Sure I can! Shoot me a dm and I'll be more than happy to help! Integrating context with your analysis allows your essay to flow more naturally and not sound as robotic in my opinion. Mine was structured somewhat more like an essay and I still received an E4. There is no wrong or right way to...
I remember my major work journal was at least 100 pages (could have been more). I believe the more you have in your journal the better because just in case there are accusations of plagiarism/academic misconduct (I highly doubt there will be), they can look at your journal and see that you've...
Yes, linking to your advanced and extension 1 influences are good because drawing on these are part of your creative process, are they not? I did this for my critique and received a good mark (pretty sure it was 17/20 but I don't have my exact mark with me).
Agreed! Whilst Year 11 is important, remember not to get too worked up about it since you can always redeem your Year 11 grades in Year 12 if worse comes to worst.
Definitely stick with three. Having three ideas to discuss and analyse is guaranteed to get you higher marks, so I'd suggest practicing with actually writing out your essay. See how long it takes you to write three paragraphs within a 40 minute time frame. Maybe you need to cut down on your...
Yes of course you should mention this! It even says on NESA's official website that "The student considers how their skills and knowledge of their chosen form have evolved and why. They reflect on particular creative features of their work..." So you can mention that knowledge of your chosen...
I'd probably start by making your qualifications known, so tell people your rankings from school, ATAR, teaching style and/or experience with other tutoring agencies/places and what makes YOU unique.
Yeah I haven't seen any changes
https://educationstandards.nsw.edu.au/wps/portal/nesa/11-12/stage-6-learning-areas/stage-6-english/english-advanced-2017
ANU does a lot of stuff with Microsoft, so I ended up replacing my Mac with the LG Gram for my engineering degree since it's really lightweight (moreso than the Macbook Air). I've been really impressed with the performance so far apart from the random updates that happen when my laptop dies.
Yeah well of course you have other sentences in your in your intro. But I was concise enough that I could introduce my text and address the question in one sentence (linking to the rubric came after).
I always did two in one in the first sentence. I'd introduce my text and throw in the words of the question to show I'm getting straight to the point. Then in my next sentence I'd elaborate more on my thesis, but @Masaken's method is also valid and I applaud it :)