Englisch 11: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen
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*Structure your material (related ideas/arguments, order of importance ...) | *Structure your material (related ideas/arguments, order of importance ...) | ||
*Tense used in the question ==> '''Correct Tense''' of your answer? | *Tense used in the question ==> '''Correct Tense''' of your answer? | ||
*Have you gota good introductory sentence? It is a sentence that states what question you answer/refers to the | *Have you gota '''good introductory sentence'''? It is a sentence that states what question you answer/refers to the question and gives the reader a basic idea of the structure/direction your answer takes. (Question: <i>What problems does the author see for big cities?</i> - Your introduction: <i>The author believes that big cities have two main problems related to traffic and housing.)</i> | ||
*Paragraphs with: '''thesis/topic sentence ==> supporting points ==> example ==> conclusion'''? | *Paragraphs with: '''thesis/topic sentence ==> supporting points ==> example ==> conclusion'''? | ||
*'''Are the paragraphs linked well''' ==> is the line of argument o.k.? | *'''Are the paragraphs linked well''' ==> is the line of argument o.k.? |
Version vom 23. September 2020, 19:53 Uhr
Basic Skills
Questions on the Text
The phrases in bold letters can serve as a checklist:
Questions:
- Read the question(s)!
- Does the question relate to only a certain (given) passage of the text?
- Mark keywords in question, look up unclear words!
- What is asked? What are you looking for? Decide what information you need before you read the text again – e.g. do you look for reasons, stylistic devices, facts/quotes that help to write a characterization?
Textwork/Reading:
Mark / collect material from the text that will help you to answer your question
- Read the text one section/paragraph at a time to maximize your concentration.
- Stop at the end of the section/paragraph and ask yourself: “What is important – what helps to answer the question?”
- Mark the passages that help to compose your answer AFTER reading a paragraph and before moving on.
- Annotate by writing e.g. the number of the question or a short tag on the margin of the text.
Writing
- Structure your material (related ideas/arguments, order of importance ...)
- Tense used in the question ==> Correct Tense of your answer?
- Have you gota good introductory sentence? It is a sentence that states what question you answer/refers to the question and gives the reader a basic idea of the structure/direction your answer takes. (Question: What problems does the author see for big cities? - Your introduction: The author believes that big cities have two main problems related to traffic and housing.)
- Paragraphs with: thesis/topic sentence ==> supporting points ==> example ==> conclusion?
- Are the paragraphs linked well ==> is the line of argument o.k.?
- Does the answer really answer the question?
- Are the promises from the introduction kept? (e.g "There are three reasons ..." - Do you give three?)