What's the best way to memorise 5 essays for the trials? It took me incredibly long to memorise my module C essay by writing it down 2 times and then reciting the rest.
Any helpful tips? I know this method which I used for module C:
www.stevenaitchison.co.uk/.../how-to-memorise-an-entire-essay-or-speech/
But it worked out badly (i.e. it was incredibly time consuming taking a few days, even though it worked out in the end). A friend of mine told me to write the essay out 10 times, but that's incredibly time consuming, especially since I have to balance my time out for other subjects, and my exam is in 6 days... I wish I had a month...
Thanks.
Alright il'l tell you, but remember, the best marks are for essays that 100% answer the question, not a simply a change in the last line of each paragraph linking back in some half-ass way.
eg. The character hamlet, through the use of dialogue propel the plot, and emboss the theme into the text; effectively making the character hamlet a tragic-hero. Thus hamlet does not follow the conventions of the time.
(btw, the last two lines are an oxymoron)
Now what you do to make mediocre, regurgitation angry BOS marker fodder essays is:
Go through sentence by sentence, appointing a "key-word" to remember that sentence by. The keyword should cause you to recall the "idea" of the sentence, and with it a few more words.
Now you should have a list of keywords. Start with the top of the list, imagine a visual representation for that keyword, a imagined scene that recalls that particular word instantly. Then look at the next word. Place the image from the first word into the imagine scene for the next word. continue this until end of the list.
Finally write out the first word on the keyword list 20 or so times.
What you should be able to do in the exam is.. Think of the first keyword (route memorised) then that should recall the picture, which features the NEXT keyword, which recalls another picture and that picture features the NEXT keyword.
Effectively you've got a mental list of every sentence in your essay.
Takes roughly anywhere between 5-30 minutes depending on your visual cortex's imaginative powers, and how memorable you can make those pictures.
Now go forth, and regurgitate your medicore essays...