Hello,
Rather than following the general conventions of essay structure, in particular, creating distinct paragraphs that clearly distinguish between prescribed and related texts, could it be possible to perhaps us the prescribed text as the centerpiece for all of your arguments, and synthesising each paragraph with your related text?
Here's a simple comparison:
Typical essay structure:
Introduction
3 paragraphs on prescribed text
1 or 2 paragraph/s on related text
Conclusion
What I had in mind:
Introduction
4 paragraphs incorporating both prescribed and related texts
(Each paragraph with a unique idea, prescribed text to support the point, related text that links to prescribed text and to ultimately convey the idea)
I was thinking of using this structure for module C in particular - representing people and landscapes
Let me know your opinions. Thanks.
Rather than following the general conventions of essay structure, in particular, creating distinct paragraphs that clearly distinguish between prescribed and related texts, could it be possible to perhaps us the prescribed text as the centerpiece for all of your arguments, and synthesising each paragraph with your related text?
Here's a simple comparison:
Typical essay structure:
Introduction
3 paragraphs on prescribed text
1 or 2 paragraph/s on related text
Conclusion
What I had in mind:
Introduction
4 paragraphs incorporating both prescribed and related texts
(Each paragraph with a unique idea, prescribed text to support the point, related text that links to prescribed text and to ultimately convey the idea)
I was thinking of using this structure for module C in particular - representing people and landscapes
Let me know your opinions. Thanks.