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firstly, well done on improving your mark. but secondly, and?? no1 said it was impossible to do well memorising an essay, just that it was better not to. remember the hsc is against a lot more than 20 ppl. so, in the spirit of controversy, i ended up coming uh, 5th maybe? (*grumbles* was first til stupid speech grr) out of 164 and i never memorised anythingMarcus_Aurelius said:Since this thread is still getting replies and just to add a bit more controversy to the topic........I got my english trial results back.......I came second out of about twentyish people and i memorized all my essays. This second placing in the exam solidifies my second rankin overall. Last year i came about tenth and i didnt memorize any essays.
Umm, one question though, how could they tell?IcEy said:I hear that in HSC, they can pick memorised essays real easy, and if/when they do, you can't get higher than 14/20 or thereabouts no matter how good it is.
easy, if they don't answer the question.kyu_chan said:Umm, one question though, how could they tell?
You could. But i've seen a stack of past essay questions that are virtually unadaptable. Ie, they give you something to argue. I've found this to happen often in extension 1 (genre - crime) and module B (critical study- harwood).kyu_chan said:But couldn't one just fit the memorised essay into the question?
You can be given a specific quote or reference point from which to write from, such as "Given the events that occured in the author's historical context, how has this affected the text and its reading?" or something like that.Vampire said:Hmmm...can you give me an example plz nwatts...I'm yet to find an unadaptable HSC/trial question.
thx
Yes there is personal style. Look at two different essays written by two different people. There is a different system of arguing points, different wording, different approaches to essays. Sophistication, flair, a demonstration of mastership of the essay medium. All these little things make up "style". A good essay isn't merely "constructed". It flows.Captain Gh3y said:Technically there's no such thing as a personal style of essay, since an essay is supposed to follow conventions and structure. How can you have a strong argument without detail and quotes anyway? The detail and quotes make the argument. Plus I've read 'exemplar' band six responses from previous years where they give a bunch of details and then conclude with a vaguely relevant argument... Pretty much what you'd do with memorised detail really.
Trust me, you can always argue the other side if you have the guts. And look carefully at how questions are worded. Subtle changes in your head can actually change the direction you interpret the question.Captain Gh3y said:You pretty much have to choose "against", I mean, just look at how biased the question is, would it even be possible to argue "For" at all? I did this question with King Lear, in which my memorised essay mentions that one of the qualities of King Lear is its ambiguity and the universality of its themes which makes it adaptable in many different contexts, as shown by different productions. It's not that big of a step to change "universal, can be adapted to different contexts..." into "doesn't have a used by date because it's universal and can be adapted to different contexts..."
^^ Use this opinion if you're not aiming for the highest marks possible.Captain Gh3y said:The question is always going to be something about the 'module', all it boils down to is listing a bunch of detail from your texts and saying that said detail supports whatever argument the question asks. (even if it doesn't really... they don't seem to care as long as you use all the right buzzwords)
"Detail and quotes" does not make an argument. Detail and quotes support and argument. If you're using detail and quotes to present ideas, rather than support them, I suggest you get someone other than your current english teacher to mark your essays.Captain Gh3y said:Technically there's no such thing as a personal style of essay, since an essay is supposed to follow conventions and structure. How can you have a strong argument without detail and quotes anyway? The detail and quotes make the argument. Plus I've read 'exemplar' band six responses from previous years where they give a bunch of details and then conclude with a vaguely relevant argument... Pretty much what you'd do with memorised detail really.
You virtually have to choose against, but it still lends itself open to further interpretation. My friend's thread was more in line with yours, saying that "Harwood's poetry deals with life issues that have timeless significance." We had varied threads coming from the same question, and both scored highly.Captain Gh3y said:You pretty much have to choose "against", I mean, just look at how biased the question is, would it even be possible to argue "For" at all? I did this question with King Lear, in which my memorised essay mentions that one of the qualities of King Lear is its ambiguity and the universality of its themes which makes it adaptable in many different contexts, as shown by different productions. It's not that big of a step to change "universal, can be adapted to different contexts..." into "doesn't have a used by date because it's universal and can be adapted to different contexts..."
The question is always going to be something about the 'module', all it boils down to is listing a bunch of detail from your texts and saying that said detail supports whatever argument the question asks. (even if it doesn't really... they don't seem to care as long as you use all the right buzzwords)
i might be wrong here, but don't the exemplar answers come in double bands? ie. bands 5 and 6 are lumped in together? how then would you differeniate between them? i'm just guessing, i know that's the way it's done in some other subjects, it might be different for english.Plus I've read 'exemplar' band six responses from previous years where they give a bunch of details and then conclude with a vaguely relevant argument...
'Exemplar' = full marks.silvermoon said:i might be wrong here, but don't the exemplar answers come in double bands? ie. bands 5 and 6 are lumped in together? how then would you differeniate between them? i'm just guessing, i know that's the way it's done in some other subjects, it might be different for english.
From what I remember the Standards packages use the double banded lumping, and the Student Answers booklet just says "high range" and "mid range" instead of full mark essays.nwatts said:'Exemplar' = full marks.
'High range' = band 5/6.
That's the way it is for English Advanced and EE1. No idea on other subjects.