Captain Gh3y said:
That somebody as dimwitted as yourself could get that is just a reflection of how pathetic the HSC really is.
Clearly if you'd done no work at all whatsoever on the texts prior to entering the exam you'd have no idea what sort of things to make up in the exam, you wouldn't be able to "Think" in the exam because you'd have no idea what to think about.
Now, if you were able to come up with your essay in the exam then you must have studied at some point and actually given some consideration to the subject matter of English Advanced.
A memoriser by the definition assumed in my previous post is someone who does not give a fuck about the content of the English Advanced course and commits an essay to memory (an essay written by a tutor or downloaded from Bored, not one you made up yourself because that requires knowing something about the course) that can be adapted somewhat to fit the range of questions one may be asked in the exam.
I didn't write the perfect essay to memorise; I didn't write ANY essays all year. I did nothing. I knew nothing about my texts prior to year 12, I know nothing about them now. I read none of them, and slept through the film texts.
It is not possible to make up an essay in the exam having done this.
out of curiousity, to everyone else that has posted in this thread, is this YOUR definition of a memoriser? if this is (which i have great doubts about, but nonetheless) HOLY CRAP do you people have absolutely no integrity whatsoever? plagiarism should not be paraded around like some sort of flag, its the root of all decay of education since there ever was such a thing! im
not any sort of exam puritan, this is a concept any person should understand. you cant just say that the HSC is pathetic, then go on to blame it as the reason why you plagiarise! its people like you who perpetuate it and make it pathetic, so YOU fuck up about it.
and congratulations on doing nothing in year 12 english - i did a little more than you in that i read and watched my texts and films. i enjoyed some of them and i hated others. now, im not entirely sure about other people, but when i read a book i absorb it and think about it - if this is what you classify as wasting time then.....yeah. i have no words.
i thoroughly, thoroughly hate the content of the English syllabus - I hate what they do to texts, and the mincemeat that is expected from us. Therefore i have argued year-long on this forum (long before i sat the hsc exam or recieved any marks) that a compulsory English course should be made much more skills orientered than the post-modernistic content based as it is now, specifically to avoid memorisation which does not allow for creativity and spontanaeity, does not encourage an agile mind, rather a robotistic regurgitation of a single essay you had previously written.
and for the record elisabeth, i can argue something as much as want when i believe in something as strongly as this. im most definetely not the only one who criticises this aspect of the HSC, and this was the first page that came up when I typed in "criticism of the HSC" in to Google:
Wikipedia said:
Criticisms
The HSC has been criticised for placing so much weight on the final exam, thus causing excessive stress to students and favouring those who cram for exams at the expense of those who work steadily throughout but do not cope well with pressure, even though 50% of the students mark is based on in-school assesments which are subsequently modified according to the schools performance in an exam.
There is also criticism that the HSC is oriented heavily towards memorised facts rather than applied skills, meaning that the student finishes with no real understanding of the subject.
source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Higher_School_Certificate
sure, they are talking about understanding a subject which doesnt necessarily apply to english as it is at the moment, but the idea regarding memorisation stands across the broader range of subjects.