Six Second Summary
Introduction
As regular practice is essential to effective study regimes, students should utilise these questions in the lead up to trial and HSC exams. Questions are best practised under timed conditions to best prepare for the exams in an authentic environment.
These questions have been prepared by top state-ranking tutors at Premier Tutors with several years of experience teaching the new syllabus, including three tutors who have placed 1st in NSW for English Advanced.
Common Questions
Question 1
“Through the language of emotion, texts may provide timeless and universal portraits of humanity.”
To what extent does this statement relate to your own understanding of your prescribed text? In your response, refer to the quotation and your prescribed text.
Question 2
“Literature always anticipates life. It does not copy it but moulds it to its purpose.” – Oscar Wilde
Assess the effectiveness of your prescribed text in providing an authentic image of reality. In your response, refer to the quotation and your prescribed text.
Question 3
“It is difficult to maintain individual identity in the face of homogenous collectives.”
To what extent does this statement relate to your own understanding of your prescribed text?
Question 4
How does your text represent the paradoxical nature of human behaviours and motivations?
Question 5
Literature’s power comes from its ability to confront the reader’s assumptions by representing new perspectives on the human experience. How does your understanding of your prescribed text reflect this statement?
Question 6
“One’s identity is a culmination of their individual and collective human experiences.”
To what extent does this statement align with your understanding of your prescribed text? In your response, refer to the quotation and your prescribed text.
Question 7
How does your text represent the inconsistencies between morality and human behaviours?
Question 8
“The medium is the message” – Marshall McLuhan
How does the composer of your prescribed text communicate their perspective on the human experience through their form choices? In your response, refer to your prescribed text and the above statement.
Question 9
“Despite our different behaviours, human motivations are all the same.”
How does your composer respond to their context to represent enduring ideas about the human experience? In your response, make close reference to the given statement and the prescribed text.
Question 10
“If the world were clear, art would not exist.” – Albert Camus
How does your prescribed text use storytelling to clarify the uncertainties and inconsistencies of the human experience? In your response, refer to the given statement and your prescribed text.
Question 11
How does the composer of your prescribed text experiment with form to challenge readers’ perspectives about the human experience?
Question 12
“The only constant within the human experience is change.”
To what extent does this paradoxical statement reflect your understanding of your prescribed text?
Question 13
How does your text use storytelling to deepen the responder’s understanding of the power of human relationships?
Question 14
How does your text develop a strong voice to shape the reader’s perspectives about the nature of individual experiences?
Question 15
“The most powerful and transcendental human experience is love.”
Love can come in many different forms. How does your text represent the impact of this emotion on individual and collective human experiences? In your response, make close reference to the above statement and your prescribed text.
Form Questions
Question 16 - Prose Fiction
“The primary purpose of prose to create an authentic representation of the human experience.”
To what extent does the given statement align with your understanding of your prescribed text? In your response, discuss how narrative voice and structure help create this authenticity.
Question 17 - Poetry
“The power of poetry is not so much in the literal meaning of the words, but in the feelings that it evokes through imagery and other creative choices. It is through those feelings that we learn about the human experience.”
To what extent does this statement align with your understanding of your prescribed text?
Question 18 - Drama/ Shakespearean Drama
Analyse your prescribed text’s use of performance devices in representing human emotions.
Question 19 - Nonfiction
Analyse how the narrative voice of your prescribed text deepens your understanding of the individual experience represented.
Question 20 - Film & Media
Analyse how visual techniques work in conjunction with dialogue to accurately portray the interaction between individual and collective human experiences.
The following are all text-specific questions:
All the Light We Cannot See (Doerr, Anthony):
Question 21
How does Doer represent the impact of adversity on the individual and collective behaviours?
Question 22
“So how, children, does the brain, which lives without a spark of light, build for us a world full of light?”
How has Doer’s representation of hope deepened your understanding of the human experience? In your response, make close reference to the given quotation and your prescribed text.
Question 23
How does Doer’s complicated portrayal of heroes and villains reveal the universality of our underlying humanity?
Vertigo (Lohrey, Amanda):
Question 24
How does Lohrey represent the importance of connection with place in shaping the individual human experience?
Question 25
“To awaken human emotion is the highest level of art.” – Isadora Duncan
Discuss how Lohrey’s representation of the range of human emotions has enhanced your understanding of the human experience. In your response, make close reference to the given quote and your prescribed text.
Question 26
How does Lohrey represent the impact of loss and grief on individual human experiences?
Nineteen Eighty-Four (Orwell, George):
Question 27
“Don’t let it happen. It depends on you.” – George Orwell
How does the above quotation resonate with your understanding of Orwell’s authorial intent?
Question 28
How does Orwell represent the power of collective narratives to homogenise individual human experiences?
Question 29
How does Orwell represent the nature of human emotions within a totalitarian regime, and how does this representation help support his authorial purpose?
Past the Shallows (Parrett, Favel):
Question 30
“No man is an island entire of itself.” – John Donne
Does the above quotation affirm or challenge Parrett’s representation of isolation in Past the Shallows?
Question 31
Analyse how Parrett’s representation of fear shapes your understanding of human behaviours and motivations.
Question 32
How does Parrett represent the influence of setting on individual and collective human experiences?
Rosemary Dobson Collect Poems
‘Young Girl at a Window’, ‘Over the Hill’, ‘Summer’s End’, ‘The Conversation’, ‘Cock Crow’, ‘Amy Caroline’, ‘Canberra Morning’
Question 33
How does Dobson experiment with form to examine the impact of internal conflict on the individual human experience? In your response, refer to AT LEAST TWO of Dobson’s prescribed poems.
Question 34
“His eyes lit windows facing west / to the lemon-coloured light.” - Over the Hill, Rosemary Dobson
How does Dobson’s poetry engage with the different human reactions to change? In your response, refer to the above quotation and TWO OR MORE of Dobson’s prescribed poems.
Question 35
How does Dobson use her poetic form to explore the depth of human emotions? In your response, make clear reference to specific FORM choices made by Dobson in NO MORE THAN TWO of her poems.
Kenneth Slessor Selected Poems
‘Wild Grapes’, ‘Gulliver’, ‘Out of Time’, ‘Vesper-Song of the Reverend Samuel Marsden’, ‘William Street’, ‘Beach Burial’
Question 36
How does Slessor use imagery to evoke confronting emotions and experiences? In your response, refer to AT LEAST TWO of Slessor’s prescribed poems.
Question 37
How does Slessor highlight the paradoxes and anomalies inherent within the human experience? In your response, refer to NO MORE THAN TWO of Slessor’s prescribed poems.
Question 38
How does Slessor’s use of poetic personas allow him to shine light on complex aspects of the human experience? In your response, refer to AT LEAST TWO of Slessor’s prescribed poems.
The Crucible (Miller, Arthur)
Question 39
“Whilst The Crucible is clearly a response to Miller’s context, it also contains enduring messages about human behaviours and motivations.”
How does the above statement reflect your understanding of the human experience represented in Arthur Miller’s The Crucible?
Question 40
How does Miller represent the power of institutional narratives to overwhelm and shape individual and collective human experiences?
Question 41
“Fear is the primary motivator within the human experience.”
To what extent does this statement reflect your understanding of the human experiences represented in Arthur Miller’s The Crucible?
The Merchant of Venice (Shakespeare, William)
Question 42
How does Shakespeare represent differing motivations and their impact on human behaviours?
Question 43
“Life itself, my wife and all the world / Are not with me esteemed above thy life.” (Bassiano to Antonio, IV.i.275-276, The Merchant of Venice, William Shakespeare)
How does Shakespeare represent the importance of connection with others in providing value to human experiences?
Question 44
How does Shakespeare in The Merchant of Venice represent the influence of social laws and norms on both individual and collective human experiences?
The Boy Behind the Curtain (Winton, Tim)
Question 45
How does Winton’s memoir form invite the reader to reflect upon the impact of past experiences in shaping individual identity? In your response, refer to AT LEAST TWO of Winton’s stories prescribed for study.
Question 46
To what extent does Winton engage with the tensions between individual motivations and collective expectations? In your response, refer to NO MORE THAN TWO of Winton’s stories prescribed for study.
Question 47
“For many, certainty has become the new normal, but it’s an illusion…We’ll forever be vulnerable to havoc.” – Havoc, Tim Winton
How does Winton represent the illusions within the human experience? In your response, make specific reference to above quotation and AT LEAST TWO of Winton’s stories prescribed for study.
I Am Malala (Yousafzai, Malala & Lamb)
Question 48
“We realise the importance of our voices only when we are silenced.” – I am Malala, Malala Yousafzai
How does Yousafzai represent the importance of storytelling to empower individuals and collectives? In your response, make close reference to the above quotation and your prescribed text.
Question 49
How does Yousafzai represent the importance of maintaining individual values in the face of challenging individual and collective human experiences?
Question 50
How does Yousafzai in I am Malala represent the emotions and behaviours associated with experiences of inequality?
Question 51
How does Yousafzai in I am Malala represent our underlying, universal humanity despite our different beliefs and backgrounds?
Billy Elliot (Daldry, Stephen)
Question 52
“We cannot change who we are, no more than we can change the rising of the sun or the coming of the tides.”
Does the above statement affirm or challenge your understanding of the representation of individual identity in Daldry’s Billy Elliot?
Question 53
How does Billy Elliot use visual techniques to engage with the difficulty of overcoming social expectations?
Question 54
How does Daldry in Billy Elliot represent the importance of acceptance to the human experience?
Go Back to Where You Came From (O’Mahony, Ivan)
Question 55
How does Go Back to Where You Came From use documentary techniques which confront the viewer’s expectations to reveal the range of human experiences?
Question 56
How does Go Back to Where You Came From represent the power of new experiences to change existing perspectives?
Question 57
How does Go Back to Where You Came From represent our underlying, universal humanity despite our different beliefs and backgrounds?
Waste Land (Walker, Lucy)
Question 58
“A powerful artistic vision is undeniable.”
Does the above quote affirm or challenge your understanding of Waste Land’s representation of the importance of artistic purpose for individual identity?
Question 59
How has your study of Waste Land enhanced your understanding of the power of creative expression to unite communities?
Question 60
How does Waste Land use visual techniques to shape our understanding of the timelessness and universality of human concerns and challenges?