Friday 22 March 2013

The General Vision and Viewpoint.

The General Vision and Viewpoint.
                    
The vision or viewpoint of any text might be described as:
-         Optimistic, pessimistic or realistic.
-         Sympathetic, compassionate, cynical
-         Unresolved, contradictory.
-         Reflecting the era in which it is set.
-         Moral, political.
-         Religious.
-         Aesthetic, appreciating beauty, emotion, language.

This vision or viewpoint may be portrayed through:
-Plot
-Characters (they may give their views of their society or the problems they are facing.)
-Relationships, is a character nurtured or thwarted?
-Dialogue, dialects. (Conversations between characters).
-Imagery, language.
-What does the ending tell us of the viewpoint of the text?
 Key moments illustrate an outlook on life.
-In a film lighting, sound, music, colour, and costumes can show a world of beauty or oppression reflecting the view in the text.

Tuesday 12 March 2013

J.C. Drama (Seen and Unseen)


J.C. Drama.

Unseen.

-You have a choice here of two texts, one will be Shakespearean. Read both texts and the questions that accompany them and answer the one you understand best.
- Read the instructions carefully, you may have to answer two questions. Check the marks awarded for each answer.
- Quote from the passage to back up all the points you make.
- Skip a line between each point that you make.
- Read the question carefully and underline exactly what you are being asked.
- Use your drama vocabulary e.g. props, lightening, costumes, facial expressions, gestures, etc. make sure you can describe how you would stage a scene if you were director.
- Know how to bring a scene to life through the setting of the scene e.g. background, sounds, music, etc.
- Know how to write dialogue as you may be asked to continue the scene.
- (Approx. 2 Pages)


Seen.
-         You have a choice of two questions here; answer the one you can write the most on.
-          Your question may be divided into 2 parts, pay attention to the marks awarded for each part.
-         Quote from the play and refer to particular scenes to back up your answer.
-         Use your drama vocabulary, dialogue, tension, climax, stage directions, props, protagonist (character).
-         Don’t just summarise the play.
-         Always read over your answer when finished and correct any mistakes you may have made.
-         (Approx. 2pgs)

Always underline exactly what you are being asked in every question.

Thursday 7 March 2013

J.C. Fiction. Exam Tips.




J.C. Fiction. Top Tips.

Unseen
-         You will not have seen this extract before.
-         Read the extract carefully, read the questions, and then re-read the extract.
-         Underline exactly what you are being asked.
-         Read the instructions to the questions. You will most likely have to answer 2 questions. Pick the questions you can answer the most on.
-         When you are re-reading the extract, note anything you deem relevant for your answers.
-         Pay close attention to the marks awarded for your answers.
-         Make 3/4 supporting points for each answer.
-         Use quotations from the extract to support each point you make.
-         Rephrase the question in your answer.
-         Skip a line between each point you make, put the point in your own words before you support it with a direct quote from the text.
-         Re-read your answers and correct any mistakes you may have made.



Seen.
-         You will have a choice of two questions here.
-         Read both questions carefully and answer on the question you can answer the most on. Underline what you are being asked in the question.
-         Refer to the question in your answer.
-         Brainstorm and plan your answer.
-         Refer to the novel throughout your answer, quote directly where you can.
-         Re-read your answer and correct any mistakes you made have made.
-         Be careful, as your question may be broken into 2 separate questions; make sure you pay attention to the marks awarded for each question.
-         Do not just summarise your novel in your answer.