L
lilsxcwog69
Guest
aNSWER
^ Go with this - it hits home each point more effectively and prevents your essay from becoming (more) repetitive.Rafy said:mine was structured according to ideas and themes regarding journeys, not paragraphs based on texts.
This allowed me to compare how the different texts raised a particular idea in 2 different ways. Its a much more intergrated structure.
i.e for each paragraph,
- Start with an introduction to the theme discussed in the paragraph, and what the point you will make is.
- Then Focus on one of your texts as your main support for the idea
- Then raise other texts to provide additional support.
It allows you to synthesise your response and better anaylse the techniques used by different text types and texts
BTW, i did 1 stimulus text, 2 coleridge poems, and 1 extra text
also doing skrzynecki's poemslilsxcwog69 said:aNSWER
leaderofrouge said:I have a question *raise hand* (BTW i'm in ESL)
I always get this confusion when trying to include techniques into my essays
I get this contradictory thinking in the head... say e.g. the journey statement is something like:
"Every journey involves change or growth within the individual"
How have texts you have studied demonstrated the truth of this statement?
How does technique relate to this? Say for a book, it might use exclaimations, capital letters during dialogues to show a character's emotions or in a film, using low-angle shots to reveal a specific character having more power over another character, 1st person perspective shots to allow audience to see what the character is seeing.
But I reckon all these stuff are purely to allow audience to get a feel of the situation or to create intimacy, connecting us into their issues. I don't understand how to link the statement and techniques together so that they relate to each other.
i ever wrote my essay in that style but my teacher said your idea of journey is too broad .... so in the end i just focus on in every text there is a differet type of journey... such as emotion, physical, .....hopeles5ly said:Introduction (Thesis)
Prescribed text
Stimulus Booklet
Prescribed Text
Related Text
Prescribed text
Related Text
Conclusion
a suggestion is to write about 3 main themes conveyed in the prescribed text in 3 seperate paragraphs. thus after each paragraph link it with your other texts(stimulus or related) and talk about things such as contrast, similarties, how this aspect is witness again etc between the theme in the text and the prescribed text and so on. and remember hsc markers look at your intro and conclusion first and see if you are able to sustain your arguement throughout your essay ! (that's what ive been told) . so it's important that you write an insightful thesis and also remember that linking and integration is REALLY important !
edit: hmm i just realised its very similar to yours andy lol.