foram
Awesome Member
How do i memorise essays? I've tried to memorise my essay, but i can't... I need to memorise it for tomorrow! Any tips on memorising it please? It's 900 words.
Adding to this - I did this once to memorise an essay in year 8 and still remember it to this very day - try doing this:munchiecrunchie said:the best way to memorise is to keep reading it to yourself whilst pacing.
I did.gloworm14 said:i found out that you cant memorise every word, especially in the last minute.
SO
i suggest to you, memorise your intro and conclusion as best you can and with the body, just memorise the key sentence of each paragraph.
For future reference - You don't, especially if you don't know for a fact that your essay is on the exact same topic as the essay you have to write for an assessment/exam. Memorising essays is a great way to screw yourself over, because what you've memorised has a very slim chance of actually answering more than one question properly. Memorise quotes/facts and figures (or whatever is relevant to your subject), and have a few ideas about what you might be able to write on a variety of topics. That should do you. You're better off having a slightly dodgy essay that was written in a rush and actually answers the question than something that's perfectly written because you've memorised something you worked on for hours which doesn't actually answer the question.foram said:How do i memorise essays? I've tried to memorise my essay, but i can't... I need to memorise it for tomorrow! Any tips on memorising it please? It's 900 words.
I predict this person will do better in English than the usual cluster of people who stand or wander around the playground heads down eyes glued to their essays hours then minutes before the 9am HSC English AOS Paper 1 exam.Cerry said:For future reference - You don't, especially if you don't know for a fact that your essay is on the exact same topic as the essay you have to write for an assessment/exam. Memorising essays is a great way to screw yourself over, because what you've memorised has a very slim chance of actually answering more than one question properly. Memorise quotes/facts and figures (or whatever is relevant to your subject), and have a few ideas about what you might be able to write on a variety of topics. That should do you. You're better off having a slightly dodgy essay that was written in a rush and actually answers the question than something that's perfectly written because you've memorised something you worked on for hours which doesn't actually answer the question.
^Aerath said:You don't.