Did anyone do Romeo and Juliet monologue here? I kind of need some help ;-;
-Leeshi
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 !
Thanks,
Is the housing crisis something you believe in? Do you really feel as if it's something you need to talk about? Do you feel as if you're burning on the inside to say something? As if what you could, could make a difference? If not, I'd recommend changing topics.
I've done well in the past because I've truly believed in what I was saying. You need to apply this rapture and faith to something that connects with you (I probably sound like a cracked record at this point).
If you get to record than you should be fine. But the teacher will not be as lenient as they would if you were speaking in front of a crowd.
Regardless of what topic you choose, I'm happy to proofread and provide some suggestions if you want.
jcurry1904@gmail.com
Tips for religion: read the syllabus; if you're not atheist/agnostic, don't get caught up in the minutiae, treat it as if it's history, not religion; learn to write (the more you read the better you will get at writing); seek feedback, and; SoR is mostly assignments, so learn to edit your work as well (in an essay, I usually rewrite each sentence at least 5 times).
I've provided a link to an essay writing guide that will help you to become succinct, yet clear https://docs.google.com/viewer?url=http://jordanbpeterson.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/Essay_Writing_Guide.docx
Ta,
Josh
Alright thanks, I'll take you up on your offer but only if you aren't too busy. Probably will not be on the housing crisis.
Don't have a SoR exam till after the Xmas holidays so plenty of time to prepare I guess. I do love reading, mainly classics and fiction but I haven't been finding any enthusiasm for SoR (mainly because my teacher is about 70 years old).
Thanks again for your help!
Yeah, it sucks if you have a shitty teacher.
My SoR teaching was particularly engaging either. I didn't do much work in class because it is an easy subject. SoR IA1 is on religious ethics and ethical frameworks so make sure you are over that. Actually, check your emails I'll send through my SoR IAs (your assessment pieces will most likely be different but it's good to have access to a high standard exemplar, nonetheless).
Classics are a good foundation. At the risk of being repetitive, I'd recommend you continue to read (this stuff or find something else you enjoy reading) because the more information (concepts, syntax, expansion of vocab) you consume (fiction and nonfiction) the better you will be able to articulate concepts without being verbose.