studiesofboard
Well-Known Member
Tips on how to study for mod c cause I am about to flip
Probs gon do that. However, It may not work because of the other options. I mean It is what it is right.memorise an imaginative and hope for the best
just practice!! we aren't all creative masterminds- half my stories end up being massive cliches BUT I just jack them up with language techniques and get marks that way. you can memorise a reflection though, that's half your marks (be warned though I don't think they'll always ask for a reflection)The module is about human experience. So creating an essay on the idea of human experience may be adaptable Idk. "your grandmas chicken kebabs"
can't see english advanced for some reason though?Hey, that link is cool. Do you have any links to English advanced and other modules?
Thanks, though that looks like old syllabus?English advanced: https://arc2.nesa.nsw.edu.au/view/default/course/15140/
it depends on the stimulus and also what you're better atFor mod c is it more effective to write imaginative or discursive?
our teacher said its more effective if you write discursive cause its basically just a conversation with a sprinkle of anaphora, personal anecdote, rhetorical question etc etcit depends on the stimulus and also what you're better at
Hopefully they give us discursive.our teacher said its more effective if you write discursive cause its basically just a conversation with a sprinkle of anaphora, personal anecdote, rhetorical question etc etc
Apparently statistically, there is a 95% chance they will let us chooseHopefully they give us discursive.
NESA website more or less confirms that students will be given a choice.In many cases, students’ writing will be a hybrid of these types of texts. Sample materials in both English Standard, Example C and English Advanced, Example B (a) demonstrate how students will have a choice about the type of text they write.
gudNESA website more or less confirms that students will be given a choice.