Tennille said:
The problem with many HSC subjects is that they can be rote learnt. I reckon science subjects are quite easy to memorise. The unfortunate thing is that at uni, you actually have to understand the concepts taught to you. Many questions in the HSC are directly from the syllabus, and many textbooks (eg. Excel physics) provide students with information following extremely closely with the syllabus (including the dot points that require students to do their own research). I must admit that the textbook is great,, but it doesn't give students the opportunity to research themselves, which is sometimes necessary at uni.
Brie-is-Me said:
I think it's wrong how in a lot of subjects, it isn't about demonstrating understanding or really knowing the course content, more memorising the textbook and reciting it in the exam.
This is also perhaps my main complaint. It seems to me that, in practice, quite a few of the courses actually discourage any real thinking. Instead, a program of mindless memorising and pseudo-intellectualism exists. I couldn't stand chemisty because any attempt to actually understand the content we were learning was met with "you don't need to know that". It may very well have only been my school, but they were basically saying "here, go learn these isolated facts".
Advanced English was another subject I
loathed. The whole year was filled with teachers constantly repeating that one had to "play the game". Arrrrgh, just thinking it about now... They would tell you what the markers wanted to hear, what hoops you had to jump through, and then expected you to do exactly that. When I started comparative literature (a Distinction Course) this year (oh, if this dosn't quite make sense, I did half my HSC last year) it was a completely different experience. So much so that it was somewhat frightening. The lecturers would say "here's your essay, go do it". "What? Aren't you going to hold my hand while I do it?" "No, it's
your essay."
Comparative Literature has been great. It really is what I wish the rest of the HSC was like. You, as an individual, are completely free to create whatever thesis you want and to go wherever the course takes you (I've even mentioned the psychologist Carl Jung in an assessment or two). Looking at its past HSC exams in an attempt to prepare for mine in a few weeks, they are
utterly daunting. The papers are not predictable like the Advanced English ones, every question requires you to think on your feet and come up with your own thesis at the time, and the questions are
challenging (extension history also makes you think on your feet but it's not quite there). Two of the three sections even let you choose from a set of five or six questions. I know it's going to be hard and I'm scared but I wouldn't have it any other way.
Perhaps I'm being idealistic and impractical (it's certainly easier in this sense to manage 9 students rather than a whole state), but I would prefer it if the whole HSC was like this; not so much about rote-learning and more to do with creatively
thinking.