My fear for mod b is having an extract that I haven't really analysed properly, basically making me screwed for the exam.Module B was the easiest for me.
no what is that?Did everyone hear about the ghost essay writing for English recently? What do you guys think about it?
Apparently the Board of Studies found out that hsc students are getting uni students or tutors to write their essays for them for $300-$400. After the exemplar essays are written for them, they just memorise it and cheat the HSC system for English. A friend of mine wrote a letter to the editor about this issue.no what is that?
Depends on the subject. Maths cssa trials seem to take the same amount of time as a hsc exam, but eco cssa trials seem long for meare CSSA trials really long or am i just too slow?
wow... I can't believe people would go to that extent to cheat.. :/Apparently the Board of Studies found out that hsc students are getting uni students or tutors to write their essays for them for $300-$400. After the exemplar essays are written for them, they just memorise it and cheat the HSC system for English. A friend of mine wrote a letter to the editor about this issue.
Yeah I look down on people that stoop that lowApparently the Board of Studies found out that hsc students are getting uni students or tutors to write their essays for them for $300-$400. After the exemplar essays are written for them, they just memorise it and cheat the HSC system for English. A friend of mine wrote a letter to the editor about this issue.
My fear for mod b is having an extract that I haven't really analysed properly, basically making me screwed for the exam.
Now that I think about it I have no idea how people managed to get a high band 5 or band 6 in english without reading their prescribed textWhy it is probably the most important module to actual read the prescribed text
Nope. Didn't even think about it.did u have it during HSC/?
Now that I think about it I have no idea how people managed to get a high band 5 or band 6 in english without reading their prescribed text
I'll be completely honest - never finished reading a prescribed text with the exception of Julius Caesar and sometimes my related as well.idk, it's probs best to read your texts. but theoretically, you don't really have to; i reckon you can get away with it for discovery, mod A and C so long as you understand the themes and messages of the text. but it definitely won't work for mod B lol - i think i reread hamlet at least 3 texts and wrote 5 essays on different ideas and whatnot. whereas for my other modules it was just refining generics lel being the lazy ass i am
tis my experience
State ranked in english... Can you post a guide to how you got itNope. Didn't even think about it.
I did 12 units so I wouldn't have came out well.
Casual maybe. Definitely not part time.
I'll be completely honest - never finished reading a prescribed text with the exception of Julius Caesar and sometimes my related as well.
Obviously everyone is different but me personally, I found that understanding the key ideas, contextual and motivations for texts (so their underlying messages) was more than enough - so completely agreeing with hawkrider here. My teacher told us the important chapters/scenes and I would read/watch that to death, but never the whole entire work itself. Worked for me since I got the highest band in advanced and extension so it can be done, though just be careful about it.
Let's be honest here. For those that do finish the entire work, how many examples do you actually grab from it? Your techs/examples should be judicial and when I was in Year11 I did finish the whole novel, but then I just found myself getting bombarded with choices and picked a lot of average parts out for analysis.
HOWEVER. I do feel the need to point out that my friend who topped the grade for both advanced and extension READ EVERY SINGLE TEXT. So you want to be completely sure and maximise your potential of getting the best possible mark - READ IT!
That's a link to her friend's advertisementState ranked in english... Can you post a guide to how you got it
You should check out Crobat's guide (he got 96 iirc)she should still make one if she can
Well just reading through the Dixon textbook a couple of times does it for me. I don't memorise word for word but I know the concepts and how to word these concepts for short answers. So memorising word for word 18 chapters isn't really ideal or possible in the given limited time...fk, this is literally what I have to do as well gg
and how does one memorise the textbook for eco lol, i need condensed notes which i made in advance to cut the BS info out
Of course, policies, organisations, stats, and events need to be memorised for essays, but concepts like inflation can just be understood and used in exams. A question from my half-yearlies was "Explain the differences in cost-push inflation and imported inflation" -2 marks. Stuff like that doesn't have to be memorised word for word from the textbook.dafuq
that's impressive lol
i can't do dat (i literally have to vocalise my notes to ensure i remember them)
and yeh, i try to grasp the concepts on a deep level with analogies if need be
but sometimes, stuff like trade agreements needs to be rote learnt :/
wth is zeitgeistPerhaps we could go for something along the lines of, “Attitudes towards discovery shift in response to the various historiographical and ideological aesthetics of a given zeitgeist” – note how this was broad enough to allow for further elaboration, but specific enough to show the marker
that you aren’t merely reiterating the question word-for-word – obviously change this in accordance with your own argument/stance etc!
(just realised how pretentious that intro sentence sounded lol)