Resources for Essay and analysis help (1 Viewer)

norez

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Hey!
I thought that it would be to the benefit of us all if I was to offer some advice for English analysis and essay writing. I tend to write little guides and tips for myself (which i suggest you do as well, for your own benefit) and I thought it would be nice to share them.
Any thoughts, suggestions and contributions are most welcome.


___________

Firstly, look at your text as a whole. What does the composer say about change? Brainstorm a little. 3-4 ideas is ideal.

Then think about HOW the message of change is shown for each of the ideas you just brainstormed? Was it a specific scene, a quote, the protagonist's response to the change? Brainstorm, and then look through your text to get the details. i.e. What is happening in this scene, page no. Try and find three strong 'HOW's.

These HOW's are called techniques. They're just ways in which the composer chooses to show his idea. It could be linguistic, like a simile or alliteration or stylistic, such as tone, structure of the text or the way in which his ideas of his text may be saying something about the nature of humanity, or society or change on a wider scale.

Also, remember to examine techniques that are specific to the type of text. If it's a film, filmic techniques like camera angle, close-ups, far shots, colour etc. If it's an image, vector lines, colour etc

Look at these HOWs and ask yourself:
- Why did the composer choose to express the concept of change in this way, rather than in a different way?
- What effect does this have upon the reader?
- To what extent does the composer, through the techniques he has used, express the concept of 'Change in perspectives.'

Write all your thoughts down, no matter how dumb they may seem.

And THAT is the hard part. When you look at that, you have constructed 3 topic sentences for paragraphs (your first ideas on what the composer says about change), and 3 solid supporting techniques and the effect and significance of the techniques employed (the last questions).

So if you were to clean that up and make your points clear and concise- you've got yourself an essay.

With incorporating supplementary texts, my teacher has said to focus on either COMPARING or CONTRASTING texts, on a THEMATIC or a TECHNICAL basis rather than looking for links in the plot. For example, with journeys, say both of the protagonists in two texts are migrants. Umm... That doesn't really have much depth for thematic textual analysis. Rather the process of forced displacement, of both a physical and emotional detachment does affect the individual, with both positive and negative implications as shown by the composers of the texts.

The great thing about supplementary texts is that you can just branch off of your main brainstorm for your prescribed text, by either comparing or contrasting, thematically or technically, to show similar/ different points of view on the matter of change.

In order to push into the higher bands, you need to look at why the composer uses the techniques that he does and how successful is it in proving his point. For example, poetry serves as a mask for outlandish anti-war propaganda as Sassoon and Owen manipulate their own war experiences to create a horrific image of war in order to stop the mass support for it. Or the cynicism of consumerist life that Bruce Dawe employs acts as an imperative for people to re-orientate their values from materialism to self-discovery and sentimentality.

Spending the hour or so thinking about your texts and the intentions and ideas of the composer and how it shines through in the text, will really help you in English.


Additional tips once you have a basic understanding of essay structure. These tips may be a bit vague and too personalised, but that may have some benefit.

BEFORE YOU WRITE

1) Look through the text in its entirety.
2) What assumption or idea can be drawn on the composer’s techniques or intentions that answers the question.
3) Answer the question. THESIS!
4) Brainstorm 3-4 themes that elaborate upon your thesis (paragraphs).
5) Decide and find 3 themes or sub-points orientated around TECHNIQUES.
6) Decide and form a logical flow.
7) Write!
8) Edit and re-draft.
9) DONE!

TIPS

- Be selective in what you write about. That is, the themes and techniques that you choose to support your argument. Choose the strongest and most relevant first.
- Make sure that there are no gaps in your argument.
- Read it like a critic and that I hate everything that I write.
- When in class, note take like crazy as you would in preparation for an assessment task. Focus on themes and significant similarities/ differences.
- Stop being a perfectionist!
- Don’t make your argument so long either. Explore your sub-points if trhe structure permits.
- Write neatly.
- If stuck, write from what you have already have. It will work. Make adjustments later accordingly.
- BE EXPLICIT!
- Don’t be vague and airy-fairy with your techniques nor your thesis exploration.
- Use philosophy and history… Just don’t cling to them. THE ISM’S!

- Use tone, effect, technique, author’s intention and answering the question in all one sentence. It eliminates obsolete and surplus material.
- If it serves no point, LOSE IT!
- IT WAS WRITTEN FOR A PURPOSE, DAMMIT!
ALWAYS relate to the COMPOSER or READER in some way.
- Link your paragraphs: “Strengthening, furthermore, concurrently, progressively…”
- Analyse and breakdown all questions.


Useful Links:

RyanHoliday.net: | On the Spartans and the Perfect Paper

Study Hacks � Blog Archive � Monday Master Class: How Two Extra Hours Can Make Your Paper Two Times Better

Some Resources from my teachers:

ImageBam - Fast, Free Image Hosting and Photo Sharing

ImageBam - Fast, Free Image Hosting and Photo Sharing

Feel free to add or comment. Enjoy
 

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