ATAR Notes: Forum
VCE Stuff => VCE Business Studies => VCE Subjects + Help => VCE Business Management => Topic started by: nbalakers24 on January 12, 2009, 04:32:52 pm
-
Hi guys,
Can you post up some tips on writing BM Notes/Summaries/Glossaries?
Cheers.
-
Use the study design?
-
Use a very very very wide range of sources. No textbook or study guide will ever be complete. You can try and use my notes which I posted up as a basis, but even that will be missing a lot of things. Particularly watch out for my HR section, it's missing quite a lot, particularly for things such as HR strategies.
-
Use the study design?
yes, printed it out
Use a very very very wide range of sources. No textbook or study guide will ever be complete. You can try and use my notes which I posted up as a basis, but even that will be missing a lot of things. Particularly watch out for my HR section, it's missing quite a lot, particularly for things such as HR strategies.
For bm righht now, i have the textbook, A+ notes, A+ exam, Checkpoints and i'll prob buy leading edge.
What other studyguides is there?
cheers
Moderator Note: Post was accidentally edited when trying to reply to this post. Post was been restored, but moderation edit still appears at bottom. The above explanation is why it is there. Sorry!
-
I dont think u really need any more texts if you have all thoses. Use notes from shinny and jsimmo on top of what you already have and u shood be right.
But definitely read the business section of the paper regurlarly and fill up your notes with examples that relate to the corresponding Area of Study (AOS)
-
okay, thanks for the advice, will have a look at shinnys and simmos notes.
-
hey, with examples do they need to be recent?? or can they be the ones found in ur text book.. mine is cambridge
-
To be safe, they don't have to be recent as long as they are well known. However I've personally made up examples myself before and gotten away with it (in SACs, not the exam), so I don't there's many restrictions regarding example use. However, given the nature of marks in BM, I'd play it safe and use predominately well known examples.