My teacher says short answers you can write as much as you want and that you shouldn't get marked down if you answer the questionShort questions are annoying =\. My teacher wants sufficient, concise, 'detailed enough' but SIMPLE. Like I swear there are some contradicting factors there.
Sometimes I see 'How or Why' throughout my cause/effect explanation. If I write in simple terms, he would say elaborate more. If I go detailed, he would say its too much and should be cutted down. Can someone clarify the way they mark short answers? (ways to hit the nail on the head?)
T_T
know your policy/case study (the other's should be wingable) in depth + some specific recent examples + write some essay structures (yes, structure is very important)
You shouldn't. But you won't gain any marks by writing more than is strictly necessary. If you can be as concise as possible, so only giving enough detail/explanation to get the marks, then you're limiting the time spent on any one question. And honestly, you're better off spending the time it would take to expand on your short repsonses (but not gain additional marks) on your extended responses or checking over your calculations, multiple choice and just generally editing your responses.My teacher says short answers you can write as much as you want and that you shouldn't get marked down if you answer the question
lol wut, internal stability is old syllabus.My teacher said you shouldn't need to go past the lines/avoid doing that (for short answers)... and if you do they might not read it, since they're not exactly told to (unlike English). Somehow I doubt that...sounds dodgy, maybe she's trying to get us to be more concise, but she was a marker last year
Anyway, for essays, yeah know your recent stuff well. Macro policy is a common one... know the budget for sure + recent AUD volatility. We had our trial last week, got a choice between discuss significance of internal balance + evaluate effects of macro p on it (something like that), or the same thing but with external stability. Our other one was either analyse causes/consequences of distribution of income in Australia, or the same thing but with rapid economic growth.
For short answers, we got a double 5 marker for int case study...