Amleops
Perpetual Student
- Joined
- Aug 23, 2011
- Messages
- 811
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2012
I have an in class essay to do first day back on the Justice Game, and with the practice ones I am doing currently I’m having some issues with structure. With Module C being quite different in its focus, I have had to move away from the standard theme by theme essay which had served me well in the AOS and other modules.
The rubric mentions exploring representations of events, personalities and situations. Hence, for me it seems easy, in accordance with the rubric, to divide my essays into representations of personalities and representations of events/situations (as separate paragraphs of course). These tie in quite well, especially with this upcoming assessment task with the prescribed related text we have to use, which draws many parallels with The Justice Game. The thesis would be based on conflicting perspectives and the subsequent examples of representation would allow me to create adequate evidence to support my thesis in a range of contexts.
During some holiday revision lectures we have had at school, my Extension 1 teacher has expressed disdain for this method. He only mentioned this briefly, didn’t explain why, and didn’t offer any alternatives, but in my opinion I think I could write a good essay using the aforementioned structure. Normally I would have done it anyway, but this teacher is one of the best I’ve ever had, and he hasn’t steered me wrong in the past, so I’m a little sceptical.
So my question is would this be a suitable method? For example, if I started with personalities, I’d talk about the portrayal of Michael Argyle, Mary Whitehouse, Princess Diana etc, do the related text, and then move onto events/situations with the state of affairs in Venda, Jamaica or Singapore, and then the related text again, would that be sufficient? Or does it seem like I’m trying too hard to reflect the rubric in my response?
The rubric mentions exploring representations of events, personalities and situations. Hence, for me it seems easy, in accordance with the rubric, to divide my essays into representations of personalities and representations of events/situations (as separate paragraphs of course). These tie in quite well, especially with this upcoming assessment task with the prescribed related text we have to use, which draws many parallels with The Justice Game. The thesis would be based on conflicting perspectives and the subsequent examples of representation would allow me to create adequate evidence to support my thesis in a range of contexts.
During some holiday revision lectures we have had at school, my Extension 1 teacher has expressed disdain for this method. He only mentioned this briefly, didn’t explain why, and didn’t offer any alternatives, but in my opinion I think I could write a good essay using the aforementioned structure. Normally I would have done it anyway, but this teacher is one of the best I’ve ever had, and he hasn’t steered me wrong in the past, so I’m a little sceptical.
So my question is would this be a suitable method? For example, if I started with personalities, I’d talk about the portrayal of Michael Argyle, Mary Whitehouse, Princess Diana etc, do the related text, and then move onto events/situations with the state of affairs in Venda, Jamaica or Singapore, and then the related text again, would that be sufficient? Or does it seem like I’m trying too hard to reflect the rubric in my response?