seventhroot
gg no re
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2014
- Messages
- 2,803
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2013
So the HSC legal studies exam is less than 12 days away so let's get practicing
A quick tl;dr guide:
Multiple Choice:
So; I'll post a question below and someone answers and post the next question. I will be happy to mark some responses (CORE + Family + Consumers + Shelter). Please draw evenly from all topics (ie not all crime or HR).
please don't PM me; post everything here
A quick tl;dr guide:
Multiple Choice:
- 20 questions drawn from prelim and HSC
- they are 15 crime questions and 5 human rights responses
- these questions are bullshit; don't spend too long on them (~1/question)
- for the average band 6 student; you should be aiming for 17+/20
- Fairly straight forward
- This is the part of the paper where most people gg because the simply don't know the content and/or can't structure a coherent response to the question
- YES; include LCM's throughout the response, 2-3 will suffice
- use ~20 words/mark as a rough guide
- is out of /15
- expecting ~700-800 words / 6 pages
- this and the HR short answers are the common 'scaling' part of the paper so have these as a priority.
- include at least 2-3 LCM's per paragraph and make sure to highlight/underline them so the marker can see. Also do the same with the options [IMO; I would go with underlining in red because exam responses are scanned and may not necessarily show up when they are]
- is out of 25
- you should be spending about 1/2 the exam on these 2 essays
- they should be around 800-1k words and around 8 pages
- Funny story - a person in my class misread it and did 2 family essays lel gg no re
- write as big as possible
- highlight your LCM's
- spend more time on your essays
- have an exam technique that works for you. I personally did the paper in reverse because I can always guess MC but not the essays
- make sure to know the themes and challenges as well as the principal focus - they can be assessed!
- don't start your essays off with "a crime is defines as...." NO! just no! jump straight into the essay
- know your verbs, assess, evaluate, discuss, etc
- always write an essay plan!
So; I'll post a question below and someone answers and post the next question. I will be happy to mark some responses (CORE + Family + Consumers + Shelter). Please draw evenly from all topics (ie not all crime or HR).
please don't PM me; post everything here
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