Improving Writing for the HSC. Hunter River High 2012

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Improving Writing for the HSC Hunter River High 2012 This ppt prepared by Stewart McGowan. It may be used by teachers for instructional purposes providing the rights of the creator and other copyright owners are acknowledged

Building your ability to Respond to your prescribed text Select appropriate related texts Understand the complexity of texts Write sophisticated, sustained responses The Challenge: What can you do to improve your writing in the HSC?

Important note: Today s workshop is focusing on English but the ideas are relevant across all subject areas. You can use today s information to improve your writing in all extended responses.

The HSC a metaphor As your final performance after 13 years of schooling you are being asked to play a Beethoven piano concerto on an instrument you have built yourself!

Some people need to build a better instrument (Pianosaurus)

Some people need to play something better than chopsticks

Question 3 (15 marks) Explore how perceptions of belonging and not belonging can be influenced by connections to places. In your response, refer to your prescribed text and at least ONE other related text of your own choosing.

I agree that perceptions of belonging and not belonging can be influenced by connections to places. Some texts that deal with these ideas are Romulus My Father by Raymond Gaita, Touching the Void by Kevin McDonald and The Lion King by Roger Allers. In all these texts a connection to place is important. In The Lion King, Scar uses the hyenas to cause a stampede through the canyon where Mufasa and Simba are, and makes sure Mufasa falls to his death. Simba flees the Pride Lands meaning never to return home. While he finds friendship with Timon and Pummba, his sense of belonging to the land pulls him back. Eventually he comes back to the decimated Pride Rock: Timon: We're gonna fight your uncle... for this? Simba: Yes, Timon. This is my home. Timon: Whoa. Talk about your fixer-upper. Timon uses colloquial language and humour here to make the movie more enjoyable. The movie is making the point that we are just like Simba because we feel a connection to place.

literate. organised. It knows how to refer to texts. some good vocab The example relates to the question. The writer is keeping the question in mind. Weak opening sentence Ideas are only commonsense Vocab is very plain: makes sure not ensures Sentences are very two-clause. Compounded, not a lot of complexity Cohesion is commonsense this goes with that logic Short on evaluation. Sees connections but doesn t explore them. wasted words look at all the narrative. The example!

Romulus throughout his lifetime can t seem to connect and understand the Australian landscape, he longs for European foliage. Romulus alienates himself from the Australian place, calling the landscape desolate and barrenness, Raimond reminds us that even after forty years my father could not become reconciled to it. The negative connotations of the landscape shows Romulus antipathy perception of the Australian place.

Language errors Better vocab (but antipathy perceptions as a marker, points for trying a student attempting to move towards uncommonsense language.) More complex sentences Gets way from narrative. It s analytical. More cohesive. Implicit linking of ideas through vocab and structure: connect, alienate, reconciled, antipathy perception. Quote as direct proof BUT The big problem is a lack of elaboration

Skrzynecki s poetry explores the perceptions of belonging of the displaced. Postcard explores this directly, through the personified voice of the old town that reminds the poet of his disconnection from the Warsaw of his parents that he hardly knew. Skrzynecki also makes interesting use of place as a metaphor in Feliks Skrzynecki when he describes himself pegging my tent further and further south of Hadrian s Wall. Significantly in the quote, he makes use of the metaphor of a tent, a piece of temporary accommodation; it s an indication of the poet s own uncertainties about his place. The reference to Hadrian s Wall evokes the retreat of Roman civilisation from Britain, further complicating the image. Additionally, his father, who belongs to the land on the north side of the wall, alludes to the prophet Teiresias; Skrzynecki s tent is moving away from significant wisdom. In combination, these language features combine to illuminate the poet s sense of disconnection from place.

Uncommonsense! Narrative is omitted! An integrated discussion more than one poem, on the point, explores the topic part of a sophisticated argument Elaborates Use of evidence is sophisticated Vocabulary is sophisticated Logic is sophisticated Sentences are complex/ embedded/ highly cohesive. Sense of differences between poems a sense of how texts construct Belonging In short, it has an insightful, academic voice. Note: Skrzynecki compares his father to Teiresias in: http://www.schools.nsw.edu.au/raps/immigrantc/pdf/ interview.pdf

Section III Examination Rubric In your answer you will be assessed on how well you: demonstrate understanding of the concept of belonging in the context of your study analyse, explain and assess the ways belonging is represented in a variety of texts organise, develop and express ideas using language appropriate to audience, purpose and context

2011 Marking Guidelines Explores skilfully how perceptions of belonging and not belonging can be influenced by connections to places Presents a skilful response with well-chosen detailed textual references from the prescribed text and at least one other related text Composes a well-integrated response using language appropriate to audience, purpose and context

A better instrument played well

How do you get there? Picture: Stuart and Sons Handcrafted Grand Pianos, Newcastle

Summarising Visualising Making Connections Comprehension strategies Monitoring Predicting Questioning

Colloquial conversational articulate personal everyday Commonsense Building Writing Competency less Congruent unelaborated Authoritative expert articulate objective specialised Uncommonsense more Incongruent elaborated

Modelled teaching The teacher uses this teaching strategy when students need to learn new literacy skills and concepts. The teacher assumes major responsibility for the interactions that take place between the teacher and students. Guided teaching The teacher uses this teaching strategy when students need guided support to practise and apply new literacy skills and concepts. The teacher structures interactions in a way that allows students to assume more responsibility and demonstrate more control over what they are learning. Independent teaching The teacher uses this teaching strategy when students need minimal support to apply and demonstrate new literacy skills and concepts. The teacher structures interactions in a way that allows students to assume a greater degree of the responsibility. Source: Introduction to Quality Literacy Teaching

Drive towards conceptual thinking Cohesion logical, sustained Build uncommon sense language Improved student writing Build sentences Build text structures Elaborate

Drive towards conceptual thinking Cohesion logical, sustained Build uncommonsense language Improved student writing Build sentences Build text structures Elaborate

John Foulcher Summer Rain

Summer rain At 4 o'clock cars clutter on the highway like abacus beads. No one dares overtake. Sunlight scrawls through the dust and the fumes, and the shadows slap at the edge of the grass. Somewhere ahead, there's been an accident. One by one, the engines stop, the cars slump into dusk. You wrench yourself from the road, sift the dark trees for diversion. Sub-division houses - teacups of colour from television sets, steam rising from ovens and showers like mist across a swampland. The cricket sound of voices and cutlery. Only the children stay outside, bruised with dirt and school, squeezing play from the tattered edges of the afternoon. In the darkness, they grow to be heroes, clash in the park like cars on a highway, pound out grudges tight as steel. At last they slacken home forgetfully. As the wreck is cleared, rain trembles across the cars and the charred, unbroken road -John Foulcher

Summarising Visualising Making Connections Comprehension strategies Monitoring Predicting Questioning

Summer rain At 4 o'clock cars clutter on the highway like abacus beads. No one dares overtake. Sunlight scrawls through the dust and the fumes, and the shadows slap at the edge of the grass. Somewhere ahead, there's been an accident. One by one, the engines stop, the cars slump into dusk. You wrench yourself from the road, sift the dark trees for diversion. Sub-division houses - teacups of colour from television sets, steam rising from ovens and showers like mist across a swampland. The cricket sound of voices and cutlery. Only the children stay outside, bruised with dirt and school, squeezing play from the tattered edges of the afternoon. In the darkness, they grow to be heroes, clash in the park like cars on a highway, pound out grudges tight as steel. At last they slacken home forgetfully. As the wreck is cleared, rain trembles across the cars and the charred, unbroken road -John Foulcher

John Foulcher s poem Summer Rain has very different ideas about Belonging than Peter Skrzynecki s work. Foulcher describes rush hour traffic: cars clutter on the highway like abacus beads. The consonance here gives the poem a harsh edge that shows the unpleasantness of this situation. Foulcher makes the suburban environment seem like a harsh and unpleasant place where people don t really belong.

Drive towards conceptual thinking Cohesion logical, sustained Build uncommonsense language Improved student writing Build sentences Build text structures Elaborate

Build uncommonsense language

Poem abacus beads teacups of colour/ mists across a swampland the rain trembles the charred, unbroken road Analysis evokes both the visual the cars stuck, unable to move and the motivation for it: slaves to the economy, worker ants, fiscal control of the individual in the late post-capitalist world again, very visual. But teacups an insignificant amount. Swamplands a dank, unpleasant place. nature s last gasp in the urban environment. Anti-romanticism. Nature overwhelmed by progress the experience of death in post-industrial society: anonymous, unwitnessed, insignificant; the best you can hope for is to be remembered for delaying the traffic.

John Foulcher s poem Summer Rain has very different ideas about Belonging than Peter Skrzynecki s work. Foulcher description of rush hour traffic - cars clutter on the highway like abacus beads. uses visual imagery to evoke a very critical view of society. The consonance here gives the poem a harsh edge that shows the unpleasantness of this situation. For Foulcher, the suburban environment is a swampland, a dank, unpleasant place in conflict with the natural world.

Drive towards conceptual thinking Cohesion logical, sustained Build uncommon sense language Improved student writing Build sentences Build text structures Elaborate

Simple paragraph structures S Statement E Evidence E Explanation D Development

T X X X X C Paragraph structure Topic sentence/ Thesis expand example explain elaborate continue or conclude

Drive towards conceptual thinking Cohesion logical, sustained Build uncommon sense language Improved student writing Build sentences Build text structures Elaborate

John Foulcher s poem Summer Rain has very different ideas about Belonging than Peter Skrzynecki s work. Foulcher description of rush hour traffic - cars clutter on the highway like abacus beads. uses visual imagery to evoke a very critical view of society. The consonance here gives the poem a harsh edge that shows the unpleasantness of this situation. For Foulcher, the suburban environment is a swampland, a dank, unpleasant place in conflict with the natural world. Foulcher s poem is anti-romantic, pointing out how our society has overwhelmed nature to the point where a summer storm becomes a tremble.

Drive towards conceptual thinking Cohesion logical, sustained Build uncommon sense language Improved student writing Build sentences Build text structures Elaborate

Foulcher s poem Summer Rain is anti-romantic, pointing out how our society has overwhelmed nature to the point where a summer storm becomes a tremble. The consonance of Foulcher s opening description of the cars that clutter on the highway like abacus beads gives the image a hard edge, and introduces the poem s challenge to concepts of a carefree suburban existence. In the suburban swampland, not even children can escape the mindless materialism that, according to Foulcher, drives suburban living. In the growing dark they clash in the park like cars on a highway.

Foulcher s poem Summer Rain is anti-romantic, pointing out how our society has overwhelmed nature to the point where a summer storm becomes a tremble. The consonance of Foulcher s opening description of the cars that clutter on the highway like abacus beads gives the image a hard edge, and introduces the poem s challenge to concepts of a carefree suburban existence. In the suburban swampland, not even children can escape the mindless materialism that, according to Foulcher, drives suburban living. In the growing dark they clash in the park like cars on a highway.

Drive towards conceptual thinking Cohesion logical, sustained Build uncommon sense language Improved student writing Build sentences Build text structures Elaborate

Cohesive Device Simple connectives Logical connectives Reference words Complex word associations: Synonyms Collocations Substitutions Detail one point is/ another point is However, therefore, additionally typically from the question or the thesis carefree existence, peaceful life urban, materialism, fear, meaningless, regimented natural, unnatural, environment

Foulcher s poem Summer Rain is anti-romantic, pointing out how our society has overwhelmed nature to the point where a summer storm becomes a tremble. The hard edge of Foulcher s opening description of cars that clutter on the highway like abacus beads introduces the concept that our suburban existence is unnatural and challenges concepts of a carefree existence. No-one dares overtake because fear and regimentation are part of this existence. It is a challenge that is continued later in the poem where Foulcher subverts our expectations of children s play. Only the children play outside for a moment suggests carefree play but our expectation is subverted by the next line: in the suburban swampland, not even children can escape the mindless materialism that, according to Foulcher, drives suburban living. In the growing dark they clash in the park like cars on a highway.

Foulcher s poem Summer Rain is anti-romantic, pointing out how our society has overwhelmed nature to the point where a summer storm becomes a tremble. The hard edge of Foulcher s opening description of cars that clutter on the highway like abacus beads introduces the concept that our suburban existence is unnatural and challenges concepts of a carefree existence. No-one dares overtake because fear and regimentation are part of this existence. It is a challenge that is continued later in the poem where Foulcher subverts our expectations of children s play. Only the children play outside for a moment suggests carefree play but our expectation is subverted by the next line: in the suburban swampland, not even children can escape the mindless materialism that, according to Foulcher, drives suburban living. In the growing dark they clash in the park like cars on a highway.

Drive towards conceptual thinking Cohesion logical, sustained Build uncommon sense language Improved student writing Build sentences Build text structures Elaborate

Build towards the big ideas In Area of Study, you need something better than belonging or not belonging. Work towards the thesis driven response one with ideas at the centre. Look for complexity: it s not a simple debate! Our experiences of belonging are complex!

Build towards the big ideas A sense of being disconnected from place is dynamically explored in both Summer Rain and The Crucible. On the one hand,... The pressure to conform is the most significant barrier to a sense of belonging to place. In The Crucible... The barriers to a sense of belonging to a place come from within us, not from external factors. Our flaws and insecurites provide the major challenges to our own sense of connectedness to place. This is evident in...

Finish Acknowledgements: this PowerPoint was prepared by Stewart McGowan in consultation with other consultants in the Hunter Region. The work of Gai Chambers, Hayley McDonald and Bronwyn Tubnor is gratefully acknowledged.