The transition between high school and university is not an easy one. There are unfamiliar subjects to be studied and even familiar subjects are approached in new ways. The pace of learning is much faster, the volume of written work increases and all the deadlines seem to come at once. And then there are the exams. This series of books aims to bridge the gap by introducing subjects as they are taught at university, providing some time management strategies, suggesting how to get the most out of lectures and tutorials, showing how to write an essay to university standards, and taking some of the agony out of exams. …mehr
< P> The transition between high school and university is not an easy one. There are unfamiliar subjects to be studied and even familiar subjects are approached in new ways. The pace of learning is much faster, the volume of written work increases and all the deadlines seem to come at once. And then there are the exams. This series of books aims to bridge the gap by introducing subjects as they are taught at university, providing some time management strategies, suggesting how to get the most out of lectures and tutorials, showing how to write an essay to university standards, and taking some of the agony out of exams.< /P>Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
David Amigoni is Professor of Victorian Literature at Keele University. He is the author of The English Novel and Prose Narrative (Edinburgh University Press, 2000) and Victorian Biography: Intellectuals and the Ordering of Discourse (Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1992). He is co-editor, with Jeff Wallace, of Charles Darwin's 'Origin of Species': New Interdisciplinary Essays (Manchester UP, 1995), and co-editor, with Paul Barlow and Colin Trodd, of Victorian Culture and the Idea of the Grotesque (Ashgate, 1999).
Inhaltsangabe
Contents Introduction Section 1: Studying English Literature 1.1.What is English literature? 1.2 Why study English literature? 1.3 What forms can the study of English literature take? 1.4 The place of 'theory' in English literature programmes Section 2: Study Skills in English Literature 2.1 Reading 2.2 Getting the most from lectures 2.3 How to use a tutorial or teaching session 2.4 Time management 2.5 Assessment 2.6 Research and writing skills 2.7 Revising for and taking examinations Bibliography and Further Reading.
Contents Introduction Section 1: Studying English Literature 1.1.What is English literature? 1.2 Why study English literature? 1.3 What forms can the study of English literature take? 1.4 The place of 'theory' in English literature programmes Section 2: Study Skills in English Literature 2.1 Reading 2.2 Getting the most from lectures 2.3 How to use a tutorial or teaching session 2.4 Time management 2.5 Assessment 2.6 Research and writing skills 2.7 Revising for and taking examinations Bibliography and Further Reading.
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