freaky.styly
Member
...This calls for a rant...
"but it had fallen victim to post-modernism"
-post-modernism has perhaps been one of the most interesting and informative concepts to learn about in my entire schooling life, and every student ought to encounter it at some stage, purely to encourage open-mindedness
"If anything it is too hard" ~ "compare the rote learning"
-f*ck off, the questions proposed are more than reasonable, the conditions under which we are expected to answer them in, are not. There is a blatant imbalance in the consideration of quality measured against quantity, an inadequate provision of reading and planning time, and the stubborn failure to recognise the application of modern word processing technology - computers!!!
"None of the parents I have asked said they memorised essays for exams ... Rather they ... thought about them from every angle"
- Consider perhaps, that is reasonable and beneficial to practice and remember the content of practice essays. If essays need to be written in the exam, then thinking about them won't be quite as beneficial as thinking and then writing essays beforehand, on them - memorised or not, after all, the HSC essentially is one great memory test (for a large part).
"Thinking on their feet, as in the good old days, is one skill English students don't master"
- Feel free to provide evidence for this before insulting us.
"hsc not a memorising test"
-Yes, it is. You're given a mere 5min reading time for Paper 2, and are allowed no resources. It has everything to do with memory.
"Who can sensibly ''create'' in 40 minutes?"
-To the standard expected? You tell me.
Adele Horin, ask some students, get it right.
"but it had fallen victim to post-modernism"
-post-modernism has perhaps been one of the most interesting and informative concepts to learn about in my entire schooling life, and every student ought to encounter it at some stage, purely to encourage open-mindedness
"If anything it is too hard" ~ "compare the rote learning"
-f*ck off, the questions proposed are more than reasonable, the conditions under which we are expected to answer them in, are not. There is a blatant imbalance in the consideration of quality measured against quantity, an inadequate provision of reading and planning time, and the stubborn failure to recognise the application of modern word processing technology - computers!!!
"None of the parents I have asked said they memorised essays for exams ... Rather they ... thought about them from every angle"
- Consider perhaps, that is reasonable and beneficial to practice and remember the content of practice essays. If essays need to be written in the exam, then thinking about them won't be quite as beneficial as thinking and then writing essays beforehand, on them - memorised or not, after all, the HSC essentially is one great memory test (for a large part).
"Thinking on their feet, as in the good old days, is one skill English students don't master"
- Feel free to provide evidence for this before insulting us.
"hsc not a memorising test"
-Yes, it is. You're given a mere 5min reading time for Paper 2, and are allowed no resources. It has everything to do with memory.
"Who can sensibly ''create'' in 40 minutes?"
-To the standard expected? You tell me.
Adele Horin, ask some students, get it right.