Yes, 4U maths are possibly the two worst units that you'll ever face in y12. It'll make you cry in frustration as you struggle with the mechanics and conics questions. That is why so many people hate y12.
And your test next year is probably going to be hard because this year's was so easy.
I myself didn't really like the story and the motif of the key. In the end, I managed to link the key to the victim's past as a concentration camp guard but I didn't feel happy with what I did.
24 pages overall. 16 for essay and 8 for creative. Hopefully 40+
Yeah, got an interview for Newcastle. Not going to bother with Med though, so probably only going to go there for the fun of seeing a different campus.
Dunno. Test was surprisingly easy and I said I'd shoot myself if they didn't give us text types this year. Guess they didn't. The questions were very generic and I wrote 32 pages. Hopefully, I should be able to get a 93 or something.
You know, I've always found it to be a bit of an oddity that us asian blokes never really go out with the non-asian ladies until I figured that we are hardly ever in a position to meet girls of different cultures. Selective school fellows have coaching which take up their time, rigorous study...
Unless you want to parody the genre by introducing a female detective in her 60s still chasing young'uns, I don't see the parody. Fat detective? Ethnic detective who speaks with accent??
Construction is about the structure of the text, how KL has been set up to further the tragic elements of the death of Lear and Gloucester and the destruction of the status quo by the greed and ambition of Edmund, Regan and Goneril. People approach the question in different ways but an easy...
There was none. One of the teachers at our school tried to link the gong with the imagery of bells going off in the Book of Revelation or something, symbolising the beginnings of chaos in the kingdom but the angry, angry director said it was just to make it in the flavour of feudal japan or...
Make them yourself like what I did. Notes are never made for recent Hollywood movies so your best bet is to borrow it out with a friend or something and do some hardcore scene analysis and overview.
Anaphora is the repetition of a syntaxtical structure and it is generally used in the scriptual register. Depending on context, it generally shows the repetition of the event described and it draws attention to the act described. Check out the Penguin's Guide to Literary Terms and Theory. Good...
Why not try the more canon interpretations of evil and good via the Jacobean morality plays and the Bible? Milton's metaphysical epic, "Paradise Lost" would be almost perfect for you.
I was basically doing the same thing as you until my incompetent teacher caused me to quit.
The Ayre's production basically showed Lear as a family play and you could try borrowing some elements from there to work your version. Whatever you do, don't look at Harlos. Dave Ritchie is a stooge.