Without determining exactly what the structure is, you should still be able to determine a limited number of possibilities. I suggest using the Tinker Toy method. You have C10H11BrO2. From the integral, there is one or two signals at 1.3 ppm with 6H's. There is a signal at 3 ppm with 1H, this signal has splitting. There are 3H's in the aromatic region and 1H that can be exchanged with D2O. Hydrogens come in 1s, 2s, and 3s. What could the peaks at 1.3 ppm be? If you have a benzene ring, how many carbons are left, 10-6 = 4. How many of them have hydrogens attached, 3 or 4? If it is only three, what must the other carbon have attached to it? What atoms are left? I don't foresee that many possibilities. (I think this is only a question of regiochemistry.) Start by drawing at least one of them. Does that structure suggest any other possible structures, especially if you switch the order of the groups? You should be able to come up with some structures that use all of the atoms from the formula. For there, you should begin to recognize some structures are better than others. You will need to review the adjacency rule, especially for aromatic compounds. I cannot say exactly where the Br and OH will be except from reversing how it would likely to have been synthesized. For this part of the problem, you may need to look at values from a chemical shift table to help.