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Against means cons.with the charter of rights could you only say pros cause the board of studies defines discuss as :
Identify issues and provide points for and/or against
thanks
Discuss means give both sides. It requires higher order thinking, like Assess or Evaluate-type questions.no but it says and/or which means you can do either doesnt it ?
thanks mate for clearing it upDiscuss means give both sides. It requires higher order thinking, like Assess or Evaluate-type questions.
Yeah in my opinion it should have been 4 for the Sovereignty Question and 6 for the Charter question.Yeah if it's a discuss you definitely have to give both sides. I gave three reasons for, three against and I was pretty careful not to include a judgement because you're not really supposed to in discuss questions. The 7 marks confused me, because if it was six I would say three for, three against... not sure where the 7th will come from. Maybe from actually discussing the IMPACT rather than just saying good and bad things.
Your stance on the questions seems to holistically disprove the statement altogether. That's quite a bold move, because your scope can only focus on negatives. Whilst there are negatives, I think everyone has at least a few things exemplifying the court processes (at least its operations which can act as a catalyst in your essay - eg. legal aid, plea bargaining and the adversary system while with their negatives (eg. unequal distribution of resources, knowledge and skills) do attempt to remove institutionalised inequality and increase the efficiency of the court process/judicial system in general). Your approach and use of superlatives 'never', 'to no extent', shut out all ideas altogether - some court punishments are also effective, but at the same time, yes, you are right in saying that at times, they do not achieve justice.Yeah in my opinion it should have been 4 for the Sovereignty Question and 6 for the Charter question.
Did anyone else start out crime by saying "To no extent does this statement reflect the criminal justice system..." and go on to talk about how the Courts in exclusion could never achieve justice, and while they are a substantial part of it, its cooperation between the different aspects that is ultimately pivotal.