TimtheEnchanter said:
That was quite a post, but I don't see why we're sposed to analyse texts from the feminist, marxist etc perspective (not that it matters now). This has been an issue of debate in politics since someone accused the cirriculum of being Left-wing. If this doesn't make people realise that when you talk to someone you don't weed out every little piece of verbal meaning imaginable along with their posture and the rest of the misen'scene then nothing will.
I always suspected the English course was a crock, just a way to make the gov't look like it's upping the average IQ of the common man (or woman) or making typical conversations more interesting, but I have yet to discover a profession besides professional critic that requires the level of mutilation of texts that we have just learnt.
It's not just me who thinks that studying texts in all these ways that authors never intended destroyed the experience of reading/viewing the text, is it?
When I told my Enlgish teacher that I didn't have to finish the HCS to get where I wanted to go, she simply asked me: "then why are you here?". This is when it finally clicked that not only is the point of school void of learning for the sake of learning, but it's new point is to present students as a product of the business that are schools. What happened to mankind's thirst for knowledge?
For those of you doing Modern History and Weimar Germany, this stuff is gold! It tells us how things ended up the way they did, why they did, who stuffed up where and also gives a good idea of how Iraq will wrap up.
I know I won't be the only one feeling a bit put out if i never have to use my hard-learnt English skills again after all this hoo-ha.
The only 'reading' you were required to apply in this module was your own. Read the freaking notes from the marking centre for this module from the past couple of years. It's not difficult stuff, it says plainly that you don't have to, because it's not the point of this module. Don't trust me? Just going off what my head-teacher has been hammering into us all year, and he's the President of the English Teachers Association of NSW. Perhaps he's right.
OK Tim, you don't like the Advanced course? I have an awesome solution that you perhaps should have applied:
Standard. Don't need advanced, then why do it?
the vendetta against English teachers that you seem to have very little grasp on really has very little to do with the way that english is taught in schools. It just provides a nice convenient angle the Howard government can take to oppose the way it's taught to get more power. I don't know if anyone else takes note of stuff that happens with our government, but they're really trying to take away power from the states for almost everything, and education is definately on the cards. The Howard government has been targetting the way that English is being taught in schools, with a focus on how we have been encouraged to adopt out own opinion of texts. Previously the ideology surrounding Literature has been that there is one way of understanding things. There is one 'proper' understanding, and that's how it's to be understood, thankyou very much.
I think everyone here can realise how terrible that would be. You would be stripped of your own opinion, that at the moment is as valid as anyone else's, simply because you've read the book and understood it.
This is what the markers are after. They want to know what you think of the book, and why.
Ah, the 'why'. This is where the necessity for analysis comes in. It's all very well to come along and say "My understanding of Cloudstreet was not greatly affected by the characterisation of Quick", but so what? So you show what made you come to this decision. that's where you exaplin that perhaps Quick is a stereotype, and you believe that Sam and Lester's contrast makes them archetypes as they show the emerging differences in characters which typify the generation just past and the current generation, or whatever you want to say.
Now, that's all well and good, but how does Winton do this? That's when you choose your specific moments, quote them, and tell the effect of the quote.
And if you look at English this way, it makes so much more sense, doesn't it? English becomes about learning skills to justify yourself and decisions you may one day make in the workplace. It gives you the skills to write reports and put words together, which is considered rather advantagous for anyone who wishes to be able to further themselves in their career. It allows you to say "We should take this policy/project direction. We should do it because of this. I have evaluated these studies, and they have shown the advantages and disadvantages. Here are some examples of what we could do." What other subject teaches you how to do that?
And just as a disclaimer, English Advanced will probably be my worst subject, I don't enjoy writing essays in such a small amount of time, and I find it hard to write at such speed and express ideas that I want to. However, I do see the point of English, simply through a bit of logic.
And about the political views: I have none, I think both sides of politics in this country are in a woeful state, but it's obvious to see what the government's doing. They've been doing it to English, and they had a pretty heavy go just around the time that the exam papers were being written: is it any surprise that the backlash was to write papers that focussed strongly on your personal opinion? but anyway, the government has a go at english, and they also had a go at history a little while ago, if you remember. I'm not so up on this one, but I think it was the same kind of thing: Howard wanted to make history taught from a very prescribed, strict understanding. Just as he wants english to be. And won't this ring true with our lovely aging population, full of people grumbling about "well, jolly good way to be taught, that's how it was done for us, those young whipper snappers ought to be taught the same!"
It's a vote winner. The federal government does not like the way english is being taught, contrary to your point Tim. The state probably likes it, but they have nothing to do with the syllabuses. I think you'll find that's up to the board of studies, and at the time of writing, was free from this kind of political influence.
On a more relevant note: Cloudstreet fucking sucked, but was very doable when you realised the loophole