letter to your friend describing your feelings how you are giving your annual exam online
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Interesting you should ask this question! You wouldn’t happen to be taking a course in correspondence and literature, would you? Well, I am… and we’re writing letters.
Comfort with written correspondence takes time and experience. How many actual letters have you written in your life that went to a friend? I have written hundreds. So, writing a letter about my current course and the classes we have to attend via a video meeting app is like asking a fish to swim. Please take that into consideration with my answer: I may be suggesting an approach that won’t work for you.
Writing to a friend involves informal writing. A letter to a friend has a much more relaxed and informal style. Even in the 18th century, “ordinary” people in Western countries wrote in an informal style to friends. They included the date at the top of the letter and, if they were traveling, the location where they were writing the letter. The informal style came closer to how they would talk if they had been together, in a room by themselves. However, it was often a little bit more reserved than that, due to the geographic distance between the two correspondence.
How will you write a letter to your friend? Pretend you are talking with a friend (a real friend you aren’t seeing face-to-face due to the pandemic). Have an imaginary, one-sided conversation in which you explain
what the course is that you’re going to use as an example
what is easier for you with this online course than you found when attending classes in a classroom
what is more difficult for you with this online course than you found when attending classes in a classroom, and
how you feel at the end of one of these class sessions. (This is part of correspondence with friends: The letters are personal.)
You can even record yourself if you think that would help.
There are culture-specific ways to start an informal letter. For example, the letter might start with “I hope that you and your family are staying healthy.” If you don’t know what the convention is in the culture of the person to whom you are writing, ask someone who is older and who writes or wrote letters to friends.
Decide on the length of the letter you want to write. This may be anywhere from 100 words to 500 words. Given that restriction, you can decide how much you want to include that you’ve covered in your imaginary, one-sided conversation in each of the types of information you need to convey.
Decide on an appropriate closure for writing to a friend. There are online sources that provide a list of formal and informal closures for letters. These are also culture-specific. You might close with “Sincerely” or “Warm wishes” or “Until we meet again.”