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What is a blog?
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All Flashcards in Topic 2.3
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2.3.110 cards
What is a blog?
An informal, personal piece written online — like a public diary or a friend talking to you.
What is a blog's purpose?
To share experience or opinion, entertain, and connect with followers.
Who is a blog's audience?
Followers and casual online readers — often young, treated like friends.
What is informal register?
Relaxed, everyday language, like friendly speech.
What is a fragment?
An incomplete sentence used for effect.
What is self-deprecation?
Gently making fun of yourself.
Name three blog techniques.
Any of: direct address, fragments, humour/self-deprecation, honesty, a closing nudge to comment.
Why are a blog's slang and fragments deliberate?
They build a friendly, trustworthy, real-sounding voice.
What does a blog's informal voice achieve?
It makes the writer relatable and trustworthy — and so persuasive.
What is a closing nudge in a blog?
A warm call to engage ('tell me in the comments') that builds community.
2.3.210 cards
How is a website read?
Scanned, not read word-for-word — headings and images guide skimming.
What is a 'call to action' on a website?
The button/link for the click they want (Buy, Join, Sign up, Donate).
Why do websites use direct address (‘you’)?
It makes the service feel personal and speaks to each visitor.
What is 'visual hierarchy'?
The way size, colour and position steer the eye to what matters most first.
Name three website features to analyse.
Headings for scanning, a clear call to action, and image/layout hierarchy.
First question to ask of a web page?
‘Where does the design send my eye — and my click?’
Why is the biggest element analysed first?
Hierarchy: size and position signal what the page wants you to notice first.
Website vs printed poster?
Both use design, but a site adds clickable calls to action and navigation.
How do you turn a button into analysis?
Say what its colour/placement DOES — pulls the eye, makes the action feel easy.
Common website-analysis mistake?
Reading only the paragraphs and ignoring design, buttons and hierarchy.
2.3.310 cards
What is a social media post (as a text type)?
A very short, informal text built to relate and be shared quickly.
Why is a social post so short?
It has seconds to stop a scroll, so it works through brevity, tone and image.
Why analyse image and caption together?
They play off each other; the meaning is in the combination, not either alone.
What do hashtags do in a post?
Set a tone and tag it to a community or shared mood.
What do emojis add?
Tone and feeling in a tiny space — irony, warmth, humour.
Name three social-post features.
A short punchy caption, image+caption interplay, and hashtags/emojis.
What is the ‘pull to engage’?
The way a post invites a like, share, reply or tag.
First question to ask of a social post?
‘How does it earn a like or a share in seconds?’
Is a post ‘too short to analyse’?
No — the brevity is the craft; every word, emoji and hashtag is a choice.
Common social-post analysis mistake?
Dismissing it as too short, instead of analysing tone, image and hashtags.
2.3.410 cards
What is a transcript?
A written record of real speech, kept exactly — hesitations, pauses and all.
Why keep the ‘um’s and pauses?
They're evidence — signs of nerves, thinking, uncertainty or power.
What do interruptions reveal?
Who cuts in and who is cut off shows who holds the power.
What does turn length show?
One person dominating vs one-word replies reveals the balance of power.
What are non-verbal notes like ‘(pause)’ for?
They record how something is said, not just what — tone and manner.
What can fillers (‘um’, ‘I mean’) reveal?
Nerves, uncertainty, or a speaker thinking on their feet.
First question to ask of a transcript?
‘How does the WAY they speak reveal character and power?’
Should you tidy up the speech before analysing?
No — the stumbles and interruptions are the evidence you analyse.
Transcript vs interview article?
A transcript keeps speech raw; an interview article selects and polishes quotes.
Common transcript-analysis mistake?
Analysing only the topic and ignoring the speech features that reveal character.
Topic 2.3 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Online & digital
English A Lang & Lit exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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