Yeah I sorta defined his public life as inextricably linked to his association and roles in the Nazi Party, as apposed to any personal details or his relationship with Hitler (which I mentioned did have a bearing on the nature of his public life, albeit debatable.)fleepbasding said:30-45... though I only really concentrated on 33-45.
Nice nice. Dudes. We are all going to ace that section. Chill.snickerdoodle said:After a brief mention of how he joined the Nazi party, I went with architecture (Nuremberg, new Berlin and Reich building in particular) > Minister of Armaments (with a brief explanation of his organisational skillis) > and closed with Nuremberg Trials, Spandau and his novels and work on the media circuit.
I focused on 33-45 in particular, but thought I should mentioned about his life afterwards because it was indeed very very public, considering he was a media whore.
The question didn't require the student to explain his assention to public office/life, merely outline the features of his public life. Therefore, the background details you speak of are by no means a requisite for a high mark. As for post-45 public life, it may be public but it doesn't fall into the 'period' we studied (national study: 1918-1945). However, I doubt doing either of the things you've done would harm your mark, but likewise, doing as I have done is still answering every aspect of the question.stu_jacks88 said:I basically mentioned everything from 27 - 66, but i focused on the period of 30-45 so i should go sweet. i dont think you should just start at 30-33 because then you have no background or explanation of his assention to his 'public life'. The same can be said with ending right on 1945 when he was captured; again Speer is definately in the 'public's' eye at Nuremburg in 46 and then in 66 with his release from Spandau, and with the release of his novel.
I'm sure you will. Like I said earlier, anyone who is writing beyond 1945 will be the types who get close to full marks (for Speer) anyway, so yeah.stu_jacks88 said:Good point. meh, i still reckon i'll go very well in the section.
I still have a problem with this. I know full well that the national study is 18 - 45 but speers public life extended beyond 45 and it was part of the period we studied, if it only wanted up to 45, why didn't it say so. Of course it could well imply that 'in the period you have studied' means up to 45 and it is a discriminator phrase of the question, but Speers public life only really started in 33, which means 18 - 33 (part of the national study) and also speers birth and life previous to that was irrellevant to the question which was part of 'the period we studied'. I would argue that post 45 there were events in Speers 'public life' and fell into 'the period we studied' while not strictly being 18 - 45 (national study) If the question each year never asks anything either side of 18 - 45, then why do we learn it? The answer is not as obvious as it seems I think. Spending time in class on something that is allegedly never tested seems a waste of time. I'm neither here or there on the issue, but I think the question definately allowed a small amount of knowledge post 45 to be included, (if you didn't you could still get full marks).fleepbasding said:The question didn't require the student to explain his assention to public office/life, merely outline the features of his public life. Therefore, the background details you speak of are by no means a requisite for a high mark. As for post-45 public life, it may be public but it doesn't fall into the 'period' we studied (national study: 1918-1945). However, I doubt doing either of the things you've done would harm your mark, but likewise, doing as I have done is still answering every aspect of the question.
I have thought about it of course. And I could have written pages about post-45 life, as I'd covered it throughly (in study) out of interest.Crazy Pomo said:I still have a problem with this. I know full well that the national study is 18 - 45 but speers public life extended beyond 45 and it was part of the period we studied, if it only wanted up to 45, why didn't it say so. Of course it could well imply that 'in the period you have studied' means up to 45 and it is a discriminator phrase of the question, but Speers public life only really started in 33, which means 18 - 33 (part of the national study) and also speers birth and life previous to that was irrellevant to the question which was part of 'the period we studied'. I would argue that post 45 there were events in Speers 'public life' and fell into 'the period we studied' while not strictly being 18 - 45 (national study) If the question each year never asks anything either side of 18 - 45, then why do we learn it? The answer is not as obvious as it seems I think. Spending time in class on something that is allegedly never tested seems a waste of time. I'm neither here or there on the issue, but I think the question definately allowed a small amount of knowledge post 45 to be included, (if you didn't you could still get full marks).
If you think about it, much of Speers historical notoriety surrounds his life post 45, with the raging debate about whether he knew about this and that or not.
Well, I'll start by saying that I justified at the end of my response that some events post 45 were part of his public life and that they WERE part of the area we studied. I know full well that 'the period we studied was apparentlyt 18 - 45, and I would like to call upon a point of order Mr Speaker on the relevance of purposely misinterpreting my phrasing (haha jokes).fleepbasding said:I have thought about it of course. And I could have written pages about post-45 life, as I'd covered it throughly (in study) out of interest.
"I would argue that post 45 there were events in Speers 'public life' and fell into 'the period we studied' while not strictly being 18 - 45 (national study)"
How can the events post-45 fall into the period we studied when they actually don't fall into the period we studied? Remember, personality study is the bastard son of national study.
"then why do we learn it?"
quite frankly, I'm not sure if we did learn it, or if we were supposed to learn it. My teacher said on a couple of occasions not to write about nuremburg, Spandau etc.
I'm pretty sure you'd get marks for discussing post-45, but likewise I don't think it was either encouraged (by the question) or necessary.
I did justify near the end of my response that I wouldn't be going into his life post-45 because it falls outside "the period we studied" for the national study, namely 1918-45.
ha ha ha ha... "The member for ballina is in order, member for Ballina."Crazy Pomo said:Well, I'll start by saying that I justified at the end of my response that some events post 45 were part of his public life and that they WERE part of the area we studied. I know full well that 'the period we studied was apparentlyt 18 - 45, and I would like to call upon a point of order Mr Speaker on the relevance of purposely misinterpreting my phrasing (haha jokes).
I'm starting to have my doubts about the wording of the question as a scam to unhinge the feeble minds of HSC students. The key words from memory were 'main features', 'public life' and 'in the period you have studied.' Now, I think I addressed the first to correctly but in response to the third, I am now beginning to think it was a trick and that "in the period you studied" is the BOS (BS) way of saying 18 - 45. However, it is difficult with Speer because his life falls either side of that, but I suppose the reason we study a personality is limited to their RELEVANCE and ROLE in the NATION studied.
I'm not backing down...but I am definately on my way.
BAHAHA. Woohoo question time is in ... one hour. Fuck yeah. Lets take up arms against a sea of troubles, and by opposing, end them. FUCK YOU BOARD OF STUDIES. Lets hope we get full marks for Speer anyway.fleepbasding said:ha ha ha ha... "The member for ballina is in order, member for Ballina."
Thank you Mr Speaker, as for the member's questions, Mr Speaker, well, I won't dent that they are important issues. And I know that the member for rurality has taken a keen interest in this issue, and it's a very important one to his electorate.
May I just say this: he is largely correct. I completely agree with everything he just expressed. Infact, the only thing debatable here, is whether or not the BOS was trying to fuck us over this year...
TONY ABBOT- "I'd like to call a point of order, the leader of the opposition just made an offensive remark, and I'd like him to withdraw it"
SPEAKER: The leader of the opposition will withdraw"
ME: I withdraw Mr Speaker... in conclusion, we may never know, but the markers notes may be a good indication nect year, if any members of parliament still give a shit in a few months time.