Vampire
KOLLARZUP!!
I thought exemplar = full marks as well, but from looking at a couple of them, I might be wrong...
I totally agree with you that it is very difficult to write an essay off the top of your head combined with the pressures in exam conditions and time. I usually prepare the topic sentences so that i know the structure of my essay and know what to writeAreYouAlright? said:I agree with a lot of what has been said, but in writing an essay off the top of your head it is sooo difficult to get not only the quantity of information out, but put it into a sophisticated form in the time you have. If you spend too much time trying to think of something new to write you will have written nothing.
Whereas if you memorise logical segments of information i.e. for Critical Study know GENRE, SETTING, CONTEXT, CHARACTERS, TWO EXTRACTS LANGUAGE FEATURES IN DETAIL, CRITICS.
I'd say you'd much easier be able to put together a prepared essay in exam conditions that is prepared in the sense all your paragraphs have been rope learnt but the way you put it together can answer the question. All in the topic sentences, opening paragraph and conclusion. What do you think?
Ah, no. You get a thesis from the question. Coming in with a preprepared thesis will result in you not answering the question.kadlil said:memorising is a sign of weakness , you should be able to walk into the exam room with your argument, i.e. thesis, antithesis and synthesis ready so you can begin to write and integrate it into the question
That's what Year 12 is for. This time next year you'll know how and will be able to write from your head in a cohesive, sophisticated manner.1/5kiwifruit said:I totally agree with you that it is very difficult to write an essay off the top of your head combined with the pressures in exam conditions and time. I usually prepare the topic sentences so that i know the structure of my essay and know what to write
You'll find yourself not answering the question and not supporting your argument. As I think glitterfairy has said before, every single word and sentence must link back to your thesis - because if it is not, there is no point it being there.AreYouAlright? said:I'd say you'd much easier be able to put together a prepared essay in exam conditions that is prepared in the sense all your paragraphs have been rope learnt but the way you put it together can answer the question. All in the topic sentences, opening paragraph and conclusion. What do you think?
lol, that's my goal uai~ im aiming towards that, isnt that obvious?nwatts said:Kandill, I think you're getting a little ahead of yourself. You haven't even began the HSC year and you have an UAI prediction in your sig?
I am now, since you edited your sig. The old "UAI for 2006: 96.5" felt, just, a little pretentious?kadlil said:lol, that's my goal uai~ im aiming towards that, isnt that obvious?
It does make sense.nwatts said:That doesn't make any sense.
"An exemplar essay is not always worth 100%, yet an essay worth 100% is exemplar..."
Confuso!
I believe the argument is something of a syllogism:nwatts said:That doesn't make any sense.
"An exemplar essay is not always worth 100%, yet an essay worth 100% is exemplar..."
Confuso!
If your smart enough, you can go in there with a prepared thesis and a basic structure of what you want to write, not a fully prepared essay, and manipulate the thesis slightly to incorporate the question or bend the question slightly to better suit your thesis.nwatts said:Ah, no. You get a thesis from the question. Coming in with a preprepared thesis will result in you not answering the question.
If you're smart enough, you can go in with the course in your head and get full marks. I seem to be able to do it. Kami, glitterfairy and others seem to be able to do it. Considering the quality of the AOS response you posted LostAuzzie, I suggest you follow the advice of us rather than trying to inflict your poor essay style upon others.LostAuzzie said:If your smart enough, you can go in there with a prepared thesis and a basic structure of what you want to write, not a fully prepared essay, and manipulate the thesis slightly to incorporate the question or bend the question slightly to better suit your thesis.
Then don't. Not everybody is an elite english student and not everybody can memorise the entire course and come up with a brilliant answer on the day. Some people, like you and Kami and Glitterfairy can, but many cant. I am one of those people because I have a mathematical/scientific mind and I need structurenwatts said:I'm tired of arguing with those who support preprepared essays.
I am not trying to inflict anything upon anyone, I am merely giving an opinion which others can take if they want to or choose to ignore it.nwatts said:I suggest you follow the advice of us rather than trying to inflict your poor essay style upon others
Kami can - kami has a mathematical/scientific mind.LostAuzzie said:Then don't. Not everybody is an elite english student and not everybody can memorise the entire course and come up with a brilliant answer on the day. Some people, like you and Kami and Glitterfairy can, but many cant. I am one of those people because I have a mathematical/scientific mind and I need structure.
i don't know about that - 96.5 should be easily obtainable - besides which, it's a positive thinking and projection technique. Writing 'target' or 'hoping for' etc. almost lends a sense of the possibility and, in some cases, probability of failure. Obviously kadlil expects a good mark, so putting the possibility of not reaching it in his mind is really just holding him back.nwatts said:I am now, since you edited your sig. The old "UAI for 2006: 96.5" felt, just, a little pretentious?
ah, but you're missing the point. An essay for english is nothing if it does not have logical progression and structure. In many ways English, as a subject, is not so different from science and maths - you just have to see the connection. Saying "oh, but I'm a science person" is an unacceptabl excuse: if this truly was a viable excuse then nobody who excelled at maths or science could also excel at english and humanities and that has been proven time after time not to be the case. You're only holding yourself back if you follow this argument.AreYouAlright? said:This is exactly right... I have a mathematical\scientific mind so i too find i learn better with structure. Sure there are those people who can walk around a house holding a calculator in ond hand and nothing else and calculate the 23rd derivative of an equation for the path in projectile motion. Or who can stand and deliver a substantiated thesis off the top of the head but these few people are a minority and subsequently are represented by a minority in this topic.
The exams are utterly useless as a mark of true achievement in any case as F. R. Leavis a true elite master of english said in Education and the University "The good student as things stand, is he who studies single mindedly and undeviatingly how to come out best in the examination (and what doing well in examinations proves is the ability to do well in examinations)."
nwatts it's a game we are playing it our way you can play it yours.. in the end if we can get a mark that we are happy with we have won.
WTF ???silvermoon said:an essay worth 100% would be exemplar, but an exemplar essay is not necessarily worth 100%
Ok, its like this. Lets say all exemplars have to be "good and higher", now a "perfect" essay fits in the category of good and higher so therefore is an exemplar. However, there are alot of essays that fit the description of "good and higher" that aren't "perfect" so alot of exemplars aren't "perfect" *but* all the "perfect" essays are "good or higher" and so must all be exemplars.Z_Nizzle said:WTF ???