7bonita7
New Member
anybody need help??
list problems. will try to answer all
list problems. will try to answer all
I asked and was told that you can call her Aung San or Suu Kyi or a variation of that if you want, the marker is just looking to see whether you've included the information. You could always write her name out once and then just use 'she'.welshi said:aung san (q - what do we use as her surname when referring to her and we don't want to write out the whole thing?)
dear god if we have to do that i'm fuct.midnight said:I asked and was told that you can call her Aung San or Suu Kyi or a variation of that if you want, the marker is just looking to see whether you've included the information. You could always write her name out once and then just use 'she'.
I don't know which ones I'm going to use yet. Whatever best suits the question, and whatever I can remember the most about.
It depends on whether we need to contrast or say what's distinctive, or whether it's just how the speaker achieves their purpose.
If anyone would like to post something about the ideas behind the different 'readings' of speeches I'd be grateful, I didn't know what they were or that we had to talk about them until the other day and so I'm quite confused.
we did that as a spoken assessment last term. not fun. most ppl said something along the lines of either:7bonita7 said:And i'm sure you've been told this many times before last years question was
Compose an argument for or against the topic:
‘That every text has its use-by date.’
Consider your prescribed text’s ideas, language and form, and its reception in different contexts.
You must refer to at least TWO speeches.
k well, all i can really give you on that is...townie said:RECEPTION IN DIFFERENT CONTEXTS.
Those four words have been the bane of my life for the past year, i hate them!
Yeah, the way that I've interpreted "reception in a range of contexts" is to incorporate the effects of certain techniques across a wide range of audences.7bonita7 said:k well, all i can really give you on that is...
reception in different contexts is asking how the original audience percieved it and how we percieve it
for example- in noel pearsons speech, he makes refernce to some key issues revolving around the wik and mabo case for instance or other refernces he makes to senators and chancellors: now we think so what?? and thats the point of the question, his speech is not very well recieved by us, because unless we have a key interest in aboriginal rights movements or anything it is very unlikely his speech will even rate on the care factor
no unlike pearson, king uses a wide range of imagery and symbolism that still becomes relevant to us and therefore we identify with that eg "i have a dream" as cliche as that is, we relate well and therefore recieve the speech well
so it depends on the audience and times. our receptions can be changed in regards to the contexts of speech and use of their techniques
hope that helps