my turn!
I never really looked at the old HSC, but going on what people have said above and my sister (who finished in 2000)...
I think the new English syllabus is successful when:
- the student already has a firm grasp of elements of English (such as techniques, form, how to write essays etc)
- the boundaries are more firmly set than they have been this year and last.
Regarding the first, I've found that people who are struggling with English in the junior years (when you're theoretically supposed to learn the concepts) are more likely to do Standard, get a tutor and rote learn, or not understand exactly what's going on - it's hard to do well even in Advanced when your essays are just not up to scratch.
The biggest problem our grade had was the application of the technique questions ('how does the composer achieve his/her meaning...'). Even students in the upper mark ranges were more likely to write descriptions than analysis of technique, and it was a huge morale surge when I figured that one out
However, it shows that those techniques are more 'assumed knowledge' in the new syllabus than in the old one; teachers have to teach the abstract concepts (context, various ways of reading texts, etc).
And that brings me to my second point (wow, this is more structured than I thought it was): that the syllabus guidelines are kind of vague, like this sentence is because I haven't had my dinner yet.
As part of my night-before-exam study I'd read the syllabus over and ask myself if I knew the meanings of all the terms, how to apply them, etc. The problem I found with the syllabuses' rubrics was that they were as broad as the rear end of a..
..anyway, the English Extension 1 outcomes are:
- A student distinguishes and evaluates the values expressed through texts.
- A student explains different ways of valuing texts.
- A student composes extended texts.
- A student develops and delivers sophisticated presentations.
(The last two doesn't really count, because as a rule the only extended responses and sophisticated presentations you're going to be delivering are essays and speeches, respectively.)
There are many ways of valuing texts, given. How a text is valued depends on the context in which it is delivered and the audience, okay. The problem lies in the depth in which the Board of Studies wants us to go into - is it worth explaining that a twentieth century text's prime purpose is a commercial one, for instance. The ambiguity of the syllabus creates problems when the subject is being taught - the most basic points can be brushed over or completely forgotten when overwhelmed by readings (for example, the Marxist, Feminist, Structuralist, Post-Structuralist, Christian, Existentialist and Aristotelian readings of King Lear (a lecturer at the USYD English day brought up an interesting critique of Lear as a reflection of King James, but I'm digressing) which often forget that Lear is a play and hence meant to be performed, thus creating alternate readings if you're going to include multimedia or aural elements.
Yes, the variety of readings is fantastic, and it's certainly worthwhile to teach various ways of reading and valuing texts, but, without discounting any English student's intelligence, I don't think that much is being discussed in depth. The old syllabus promoted learning a single (or several? corrections?) reading of a text, which just about stands on the opposite end of the scale (so I've been told, anyway).
I'm working on improvements.
My conclusion, then, is that the new syllabus is certainly more interesting; it offers a more diverse exploration of texts and meanings than the old one. However... I think it's a more complex syllabus and to be properly studied needs more time. The variety is refreshing (I was reading the 04/05 reading list.. awww) and I like being able to choose related texts, even if it's a time-consuming process.
On that, actually (and okay, the structure of this argument has flown out the window), there should be more emphasis on related texts. They usually have as much depth as any text we're given to study, but at the moment the questions merely ask you to refer to them. You can get away with two paragraphs on two related texts, which is just... just... dodgy.
And that's my two cents.