Some of you may have already seen me on BoS over the past few months (including for this AMA. In 2008, I ended up with a UAI of100.00 against all odds. I attribute this to a fair bit of luck and a lot of smart revision - particularly in my English studies, where I went from an Advanced ranking of 30th at half-year to 5th by trials. You can't drop English and it influences the scaling of all your other subjects, hence a win in English is essential for a win at HSC (life).
A lot of people think English scores are a lottery where you win or you die based on your marker's subjective criteria. Even more think that you need a tutor to improve your English results - often, sadly, by writing the very responses which are meant to be your own. Both are wrong.
How did I game the HSC English syllabus so I was clocking 17's, 18's and 19's in every single essay I wrote? I focused on things which other people didn't, and treated English like a sporting competition instead of an academic subject. And recently I turned my successful strategy into a ten-point plan called The 5-Minute Essay, which you can buy for digital download or on Amazon for half the price of an average tuition lesson.
This thread is for you to ask me any questions about how to improve your English "game", and make your essay responses more cohesive, consistent and kick-ass (yes, I ran out of useful adjectives starting with C). I greatly urge you to check out The 5-Minute Essay (I would, wouldn't I?) but will do my best to give you some tips and pointers based on your posts here.
Look forward to fielding your questions.
A lot of people think English scores are a lottery where you win or you die based on your marker's subjective criteria. Even more think that you need a tutor to improve your English results - often, sadly, by writing the very responses which are meant to be your own. Both are wrong.
How did I game the HSC English syllabus so I was clocking 17's, 18's and 19's in every single essay I wrote? I focused on things which other people didn't, and treated English like a sporting competition instead of an academic subject. And recently I turned my successful strategy into a ten-point plan called The 5-Minute Essay, which you can buy for digital download or on Amazon for half the price of an average tuition lesson.
This thread is for you to ask me any questions about how to improve your English "game", and make your essay responses more cohesive, consistent and kick-ass (yes, I ran out of useful adjectives starting with C). I greatly urge you to check out The 5-Minute Essay (I would, wouldn't I?) but will do my best to give you some tips and pointers based on your posts here.
Look forward to fielding your questions.