Howdy, welcome to the forums!
d-s I know this is a different book n all, but I hope it helps you get a better idea of how to approach the IA1:
https://archive.atarnotes.com/forum/index.php?topic=183800.75
-jinx_58
Howdy, welcome to the forums!
d-s I know this is a different book n all, but I hope it helps you get a better idea of how to approach the IA1:
https://archive.atarnotes.com/forum/index.php?topic=183800.75
-jinx_58
My English exam is on Monday, where we write an analytical essay in response to an unseen question. It's meant to be an external mock exam, so no book. I'm doing 'TKAM' by Harper Lee.
If you guys could give any tips this weekend I would highly appreciate it. I would specifically like advice for what to do in my 15 mins planning time and how I can remember 30+ quotes on the day. Writing time's 2 hours but that might not be enough! I'll take any tips I can get.
DumbNerd
Hey DumbNerd,
I haven't studied To Kill a Mockingbird (I did MacBeth) so I wouldn't be able to give any specific advice about the book. However, in the 15 mins of planning, the first thing I did was write down all the quotes that was relevant to the topic from all the 30-40 quotes I remembered. I then planned all 3 points of the analysis with the quotes I would use in each paragraph as well. By that point, you shouldn't have that much time left but if you do, I would probably start crafting the first part of the introduction on the planning paper so all you have to do is rewrite it in the real paper when its time.
As for how to remember the quotes, I used a program called Anki. It was extremely effective for me to memorise 30+ quotes because it only required just over day to memorise which was not much time at all. I used the cloze deletion feature so I would close/hide the first half/bit of the quote and I would have to write the rest of it out. Let me know if you need any more info on Anki.
Hopefully, that helps and feel free to ask any more questions!
DumbNerd
Howdy!
I did TKAM in year 10, donβt remember much lol but I remember planning out a few practice essays to TKAM questions and how I would approach them. Iβd do at least one from like the top 3-4 themes so I was well rounded before the exam.
I absolutely agree with everything @PhytoPlankton has said. Just wanna add on, during planning time, I suggest you plan out your paragraphs and have at least 3 quotes at hand that you know you can use to drive your argument. I was taught the PEEL structure for paragraphs, and I can explain if you want me to, just ask!
-jinx_58
Thanks to both of you so much - I got my results today and it was a 16/20, B+ !!!! I honestly did not expect to do that well since I only read half of the book yet I still pulled it off.
Sad thing is my overall grade is 69%, when going into Lit next year requires a 70% , but I'll speak to my teacher about that.
Anyways, I still really appreciate the advice that both of you gave and will remain positive. P.S. I had already finished my essay with 30 minutes left lol.
I'm doing general english now because my mark wasn't enough for lit. Anyways, I have my IA2 coming up and our topic is 'cultural ownership'. I was thinking of talking about K-pop since it's something I know quite a lot of lol but I can't really find many links between the two (as of now). I would appreciate if I could get any ideas or just tips for writing my speech since I'm confident in presenting.
Hope y'all have had a good start to this year.
Did anyone do Romeo and Juliet monologue here? I kind of need some help ;-;
-Leeshi
DumbNerd
Here's a structure for your speech writing, hope it helps
Introduction:
β’ Consider using an anecdote, question or very short sentence to hook the audience
β’ Greet the audience
β’ Discuss the context of the issue β what sparked it? Why now?
β’ Define key terms
β’ Outline your point of view and state your contention clearly
Main body paragraphs β segment topic:
β’ Present topic.
β’ Consider if there are similarities and differences between your texts.
β’ Compare and contrast texts stating:
o Evidence
o How this positions the reader/audience
β’ Why should this matter for young people?
Conclusion:
Segment Topic: Personal Response
Restate your main arguments
Avoid repetition
Call your audience to action:
β’ What are the representations?
β’ Why does this matter to young people
Leave the audience with a strong image or idea
My English teacher gave me this last year, and it helped me heaps, hope it helps you!
-jinx_58
does anyone have any high examples of text response paragraph/ essays on station eleven? thanks
FIA3 HELP???? any tips? its the imaginative response
I don't do any STEM subjects. I'm currently in EA exam block and have confirmed IAs of...
I do:
As you can see, I don't do General English. However, I am acutely familiar with the task (proofread some of my friends' IA2s) and, in the past, have been successful in public speaking competitions. If you do spec. maths, you're probably oriented towards numbers instead of words.
So, what help do you need? Have you chosen a topic? Are you an adept speaker?
I'm not doing spec maths, I'm contemplating whether doing for U3 and 4 because I'm struggling to get top marks in Gen Eng and study of religion.
For my IA2 I have picked the housing crisis. It has to be a topic that polarises Australia and we have to have a 'call for action.' I feel like its too broad and I don't really know what my call for action could be. I spoke to my eng teacher and she said (because our hypothetical ted talk is in front of a bunch of 18 year olds in their first week at uni) I should talk about the prices of the rentals and how no one can afford to rent especially young people in cities. And my call for action could be for a protest or something to tell the government that they should incentivise single people in multi-bedroom homes to rent out their spare rooms. And also to ban airbnb's because they could accomodate university students. I don't know if I could make that work though.
My public speaking is average. But we do a recording.
How do you get good marks in religion!!??
Also good luck for you EA's !