watch all the jeddle videos on short answers they’re really goodsince i have no hope, ive decided to bs the whole unseen part
watch all the jeddle videos on short answers they’re really goodsince i have no hope, ive decided to bs the whole unseen part
ill check it out nowwatch all the jeddle videos on short answers they’re really good
1. both, this comes naturally with practice so don’t overthink this too muchDuring reading time, are you looking for specific techniques or just focusing on understanding the text? (or both) and how do you go about answering comparative questions? Like if you have to choose one of the previous texts how do you say something different about it?
Yes I meant short answer lolno only do that for sa, they dont know what text 1 and text 2 are if u have 2 texts lmao
Salience, colour, positioningwhat are some really good to know, fairly common visual techniques?
ilyGood luck!
- Always fill out the lines they give you.
- Answer the question directly in the first sentence.
- BE SPECIFIC. E.g. 'the author conveys emotions' SHOULD BE written as 'the author conveys emotions of loneliness and isolation through his depiction of...'.
- EVERY quote must be supported with a technique to explain it.
- You DO NOT have to understand the text. But you always must ANSWER THE QUESTION.
- Markers love sophisticated sounding answers so simple things like changing 'the personification shown in' to 'the personified representation of' 'Quote...' highlights/reveals/demonstrates/emphasises/elucidates/conveys/exhibits.
- Essentially: Answer the question in the first sentence BEING SPECIFIC. Find a quote with a technique. Explain the techniques effect LINK IT BACK to your first sentence (which answers the question). With this framework you won't go wrong.
- When in doubt, make an idea up. As long as it ANSWERS THE QUESTION and you explain the idea with relevant techniques and quotes, it is fine.
- Kiss your full marks goodbye if you don't USE UP ALL THE LINES WHICH HAVE BEEN PROVIDED. I cannot stress the importance of this enough.
THANK YOUUUUGood luck!
- Always fill out the lines they give you.
- Answer the question directly in the first sentence.
- BE SPECIFIC. E.g. 'the author conveys emotions' SHOULD BE written as 'the author conveys emotions of loneliness and isolation through his depiction of...'.
- EVERY quote must be supported with a technique to explain it.
- You DO NOT have to understand the text. But you always must ANSWER THE QUESTION.
- Markers love sophisticated sounding answers so simple things like changing 'the personification shown in' to 'the personified representation of' 'Quote...' highlights/reveals/demonstrates/emphasises/elucidates/conveys/exhibits.
- Essentially: Answer the question in the first sentence BEING SPECIFIC. Find a quote with a technique. Explain the techniques effect LINK IT BACK to your first sentence (which answers the question). With this framework you won't go wrong.
- When in doubt, make an idea up. As long as it ANSWERS THE QUESTION and you explain the idea with relevant techniques and quotes, it is fine.
- Kiss your full marks goodbye if you don't USE UP ALL THE LINES WHICH HAVE BEEN PROVIDED. I cannot stress the importance of this enough.
Thank you!!!!Good luck!
- Always fill out the lines they give you.
- Answer the question directly in the first sentence.
- BE SPECIFIC. E.g. 'the author conveys emotions' SHOULD BE written as 'the author conveys emotions of loneliness and isolation through his depiction of...'.
- EVERY quote must be supported with a technique to explain it.
- You DO NOT have to understand the text. But you always must ANSWER THE QUESTION.
- Markers love sophisticated sounding answers so simple things like changing 'the personification shown in' to 'the personified representation of' 'Quote...' highlights/reveals/demonstrates/emphasises/elucidates/conveys/exhibits.
- Essentially: Answer the question in the first sentence BEING SPECIFIC. Find a quote with a technique. Explain the techniques effect LINK IT BACK to your first sentence (which answers the question). With this framework you won't go wrong.
- When in doubt, make an idea up. As long as it ANSWERS THE QUESTION and you explain the idea with relevant techniques and quotes, it is fine.
- Kiss your full marks goodbye if you don't USE UP ALL THE LINES WHICH HAVE BEEN PROVIDED. I cannot stress the importance of this enough.
yeah but my internals some ppl did that, and they marked the n-1 down , it wasnt confirmed that was the case, but it was a common trend around the people who got n-1 for each questionI was told that if n = number of marks, we need n-1 ETA's in our essay
but if it's 5/6+ marks you need a short intro
BRO WHAT THE FUCK I HATE THIS SUBJECTTTT HUHHH HOW CAN THEY DO THISyeah but my internals some ppl did that, and they marked the n-1 down , it wasnt confirmed that was the case, but it was a common trend around the people who got n-1 for each question
if its 4 marks, why would u do 4 quotes, u need space to elaborate so u do 3, ive heard that u can also do 2 in a lot of detail? not sure but i always do n-1yeah but my internals some ppl did that, and they marked the n-1 down , it wasnt confirmed that was the case, but it was a common trend around the people who got n-1 for each question
to be fair our school markers suck ass cos they are soooo fucking subjective to their own biases and what they think is a good answer, not a set rubricBRO WHAT THE FUCK I HATE THIS SUBJECTTTT HUHHH HOW CAN THEY DO THIS
idrk, my school tbhif its 4 marks, why would u do 4 quotes, u need space to elaborate so u do 3, ive heard that u can also do 2 in a lot of detail? not sure but i always do n-1
ace when did you hit 2000+ messages and why am i suddenly concerned for you -- go study english and memo your 1984 grrif its 4 marks, why would u do 4 quotes, u need space to elaborate so u do 3, ive heard that u can also do 2 in a lot of detail? not sure but i always do n-1
crucibleace when did you hit 2000+ messages and why am i suddenly concerned for you -- go study english and memo your 1984 grr
same same cm cmcrucible