Please make sure you have completed your final images and uploaded them to your website before you continue to the essay. Read the following essay by an A-level photography student. You will be writing a supporting, evaluative essay to accompany your project - this is a good example. The first component of your A level work has a compulsory 1000-3000 word essay to go alongside your personal photographic investigation. This is a practice essay for the required written element of Component One. To be successful you must: - Be reflective not descriptive - Explain your thought process at each stage of the project - why did you...? - Analyse the strengths and weaknesses of your experiments - Link to artists clearly (with pictures in relevant places) - Explain how your outcomes bring together your ideas to realize your intentions. You are marked on the essay in AO1 and AO4. See the criteria below, and be aware of the wording, including a requirement for 'fluent use of appropriate specialist language' and 'exceptionally clear, coherent and accurate use of language' to achieve the higher marks. Use the above document to help you structure the way in which you write your essay. The word count must be above 1000 words but below 3000. Do not include your skills development tasks in the essay, just everything from the Journeys project. Write your essay on word so you can check spellings etc then copy and paste to your website. You have until the 17th of February to complete your essay and upload it to the bottom of your Journeys page, ready to be marked over half term. Print your essay so far.
Swap them with each other, and read their work. Aim to: - underline any typos, spelling or punctuation errors - circle any repetition eg. if they use the phrase such as 5 times in as many lines! - underline anything that is waffling/irrelevant!
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorThese lessons have been written by Miss Wilson. Archives
December 2018
Categories
All
|