Cathode_RT
I'm so done with trimesters bruh
For the weirdos doing this subject, how we feeling? What do you think with show up?
I'm pretty sure we need to know one report in depth (like date, author, what it was about, etc) so I assume some examples would be needed from that. I'm doing the Debendox from Will McBride as my example, apparently it can be any one from the entire syllabus, you just need to know any one in depth.hopefully not some out of the blue question that requires exact examples hahaha
Its studies the processes behind science overall, like methodology, technologies and how society affects scienceDon't mean to sound stupid but what is this subject about? I remember hearing about it in junior years and thought it was forensics or some shit and thought that would be sick but im confused now
I'm trying to remember all the details for Andrew Wakefield's report, that one is pretty easyI'm pretty sure we need to know one report in depth (like date, author, what it was about, etc) so I assume some examples would be needed from that. I'm doing the Debendox from Will McBride as my example, apparently it can be any one from the entire syllabus, you just need to know any one in depth.
Maybe it will be a question that is split up into 3 subquestions like a) b) and c) , those arent too bad to be honest, their usually ones on module 5 methodology and hypothesisesAccording to NESA, we'll have at least 2 questions worth 7 - 9 marks. I was hoping it would only be one.
Section I (20 marks) consists of multiple-choice questions answered on a separate machine-scored answer
sheet. Section II (80 marks) consists of 20-25 items. At least two items will be worth 7-9 marks. Answers are written
in the spaces provided on the question paper.