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Paper 1:- different topics for consideration - Coggle Diagram
Paper 1:- different topics for consideration
Personal...
Blogs
Very versatile, many purposes
Mix of personal and public
Can be anonymous
Lists and bullet points with simplified language
Use of first person to make personal
Short, well structured paragraphs
Descriptive words: 'polished, authentic, convincing'
Mentions author by last name
Question for title?? Hard hitting
Command words, quotations
Facts and emotive lexis if persuasive
Vlogs
Rankings of different things
Comparisons (why good/ better)
Technical lexis and professionalism, perhaps jargon
For more personal, first person
Gives other people's views/reviews on products eg. Emily on Amazon said..
Personal tastes and opinions as well as facts
Unboxings
Sponsored vlogs contain much more about products in question and in positive light so viewers will buy
Can either be very formal or chatty and friendly
Which depends almost entirely on subject and the vloggers PERSONA
Reviews
Introduction: key facts about what is being reviewed
Evaluation: your opinion on all of these elements, keeping in mind both purpose and audience
Use present tense
Loaded language, eg. 'the
dreadful
acting casts a
shadow
over a story that has been plotted
cleverly
'
Humorous, intense or exaggerated language (and hyperbole): 'that gloopy mountain of pasta could be used to fill a hole in the wall', 'glorious, rich evocation'
Introduce elements under discussion, 'let us turn to', 'a key element is', 'the mood changes when'
Ask questions
Weigh up good and bad
Sum up writers feelings/ expectations
Take reader into confidence ('so come with me...', use of first person and informal exclamations or anecdotes etc)
Use jargon, if required
Summary: concise amount of core elements under review
Creative writing
Describe characters personalities through
-appearance
-other characters viewpoints
-use metaphors to describe
-make introductions memorable
-describe with
action
-show character through what person says or does
1st person viewpoint
: relates events using me, I and other first person pronouns:
-unique perspective that includes outsiders view
-intrigue effect as though readers are part of the story -unreliable narrator, multiple viewpoint
2nd person viewpoint
: use the imperative mood and pronouns you, your and yours to address readers directly:
-writing directly
to
reader
-immerse reader in becoming the protagonist
-engages reader in rich sensory experience
3rd person viewpoint
: relates events using the pronouns he, she and they:
-the most common form of narrative
-lets characters actions and behaviours portray thoughts, feelings
Third person objective:-
facts are reported in seemingly neutral, impersonal narrative
Third person omniscient:-
All-knowing narrator records events AND relates to the thoughts/feelings of any of the characters
Third person limited:-
narrator relates events from a single characters perspective
CONSISTENCY IS IMPORTANT WHEN USING any OF THESE TECHNIQUES
Setting: not merely situation or scenery:
-interaction of characters with setting
-similar or different to characters or mood??
-long shot, middle shot and close shot as used in filming
-sometimes the detail
is
the story
-choose direct or indirect speech carefully according to styles purpose and genre