidence, Independence and Skills you need to ensure future exam success.

Literature: GCE OL Mock Exams
Access unlimited GCE OL Literature Paper 1 & 2 Mock Exams set by seasoned teachers with GCE OL marking experience to enhance your knowledge, understanding and competence in the subject.
  • Enrolled students: 13
Prose: Silas Marner - George Eliot

Silas Marner is a tale of love and overcoming setbacks. In the beginning of the novel, the protagonist, Silas, loses his friends, his faith, and his fiancé when he is framed for theft. Exiled, he moves from Lantern Yard to the idyllic English countryside of Raveloe, a farming community. There, he replaces people and human interaction with money. He works at his trade, weaving, and isolates himself so that he can never be hurt like he was before.

Later in the story, plots converge when Silas has all his money stolen from him by Dunstan Cass, a conniving aristocrat from town. Dunstan, the Squire's son, had been in the business of blackmailing his older brother Godfrey. However, when money ran short, he offered to sell Godfrey’s horse, Wildfire. He ended up killing the horse before delivering it and receiving the money, leading him to steal from Silas.

On New Year’s Eve, leaving his door open, Silas gets an unlikely visitor. A small child, having left her dying mother's arms, toddles into his cottage. Silas, awaking from a trance, at first thinks the child is his gold returned to him. Seeing the tracks in the snow and then discovering the dead body, Silas goes to the Cass house to fetch the doctor. When he arrives, Godfrey recognizes the child as his from his secret marriage to a woman named Molly, a fact which Dunstan was using as blackmail. Godfrey, hoping the woman is dead, follows the doctor and Silas. His hopes are realized; Molly overdosed and died in the snow. Godfrey hated this marriage, and with his wife dead, he realizes he has the ability to marry his true love, Nancy Lammiter. However, there is still the issue of the child. Godfrey hopes it will remain a secret, and he is assured when Silas fights to keep her. Godfrey is relieved and secretly vows to always provide for Silas as a secret benefactor.

Many years pass and Eppie, the golden hair child, is now grown up. Silas and Eppie are inseparable. However, on the other side of Raveloe, Godfrey and Nancy Cass are unhappy and childless, an unspoken source of contention. One day, while Godfrey was draining the Stone Pits, a shocking discovery is made: the skeleton of Dunstan Cass is uncovered, and Silas’ missing money is next to him. This leads Godfrey to come clean about his past with his wife Nancy. Nancy becomes angry with Godfrey and suggests that they go and claim Eppie as their daughter so that he may have the child he has always wanted. This, again, could take everything Silas loves away from him! Eppie remains by Silas' side. She knows that Silas would never have forsaken her the way Godfrey did. In the end, Silas get his gold returned and gets to keep his daughter. Learning to trust and believe in others again, Silas and Eppie live happily ever after.

 Essential Questions for Silas Marner

  1. What are the consequences of being a victim of lies, gossip, or rumours?
  2. How do people cope with extreme despair?
  3. How does social upbringing influence personal characteristics and behaviours?
  4. Does money bring happiness

  • Enrolled students: 5