wuddie
Black by Demand
Re: Julie Bishop's vision for education in Australia
the syllabus itself is suppose to make you look at the world from another angle, and learn from it. if you haven't been 'illuminated' by the course, here's one of two scenarios:
1. you're not a competent advance student, and should not be doing it (no offense) and you've probably bludged throughout the course, and have no idea what the text is. because it should 'illuminate' your perceptions, as it has done for me.
2. your teacher hasn't taught you the right things, ie. your teacher's standards are not up to scratch, which brings back to my point that public schools are not very well funded - shown through your teacher (let me know if you're from priv school, but i doubt it).
i don't want to comment on the syllabus, but i think if the best of the teachers in nsw wrote that stuff, i doubt any of us have the intellectual right to deem it to be unfit for our learning - afterall, it has taught you to think for yourself and compose a well structured piece of argument. wouldn't you agree?
oh poor you, 23 texts, so do 30,000 of us who will be sitting the same exam as you, my friend. if that's not enough, people doing ext 1 have another 5 (?) texts to worry about, so don't even whinge. learn to cope with it - alternatively, you can drop to standard english.Red-Wine-&-Joni said:My personal problem with the Syllabus as it stands is the demand it places on the students. This year I have to study 4 Coleridge poems, 2 related Journey texts, Hamlet, a Stoppard Play, 12 Speeches, Nineteen Eighty-Four and 2 related Powerplay texts. That's 23. And we're told English is 'too easy'.
Another agreement with you, my fine sir. I think instances of students "parroting what they're taught" is when the HSC Exam itself asks questions such as 'How was your perception of "Transformations" been illuminated by..." - I doubt, for most students, it has at all. And yet we're expected to say it has?!
the syllabus itself is suppose to make you look at the world from another angle, and learn from it. if you haven't been 'illuminated' by the course, here's one of two scenarios:
1. you're not a competent advance student, and should not be doing it (no offense) and you've probably bludged throughout the course, and have no idea what the text is. because it should 'illuminate' your perceptions, as it has done for me.
2. your teacher hasn't taught you the right things, ie. your teacher's standards are not up to scratch, which brings back to my point that public schools are not very well funded - shown through your teacher (let me know if you're from priv school, but i doubt it).
i don't want to comment on the syllabus, but i think if the best of the teachers in nsw wrote that stuff, i doubt any of us have the intellectual right to deem it to be unfit for our learning - afterall, it has taught you to think for yourself and compose a well structured piece of argument. wouldn't you agree?