PsychoSuperchic
New Member
So I'm a bit iffy on my reflection statement, can anyone give me a link to where i can view some sample ones to give me more of an idea, i've already looked at the writer's showcase ones. good luck all
yeh that usually works...Originally posted by anti
I've got no idea of if there's any on the web, since it's a very localised (well, state-wide) course...
But for mine I'm looking VERY closely at the rubrics. If you rephrase the dot points they can't say you haven't completed the task!
Most people have finished practically all their major work and reflection statements. Well in my school anyways.Originally posted by lucy
reflection statement?
how is anyone up to that stage yet?
god you're freaking me out.
omg...don't make me have a heart attack...Originally posted by mercurydrinker
Most people have finished practically all their major work and reflection statements. Well in my school anyways.
Even I've finished my reflection statement even though I'm still only half way through my major work
Same deal at our school. Only 2-3 people don't have near-complete final drafts doneOriginally posted by mercurydrinker
Most people have finished practically all their major work and reflection statements. Well in my school anyways.
Even I've finished my reflection statement even though I'm still only half way through my major work
Sorry, was being sarcastic.Originally posted by icemouse
um,. yeah
its sorta GOTTA be an essay................
not 'i'm so cool'........ havent u read the criteria???
Without doing a Gwyneth!Originally posted by Alex
Another point, make it personal, try and include a lot of empathy get those markers teary
We started at 20. Now at 11.Originally posted by bex
Its the complete opposite at my school... only 2-3 people have finished!! But then again.. theres only 7 in my class....
Yeah, the syllabus actually gives you details about what the reflection statement SHOULD or COULD have...so i just did mine like with lil introduction w/ subheadings for each point outlined in rubric so then they can't say i didn't meet requirements or wateva. They're really stupid requirements - like u gotta give the intended audience, and the language fetures you used, y u did this, y u did that, wat u learnt out of it, blah blah blahOriginally posted by anti
Sorry, was being sarcastic.
As for form, I don't think it has to be in a strict essay form; ie. intro -> point 1 -> point 2 -> point 3 -> concl.
I can see a perfectly good Reflection Statement which fills the criteria stipulated in the syllabus in order without a formal introduction or conclusion.