ATAR Notes: Forum
HSC Stuff => HSC English Stuff => HSC Subjects + Help => HSC English Standard => Topic started by: mattmorley on November 02, 2016, 10:17:18 pm
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Anyone have any recomendations for related texts??
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This depends on your prescribed text, however I would recommend any Tim Winton short story. Specifically, Big World, part of his The Turning, contains various parts of transitions.
If you require, I can provide sample paragraphs that illustrate the transitions in Big World. And moreover, using a Tim Winton story is an excellent way to elevate an essay, as the markers inherently respect the text.
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This depends on your prescribed text, however I would recommend any Tim Winton short story. Specifically, Big World, part of his The Turning, contains various parts of transitions.
If you require, I can provide sample paragraphs that illustrate the transitions in Big World. And moreover, using a Tim Winton story is an excellent way to elevate an essay, as the markers inherently respect the text.
Hey Oliver, do you have any of your essays on your computer? If so, it would be super helpful to the next cohort to add them to the "notes" section in the top tab! By all means, sample paragraphs here are wonderful too - but if you've got anything for the notes section, that would be so cool!
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Thanks Oliver, yes our teacher was also suggesting Tim Winton as it is a well respected text. We studied Neigbours by Tim Winton yesterday in class, what do you think about this??
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Having just read it, I think you could definitely use it for transitions.
Initially I'm thinking:
-new social context and changing perceptions
-transitions in social class divisions (initial rejection of others, then help with tasks ie. chickens)
-physical transitions being overwhelming (pregnancy)
-however, all smaller transitions as conduits to initial perception of others; overwhelming, confronting, new worlds are surendered to unwillingly.
The motif of the 'Twentieth Century Novel' is interesting. This perhaps could be inferred as a reference to 1984 (albeit, loosely), with the overall theme of complete loss of privacy. Hence another transition: From the initial 'suburbs where neighbours were not heard' to weeping at loosing agency in their context.
What is your prescribed text?
Hey Oliver, do you have any of your essays on your computer? If so, it would be super helpful to the next cohort to add them to the "notes" section in the top tab! By all means, sample paragraphs here are wonderful too - but if you've got anything for the notes section, that would be so cool!
Yes I was going to upload things here :)
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Thanks for that, My prescribed is Billy Elliot which i think would work good with this????. For our upcoming assigment. We have to make a video as an educational resource to demonstrate our understanding of MOD C using a related text and either talking about the process of transitions or the transitions of individuals into new social cultural or personal contexts. I think the last question would work better for this? Do you agree?
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Yes I was going to upload things here :)
Oliver...you are, actually, the best!!!
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Hey, so i have an english text coming up for Billy Elliot, and I'm stuck should i explain more the quote or the film techniques or should they both be explained equally. Thank you :)
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Film Techiniques and key scenes
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Hello!
im doing a play: Shafana and Aunt Sarrinah
Would this poem by Emily Dickinson 'No Notice gave She, but a Change' be good for related text for Module C
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Hi,
My prescribed text is Billy Elliot and my ORT is 'It's Quiet Uptown' from Hamilton: An American Musical. I just realised that my ORT doesn't actually show the aftermath of Alexander's transition, which makes it hard to elaborate on.
Would 'Requiem' from Dear Evan Hansen be a better ORT? (link to lyrics here https://genius.com/11493074). The characters go through the transition of the struggle of trying to deal with Connor's death. Two characters in the end realise that they don't need to sing a 'requiem' as they realise that Connor wasn't a good person.