andrew ridge
New Member
- Joined
- Sep 26, 2025
- Messages
- 12
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2025
mate thats insane i got 41/50 and was happy in trialThats so good congrats!
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mate thats insane i got 41/50 and was happy in trialThats so good congrats!
i feel like its just refreshing to be able to say whatever you want and formulate an argumenet you belive in because the questions are jsut so broadfr i was doing a hisext paper just now and i actually had fun hahah
witch hunts in europe made me the biggest feminest until we got to this person called lyndal roper who said it was like the 'holocaust of women' and a 'brutal form of sexual terrosim'. i drew the line therehistory extension q2 has turned me into a jihadist just based on how evil western revisionists are in terms of the crusades
amazing!! what was your major work topic? i'd love to read it hahathe fact that you believe it's a useless subject shows that you don't understand it at all. It's about critical thinking and understanding how political motivations guide propaganda in history.
But i guess if you're an immoral bot who'd believe whatever the government tells them and prefers mining, then that's a you problem.
And by the way - I got 100% in my major work, and 48/50 in my trial.
thank you!! my major work was on the destruction of controversial monuments. Something along the lines of - do historical philosophies impact our perspectives in whether destroying monuments is ethical?amazing!! what was your major work topic? i'd love to read it haha
wait so like you memorise like say 5 historians and use them according to the question?so for q1 a lot of ppl have specific historical schools n historians n their methodologies etc memorised that you whip out regardless of q? does anyone only use specific schools for specific questions or is it not worth it to memorise it and not use it?
i'd say its more worth it to memorise less detail but a lot more historians and stuff so you can end up using stuff that is right for the question, because it's not like english advanced where you can just memorise everything they actually want a sustained answer to the question that isn't all memorisedso for q1 a lot of ppl have specific historical schools n historians n their methodologies etc memorised that you whip out regardless of q? does anyone only use specific schools for specific questions or is it not worth it to memorise it and not use it?
well my teachers kinda insane and has given us like prolly 15+ historians and schools and told us to only use the relevant ones for the question but its like lowk a lot. but im wondering if ppl are just bringing in like 2-5 or so and just using it no matter whatwait so like you memorise like say 5 historians and use them according to the question?
Surely this is bait... people still choosing their jobs based on economic motivations rather than personal interest is lowk crazyWhy do people feel the need to undertake this completely useless subject
You gain nothing from this or any lead for future professions
I understand people might choose this out of personal love and curiosity but still.....you will never use these information in real world context
Unless you want to become an archaeologist - An unfortunate job (When you could earn millions from doing mining instead)
i think thats a bit extreme, everything we use has to come from somewhere and those places are mines, i think lots of the coal mines on indigenous land is bad but without mining we'd still be in cavesEspecially smth like mining...probably one of the most immoral and unethical jobs out there
I did a bit about this in yr11 modern such an interesting topic. What monuments were you looking at in specific (or was it a more broad analysis?) I looked into the removal of Southern Generals and slave owners in the USA last year and it was so interestingthank you!! my major work was on the destruction of controversial monuments. Something along the lines of - do historical philosophies impact our perspectives in whether destroying monuments is ethical?
Most mining companies are owned by a small amount of people. The people actually doing the mining are paid so much less compared to the owners, I guess it's less of a problem of the actual job because I agree it is important but the practices of major mining companies is so degenerate and obviously CEOs are all pretty evil but mining company CEOs are a different level of evil (especially around mining on indigenous cultural sites)i think thats a bit extreme, everything we use has to come from somewhere and those places are mines, i think lots of the coal mines on indigenous land is bad but without mining we'd still be in caves
yea idk. i think every school teaches history ext very differently, but from what i gather most people do go in with a select amount and just adapt them to fit the q?well my teachers kinda insane and has given us like prolly 15+ historians and schools and told us to only use the relevant ones for the question but its like lowk a lot. but im wondering if ppl are just bringing in like 2-5 or so and just using it no matter what
yeah i agree that mining ceos are evil but the person before was talking about being in mining, which isn't inherently evil or immoralMost mining companies are owned by a small amount of people. The people actually doing the mining are paid so much less compared to the owners, I guess it's less of a problem of the actual job because I agree it is important but the practices of major mining companies is so degenerate and obviously CEOs are all pretty evil but mining company CEOs are a different level of evil (especially around mining on indigenous cultural sites)
Lowkey I just have all of mine remembered so I could honestly answer a lot of questions just through my historians (I usually aim for around 4 body paragraphs for both q1 and q2)yea idk. i think every school teaches history ext very differently, but from what i gather most people do go in with a select amount and just adapt them to fit the q?
It was more a broader analysis but the ones I used as case studies were Cecil Rhodes' Oxford Statue, a few Nazi memorials, Dr James Marion Sims in the US, ISIS Palmyra Syria, and Pharoah Akhenaten.I did a bit about this in yr11 modern such an interesting topic. What monuments were you looking at in specific (or was it a more broad analysis?) I looked into the removal of Southern Generals and slave owners in the USA last year and it was so interesting
damnn how many do you think is a 'good' amount to know? like you reckon one from each school or...Ask me about a historian and I can tell you their historical philosophy, major works and which century theyre from![]()
