Re writing legal responses to questions along the lines of: evaluate the effectiveness... you know, typical 20-mark worth questions.
Under exam conditions, I'm under the impression that you can't possibly be made to remember a crapload of legislations, articles, cases that are relevant to answer the question. Is this so?
For a response of good quality and qty (19 or 20/20), what'd you say would be the bottomline/average amount of external, prior research on these stuff needed?
Also, for a prepared assessments (essay, surprise surprise), what'd you say be a good number.
At the moment, I'm doing women (as a focus group), and for each issue - education, harrassment, pay, stuff like this - I have a legislation, case and article to support the essay. Minus a few that is not really big topic points, but I'd say most. This comes to about 6-7 cases, legislations, articles which is nearly 20 things to remember. I don't want to stretch the quality of my argument but not wanting to compromise the qty of the content - both are important.
Please shed your light on this. Thanks in advance.
Under exam conditions, I'm under the impression that you can't possibly be made to remember a crapload of legislations, articles, cases that are relevant to answer the question. Is this so?
For a response of good quality and qty (19 or 20/20), what'd you say would be the bottomline/average amount of external, prior research on these stuff needed?
Also, for a prepared assessments (essay, surprise surprise), what'd you say be a good number.
At the moment, I'm doing women (as a focus group), and for each issue - education, harrassment, pay, stuff like this - I have a legislation, case and article to support the essay. Minus a few that is not really big topic points, but I'd say most. This comes to about 6-7 cases, legislations, articles which is nearly 20 things to remember. I don't want to stretch the quality of my argument but not wanting to compromise the qty of the content - both are important.
Please shed your light on this. Thanks in advance.