I was just wondering how most of you set out your essays. Say for example you got a question on the effectiveness of the law in family law (I know that's really broad, but this is just an example)
Would you:
a) Go through each area;
1. Relationships
2. Dissolution of marriage
3. Children
4. Problems in family relationships
and then discuss different aspects that contribute to and hinder effectiveness in each area.
or
b) Discuss the different factors in the evaluation of the effectiveness eg: equality, accessbility, enforceability, resource efficiency ... etc. and just incorporate the different areas in each of these.
Our teacher has never actually told us how to do it, in fact she didn't tell us much at all ... but I've always done it the first way. Just wanted to see if anyone else did it differently, and if they think one way is better than the other. I've always done ok this way, I've never gotten full marks though, I usually get between 21-23.
The only thing that comes to mind for me, is that for the second method it could get kinda messy, and you'd be more likely to leave out important points.
Anyways, let's hear what everyone else thinks ...
Would you:
a) Go through each area;
1. Relationships
2. Dissolution of marriage
3. Children
4. Problems in family relationships
and then discuss different aspects that contribute to and hinder effectiveness in each area.
or
b) Discuss the different factors in the evaluation of the effectiveness eg: equality, accessbility, enforceability, resource efficiency ... etc. and just incorporate the different areas in each of these.
Our teacher has never actually told us how to do it, in fact she didn't tell us much at all ... but I've always done it the first way. Just wanted to see if anyone else did it differently, and if they think one way is better than the other. I've always done ok this way, I've never gotten full marks though, I usually get between 21-23.
The only thing that comes to mind for me, is that for the second method it could get kinda messy, and you'd be more likely to leave out important points.
Anyways, let's hear what everyone else thinks ...