13.07.2015 Views

Writing Exam Essays & Short Answers Quickly - Victoria University of ...

Writing Exam Essays & Short Answers Quickly - Victoria University of ...

Writing Exam Essays & Short Answers Quickly - Victoria University of ...

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

<strong>Writing</strong> <strong>Exam</strong> <strong>Essays</strong>& <strong>Short</strong> <strong>Answers</strong> <strong>Quickly</strong>The following is a step-by-step approach to quick writing in an exam.The Paper- Look through- How many Qs?- Do easy Qs firstThe Question- <strong>Quickly</strong> read- Analyse Q- Plan answer- Write answerThe Paper First look through the paper and get a feel <strong>of</strong> it. See how many questions are allocated to each section and thus how long you will spend on each. Do the easy questions first.The Question <strong>Quickly</strong> read all the relevant introductory text. Note any hints, stressed points and italicisedwords. Analyse the question. underline all the instruction words e.g. assess,explain, evaluate what exactly is the topic e.g. “The validity <strong>of</strong>the judges reasoning” how many marks and how long to spend on it Plan your answer (if it’s a long question). note down everything you can think <strong>of</strong>relating to the question (i.e. brainstorm) order your notes, in the order they will appearin your answer, delete what isn’t important Write your answer (quickly). introduce your answer - one or two sentencesstating exactly what you are going to write write quickly from your note plan,concentrate on speed, coherence and a logicalflow when writing state your main point at thebeginning <strong>of</strong> a paragraph, give examples,explain your point, show the limits <strong>of</strong> thepoint, compare with other ideas,comment/criticise your point, link to the nextbig point conclude with a very short reminder <strong>of</strong> whatyou have written use some fancy phrases you have preparedbefore Edit (if you have time). check clarity and a good argument first add in missing words, delete unnecessarywords spelling and punctuation you should leave forlast (only if you have time)© Student Learning Support Service<strong>Victoria</strong> <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Wellington | www.victoria.ac.nz/slss | student-learning@vuw.ac.nz | +64 4 463 5999


The following is a step-by-step approach to quick writing in an exam.THE PAPERSpend up to 5 mins First look through the paper and get a feel <strong>of</strong> it. See how many questions are allocated to each section and thus how long you will spend on each. Do the easy questions first.THE QUESTIONSpend up to 10 mins <strong>Quickly</strong> read all the relevant introductory text. Note any hints, stressed points and italicised words. Analyse the question.► underline all the instruction words e.g. assess, explain, evaluate►what exactly is the topic e.g. “The validity <strong>of</strong> the judges reasoning”► how many marks and how long to spend on it Plan your answer (if it’s a long question).► note down everything you can think <strong>of</strong> relating to the question (i.e. brainstorm)► order your notes, in the order they will appear in your answer, delete what isn’timportant Write your answer (quickly).► introduce your answer - one or two sentences stating exactly what you are goingto write► write quickly from your note plan, concentrate on speed, coherence and a logicalflow► when writing state your main point at the beginning <strong>of</strong> a paragraph, giveexamples, explain your point, show the limits <strong>of</strong> the point, compare with otherideas, comment/criticise your point, link to the next big point► conclude with a very short reminder <strong>of</strong> what you have written► use some fancy phrases you have prepared before Edit (if you have time).► check clarity and a good argumentPlan to allocatearound 10 mins► first add in missing words, delete unnecessary words► spelling and punctuation you should leave for last (only if you have time)© Student Learning Support Service<strong>Victoria</strong> <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Wellington | www.victoria.ac.nz/slss | student-learning@vuw.ac.nz | +64 4 463 5999

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!