About your personal response and the views of others.... It is much more important to establish what YOU think about the text, and then only support it with slight references to others. This is a quote from the Board of Studies Module B Support Document:
"Misplaced emphasis may lead students to rely on the views of others, rather than developing their own informed view. Exploring the perspectives of others and discussion and evaluation of how the prescribed text has been received in different contexts should enhance rather than overshadow a student’s personal engagement with and close analysis of the prescribed text. The view students develop must continue to be supported with detailed textual reference from the prescribed text.
Students refine their interpretation by testing their perspective against the perspectives of others. During this process students consider aspects of the text that they may not have considered previously, thereby deepening their own understanding and sharpening their personal view of the text’s value and its meaning. The teacher’s careful direction of students as they refer to other perspectives will enable them to develop and demonstrate their understanding of the prescribed text."
A lot of girls at my school in the trials based their arguments on saying "there is this undestanding and this understanding", rather than saying "this is what I understand the text to mean"... and they got really low marks for their Module B essays (in our case.. King Lear). So yeah, they're pretty much looking for waht you think, backed up by what others think.... rather than just the various interpretations out there. As for what they're going to ask us, I wish I could answer that.