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Short Film Study: Questions for 'The Coin' dir. Siqi Song
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Short Film Study: Questions for 'The Coin' dir. Siqi Song

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Short films can be engaging texts from which to construct a whole unit, or as reward breaks for single lessons. The rich variety of styles and stories in short films from around the world will appeal to even the most disengaged or low-ability student. This single-lesson activity comprises questions for the 7 minute short animated film ‘The Coin’, directed by Siqi Song. The film is suitable for students 8+. Please note this file does not include the film itself, nor can we guarantee that the film will remain at that site permanently. We advise teachers to check the link above, or make sure that they can view the film before purchasing.
Short Film Study: Questions for 'Verse', dir. Tony Comley
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Short Film Study: Questions for 'Verse', dir. Tony Comley

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rich variety of styles and stories in short films from around the world will appeal to even the most disengaged or low-ability student. This single-lesson activity comprises questions for the 4 minute short animated poetry film ‘Verse’, directed by Tony Comley The film is suitable for students 12+. Please note this file does not include the film itself, nor can we guarantee that the film will remain at that site permanently. We advise teachers to check the link above, or make sure that they can view the film before purchasing.
Short Film Study: Questions for 'A Night in Camp Heebie Jeebie' dir. Dylan Chase
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Short Film Study: Questions for 'A Night in Camp Heebie Jeebie' dir. Dylan Chase

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Short films can be engaging texts from which to construct a whole unit, or as reward breaks for single lessons. The rich variety of styles and stories in short films from around the world will appeal to even the most disengaged or low-ability student. This single-lesson activity comprises questions for the 6 minute short animated film ‘A Night in Camp Heebie Jeebie’, directed by Dylan Chase. The film was found on A Night in Camp Heebie Jeebie by Dylan Chase | Horror Short Film (shortoftheweek.com), and is suitable for students 12+. Please note this file does not include the film itself, nor can we guarantee that the film will remain at that site permanently. We advise teachers to check the link above, or make sure that they can view the film before purchasing.
Short Film Study:  Questions for 'Second Best' dir. Alyssa McClelland
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Short Film Study: Questions for 'Second Best' dir. Alyssa McClelland

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Short films can be engaging texts from which to construct a whole unit, or as reward breaks for single lessons. The rich variety of styles and stories in short films from around the world will appeal to even the most disengaged or low-ability student. This single-lesson activity comprises questions for the 20 minute short film ‘Second Best’, directed by Alyssa McClelland. The film was found on Second Best by Alyssa McClelland | Comedy | Short Film (shortoftheweek.com), and is suitable for students 15+. There is one instance of swearing (the f-word). Please note this file does not include the film itself, nor can we guarantee that the film will remain at that site permanently. We advise teachers to check the link above, or make sure that they can view the film before purchasing.
HSC Advanced English Module A Sample essay: Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes
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HSC Advanced English Module A Sample essay: Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes

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This is a three-part resource for students undertaking the NSW HSC Advanced English Module A: Textual Conversations. A generic essay plan shows students how to compose an essay suitable for Stage 6, progressing them from the simpler PEEL/TEAL models of Stage 4 and 5. A sample essay for the prescribed text-pairing of Plath’s and Hughes’ poetry answering the question: Later texts rarely agree with their textual mentors; the conversation is always a challenge, a rebuttal to what has gone before. To what extent is this statement true of the texts you have studied in this module? There is also a second copy of the essay, marked up to show how it follows the plan, and with five short questions which require students to engage critically with the essay and its form
Talking Points HSC Advanced Mod A: Poetry of John Donne and W;t
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Talking Points HSC Advanced Mod A: Poetry of John Donne and W;t

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Memorized essays betray a lack of confidence and an unwillingness to commit to authentic answers. Examiners have always advised students to prepare ‘talking points’ instead - a selection of ideas that they can draw on and which convey solid analysis and interpretation of the text. These talking points can be used by teachers, to focus discussion on higher-level or less-noticed features of the text and context. They also form effective student revision materials for formal assessment. Each point is supported by a piece of evidence from the text, and there are sufficient points to generate solid responses to almost any essay question. The Talking Points also model how students can articulate more complex thoughts about the text, and adduce evidence in natural and well-integrated writing.
HSC Advanced English Module A: Poetry of John Donne and Margaret Edson, W;t
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HSC Advanced English Module A: Poetry of John Donne and Margaret Edson, W;t

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This is a three-part resource for students undertaking the NSW HSC Advanced English Module A: Textual Conversations. A generic essay plan shows students how to compose an essay suitable for Stage 6, progressing them from the simpler PEEL/TEAL models of Stage 4 and 5. A sample essay for the prescribed text-pairing of John Donne’s poetry and Margaret Edson’s play W;t, and answers the 2019 HSC question: Everything is being dismantled, reconstructed, recycled. To what end? For what purpose? To what extent is this true of the texts you have studied for this module? There is also a second copy of the essay, marked up to show how it follows the plan, and with five short questions which require students to engage critically with the essay and its form
HSC Mod C: Ways Into - Boey, 'Stamp Collecting' TEACHER'S COPY
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HSC Mod C: Ways Into - Boey, 'Stamp Collecting' TEACHER'S COPY

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HSC Module C: The Craft of Writing offers students complex texts from which to draw for their own writing. Because of their complex construction and ideas, students can be at a loss for ‘ways in’ to the text, and teachers can often struggle to break down these complex texts in the time available. This teacher’s version of Diving Bell’s ‘Ways Into’ for Module C provides the answers to the student worksheet (also available). These comprehensive answers help teachers to lead classes through complex texts in the brief time available. With the ‘Ways Into’ Module C both teachers and students should be clear on the content, meaning, construction-strategies, and ways to use Kim Cheng Boey’s autogiographical poem ‘Stamp Collecting’. NOTE: the final question, addressing ways to appropriate the text for the student’s own work, is undone since it invites an individual, creative response.
HSC Module C: Ways Into - Kim Cheng Boey, 'Stamp Collecting'
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HSC Module C: Ways Into - Kim Cheng Boey, 'Stamp Collecting'

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HSC Module C: The Craft of Writing offers students complex texts from which to draw for their own writing. Because of their complex construction and ideas, students can be at a loss for ‘ways in’ to the text. Diving Bell’s ‘Ways Into’ series for Module C provide a structured way for students to consider the text in terms of Content, Context, and Construction, with appropriate elements within these headings. By the end of the worksheet the student should be clear on the content, meaning, construction-strategies, and ways to use Kim Cheng Boey’s autobiographical poem ‘Stamp Collecting’. A completed teacher’s copy with possible responses is available so that time-poor teachers can lead classes through these texts.
HSC Advanced English The Craft of Writing: Module C Eliot (Journey of the Magi)
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HSC Advanced English The Craft of Writing: Module C Eliot (Journey of the Magi)

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This resource offers an answer to the Sample Paper HSC Advanced English Module C question: Guard your roving thoughts with a jealous care, for speech is but the dealer of thoughts, and every fool can plainly read in your words what is the hour of your thoughts. Use this warning as a stimulus for a piece of persuasive, discursive or imaginative writing that expresses your perspective about a significant concern or idea that you have engaged with in ONE of your prescribed texts from Module A, B or C. This answer uses T.S. Eliot’s poem ‘Journey of the Magi’ in an imaginative way, reflecting on the possible listener to the Magus’ dramatic monologue. Check out more creative writing resources at https://thecraftofwriting.org/
Ways Into - Orwell 'Politics & English Language' Teacher AND Student Guide
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Ways Into - Orwell 'Politics & English Language' Teacher AND Student Guide

2 Resources
HSC Module C: The Craft of Writing offers students complex texts from which to draw for their own writing. Because of their complex construction and ideas, students can be at a loss for ‘ways in’ to the text, and teachers can often struggle to break down these complex texts in the time available. This bundle contains BOTH student worksheet AND teacher’s suggested answers for George Orwell’s famous and fabulous essay ‘Politics and the English Language’.
HSC Mod C: Ways Into - Orwell 'Politics & the English Language' TEACHER'S COPY
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HSC Mod C: Ways Into - Orwell 'Politics & the English Language' TEACHER'S COPY

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HSC Module C: The Craft of Writing offers students complex texts from which to draw for their own writing. Because of their complex construction and ideas, students can be at a loss for ‘ways in’ to the text, and teachers can often struggle to break down these complex texts in the time available. This teacher’s version of Diving Bell’s ‘Ways Into’ for Module C provides the answers to the student worksheet (also available). These comprehensive answers help teachers to lead classes through complex texts in the brief time available. With the ‘Ways Into’ Module C both teachers and students should be clear on the content, meaning, construction-strategies, and ways to use George Orwell’s famous and fabulous essay ‘Politics and the English Language’. NOTE: the final question, addressing ways to appropriate the text for the student’s own work, is undone since it invites an individual, creative response.
HSC Module C: Ways Into - Orwell, 'Politics and the English Language'
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HSC Module C: Ways Into - Orwell, 'Politics and the English Language'

(0)
HSC Module C: The Craft of Writing offers students complex texts from which to draw for their own writing. Because of their complex construction and ideas, students can be at a loss for ‘ways in’ to the text. Diving Bell’s ‘Ways Into’ series for Module C provide a structured way for students to consider the text in terms of Content, Context, and Construction, with appropriate elements within these headings. By the end of the worksheet the student should be clear on the content, meaning, construction-strategies, and ways to use George Orwell’s famous and fabulous essay ‘Politics and the English Language’. A completed teacher’s copy with possible responses is available so that time-poor teachers can lead classes through these texts.
Writing Historical Fiction: A History Student's Workbook
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Writing Historical Fiction: A History Student's Workbook

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Writing historical fiction is an excellent way for History students to develop an understanding of historical narrative, cause and effect, empathy, and perspective. Yet many teachers do not feel comfortable introducing an fiction task to the History classroom, or confident in steering students through it in a manner fundamentally different from English. This 10-section workbook engages students in a self-guided exercise in forming a historian’s question, locating sources with which to answer it, and performing a thought-experiment with historical imagination. They write the narrative in stages closely tied to historical skills, and so recognize from the outside the contestability of historical explanations and the relative quality of significance and evaluation performed by different historians. This workbook can be partnered with Diving Bell Education’s Investigating Story and History, a 10-section workbook which guides students through the development of narrative from the earliest human stories to the narratives of the digital era, and shows how History has an innately narrative character.
Texts and Human Experience Short Story: Peter Gaskill, 'Black Magic'
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Texts and Human Experience Short Story: Peter Gaskill, 'Black Magic'

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Short stories are an effective way to illustrate the key concepts and reading strategies in the HSC Texts and Human Experience module. These short stories can be used to introduce the module, to supplement the prescribed text, as a standby lesson, or as part of an assessment task. Questions ask students to apply concepts from the rubric to the story, and sample answers on separate pages which the teacher may detach for teaching. Peter Gaskill’s story ‘Black Magic’ is about a fighter pilot attempting to make an impossible landing on a Pacific island during WWII. It is around 2226 words long and has been used successfully with a senior class (16-18 years).
Texts and Human Experience Short Story: Miriam Marshall, A Breath of Wind
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Texts and Human Experience Short Story: Miriam Marshall, A Breath of Wind

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Short stories are an effective way to illustrate the key concepts and reading strategies in the HSC Texts and Human Experience module. These short stories can be used to introduce the module, to supplement the prescribed text, as a standby lesson, or as part of an assessment task. Questions ask students to apply concepts from the rubric to the story, and sample answers on separate pages which the teacher may detach for teaching. Miriam Marshall’s ‘A Breath of Wind’ reflects on an encounter between a young white woman and an Aboriginal man. It is around 1368 words long and has been used successfully with a senior class (16-18 years).
Texts and Human Experience Short Story: Anna Hallett, A Tempest
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Texts and Human Experience Short Story: Anna Hallett, A Tempest

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Short stories are an effective way to illustrate the key concepts and reading strategies in the HSC Texts and Human Experience module. These short stories can be used to introduce the module, to supplement the prescribed text, as a standby lesson, or as part of an assessment task. Questions ask students to apply concepts from the rubric to the story, and sample answers on separate pages which the teacher may detach for teaching. Anna Hallett’s ‘A Tempest’ is an inversion of a famous moment from Shakespeare’s The Tempest. It is around 950 words long and has been used successfully with a senior class (16-18 years).
Texts and Human Experience Short Story: Helen Benedict, 'Binocular'
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Texts and Human Experience Short Story: Helen Benedict, 'Binocular'

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Short stories are an effective way to illustrate the key concepts and reading strategies in the HSC Texts and Human Experience module. These short stories can be used to introduce the module, to supplement the prescribed text, as a standby lesson, or as part of an assessment task. Questions ask students to apply concepts from the rubric to the story, and sample answers on separate pages which the teacher may detach for teaching. Helen Benedict’s ‘Binocular’ is a character-driven story about a boy’s experience after spying on a girl. It is around 2400 words long and has been used successfully with a senior class (16-18 years).
Texts and Human Experience Short Story: Anton Linn, 'Oath'
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Texts and Human Experience Short Story: Anton Linn, 'Oath'

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Short stories are an effective way to illustrate the key concepts and reading strategies in the HSC Texts and Human Experience module. These short stories can be used to introduce the module, to supplement the prescribed text, as a standby lesson, or as part of an assessment task. Questions ask students to apply concepts from the rubric to the story, and sample answers on separate pages which the teacher may detach for teaching. This feminist retelling of a famous biblical story, ‘Oath’ by Anton Linn is around 1200 words long and has been used successfully with a senior class (16-18 years).
Texts and Human Experience Short Story: Rose Hughson, 'Day Out'
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Texts and Human Experience Short Story: Rose Hughson, 'Day Out'

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Short stories are an effective way to illustrate the key concepts and reading strategies in the HSC Texts and Human Experience module. These short stories can be used to introduce the module, to supplement the prescribed text, as a standby lesson, or as part of an assessment task. Questions ask students to apply concepts from the rubric to the story, and sample answers on separate pages which the teacher may detach for teaching. This character-driven story of two old people attempting a day out despite dementia, ‘Day Out’, by Rose Hughson, is around 2700 words long and has been used successfully with a senior class (16-18 years).