encountering conflict

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How To Study For Encountering Conflict

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Page 1: Encountering conflict

How ToStudy For

EncounteringConflict

Page 2: Encountering conflict

6 reasons you should listen

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Page 3: Encountering conflict

6 reasons you should listen

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Page 4: Encountering conflict

6 reasons you should listen

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Page 5: Encountering conflict

6 reasons you should listen

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Page 6: Encountering conflict

6 reasons you should listen

This student was This student was asked about Arctic asked about Arctic

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Page 7: Encountering conflict

6 reasons you should listen

This student was This student was asked an algebra asked an algebra

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Page 8: Encountering conflict

Don’t end up here

Page 9: Encountering conflict

And one reason you need to have a

plan

5656

Page 10: Encountering conflict

Effective Study

•Don’t measure study by time passed but by goals achieved

Page 11: Encountering conflict

Three ways you can respond to the

context section

•Expository essay piece

•Persuasive piece

•Creative piece

Page 12: Encountering conflict

Expository EssayText Response:

*What is one text about?*Examples

from that one text.

Expository Essay:

*What is an idea about?*Examples

from that one context text.

*Example from other places

Page 13: Encountering conflict

Understanding the prompt

•‘The experience of conflict changes people’s priorities.’

• What is an experience of conflict?

• Which experiences of conflict change people?

• Which people are changed by experiences of conflict?

• What is a priority and how can it be changed?

Page 14: Encountering conflict

Understanding the prompt

WhoWhatHow Why

&WhoseWhich

‘The ability to compromise is important when responding to conflict.’

‘It is difficult to remain a bystander in any situation of conflict.’

‘It is the victims of conflict who show us what is really important.’

Page 15: Encountering conflict

Introduction

•Which question would you start by answering in your introduction?

•An experience of conflict is any situation where a person is confronted by difficulty and has to chose to go one way or the other. It means we have to think about what is really important...

Page 16: Encountering conflict

Ways To Encounter:With courage,

bravely, cowardly, practically, quickly, slowly, with thought

and care, angrily, resiliently, hesitantly,

instinctively, through

determination, alone, with others,

with dignity, hopelessly, through

avoidance, manipulatively,

emotionally, with principles

Conflict Choices:Family vs. Me

Survival vs. Giving inLoyalty vs. Self interest

Values vs. What’s practical

Change vs. Staying the same

Justice vs. InjusticePrejudice vs. Acceptance

What’s hard vs. What’s easy

Page 17: Encountering conflict

Body paragraph

•Some conflict situations require people to choose between...In....What’s difficult about this choice is...

Page 18: Encountering conflict

Other exampleConflict Choices:Family vs. Me

Survival vs. Giving inLoyalty vs. Self interest

Values vs. What’s practical

Change vs. Staying the same

Justice vs. InjusticePrejudice vs. Acceptance

What’s hard vs. What’s easy

Other examples:Current events

Historical examplesMy own personal

examplesFrom other novels/films

Page 19: Encountering conflict

Using other examples

•In Paradise Road the women face a serious conflict in terms of survival. They need to choose between self interest and thinking about others. Around the world during World War II thousands of people faced the same grim decision. Everyone encountered this conflict in different ways. Many decided to do just what was good for them. For example...

Page 20: Encountering conflict

•Break an essay prompt into a series of smaller questions ❏ Yes ❏ Getting There

❏ No

•Plan how I’m going to logically answer these questions ❏ Yes ❏ Getting There ❏ No

•Use examples from one text to answer the prompt ❏ Yes ❏ Getting There ❏ No

•Use other examples from elsewhere to address the prompt ❏ Yes ❏ Getting There ❏ No

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Page 22: Encountering conflict

Writing persuasively

• ‘The ability to compromise is important when responding to conflict.’

•We must always be able to compromise in the face of conflict.

Page 23: Encountering conflict

Propositions*We must/must not...always/nev

er/sometimes*We

should/should not...always/nev

er/sometimes

‘The experience of conflict changes people’s priorities.’

‘It is difficult to remain a bystander in any situation of conflict.’

‘It is the victims of conflict who show us what is really important.’

Page 24: Encountering conflict

•Turn an essay prompt into something that can be argued for or against ❏ Yes ❏ Getting There ❏ No

•Start my persuasive piece in a distinctly persuasive way ❏ Yes ❏ Getting There ❏ No

•Use persuasive examples from one text ❏ Yes ❏ Getting There ❏ No

•Use other persuasive examples from elsewhere ❏ Yes ❏ Getting There ❏ No

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Page 26: Encountering conflict

Creative writingBad reasons for

choosing the creative option:*I think it’s easy*I don’t want to

study*I’ve got a great

idea for one story

Good reasons for choosing the creative

option*I’m confident about

creative writing*I’m prepared to practice creative

writing*I’ve got a good idea for a character and

setting that’s relevant to the context

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are needed to see this picture.

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Characters and situationsCharacter types:

*A family member who is both loyal and wants to do their own thing (The

Rugmaker)*A younger person who is part of a

group and share some values but has different values to the group (Paradise

Road)*A person who is an advocate of change

(The Life of Galileo)

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Character + Scenarios

• ‘The ability to compromise is important when responding to conflict.’

•A group of people is detained at an overseas airport by security. One member of the group needs to decide how to best handle the situation.

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•A character and a setting that you can write confidently about ❏ Yes ❏ Getting There ❏ No

•Take an essay prompt and develop a scenario/problem a character can face which addresses the key idea in the prompt ❏ Yes ❏ Getting There ❏ No

Page 31: Encountering conflict

Three ways you can respond to the

context section

•Expository essay piece

•Persuasive piece

•Creative piece

Page 32: Encountering conflict

Thank you...

Note: This is Note: This is an entirely an entirely

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