Eagle Mum
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Nov 9, 2020
- Messages
- 561
- Gender
- Female
- HSC
- N/A
Does anyone write their essays involving English text analysis as you would a science essay - ie. referencing sources rather than directly interpreting the text (noting many students would get ideas from other sources)? DS writes well for his science and geography essays, but approaches his English essays in a similar way - eg. ‘The three most popular interpretations of the author’s...’. When I wrote my English essays (over three decades ago), I would have set it out as ‘The main theme...’, ‘Another interpretation...’, ‘It is also possible...‘.
The main problem is that his teachers want analyses of how themes are relevant in current contemporary settings and my son‘s view is that this requires internet research beyond direct analysis of the given text and as such, should be presented in essays as a researched component rather than direct interpretation of the text. Would a direct statement such as ‘The [theme] is relevant in the contemporary context to [describe contemporary context]’ without indicating an external source of such an interpretation be more appropriate?
The main problem is that his teachers want analyses of how themes are relevant in current contemporary settings and my son‘s view is that this requires internet research beyond direct analysis of the given text and as such, should be presented in essays as a researched component rather than direct interpretation of the text. Would a direct statement such as ‘The [theme] is relevant in the contemporary context to [describe contemporary context]’ without indicating an external source of such an interpretation be more appropriate?