English 2019 v1.3. General Senior Syllabus. This syllabus is for implementation with Year 11 students in 2019.

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This syllabus is for implementation with Year 11 students in 2019. 170082

Contents 1 Course overview 1 1.1 Introduction... 1 1.1.1 Rationale... 1 1.1.2 Learning area structure... 2 1.1.3 Course structure... 3 1.2 Teaching and learning... 4 1.2.1 Syllabus objectives... 4 1.2.2 Underpinning factors... 6 1.2.3 Aboriginal perspectives and Torres Strait Islander perspectives... 9 1.2.4 Pedagogical and conceptual framework... 9 1.2.5 Subject matter... 10 1.3 Assessment general information... 13 1.3.1 Formative assessments Units 1 and 2... 13 1.3.2 Summative assessments Units 3 and 4... 14 1.4 Reporting standards... 15 2 Unit 1: Perspectives and texts 17 2.1 Unit description... 17 2.2 Unit objectives... 18 2.3 Areas of study... 19 2.4 Assessment guidance... 20 3 Unit 2: Texts and culture 21 3.1 Unit description... 21 3.2 Unit objectives... 22 3.3 Areas of study... 23 3.4 Assessment guidance... 24 4 Unit 3: Textual connections 25 4.1 Unit description... 25 4.2 Unit objectives... 26 4.3 Topic 1: Conversations about concepts in texts... 27 4.4 Topic 2: Conversations about issues in texts... 28 4.5 Assessment... 30 4.5.1 Summative internal assessment 1 (IA1): Extended response written response for a public audience (25%)... 30 4.5.2 Summative internal assessment 2 (IA2): Extended response persuasive spoken response (25%)... 36

5 Unit 4: Close study of literary texts 41 5.1 Unit description... 41 5.2 Unit objectives... 42 5.3 Topic 1: Creative responses to literary texts... 43 5.4 Topic 2: Critical responses to literary texts... 44 5.5 Assessment... 46 5.5.1 Summative internal assessment 3 (IA3): Examination imaginative written response (25%)... 46 5.5.2 Summative external assessment (EA): Examination analytical written response (25%)... 51 6 Glossary 52 7 References 72 8 Version history 73

1 Course overview 1.1 Introduction 1.1.1 Rationale The QCAA English learning area is made up of five senior secondary subjects: Essential English, English, Literature, English & Literature Extension, and English as an Additional Language. These subjects share common features that include the continuing development of students knowledge, understanding and skills in listening, speaking, reading, viewing, designing and writing. Differences between the subjects lie in the emphasis on how language and skills are developed and the contexts in which they are applied. English learning area subjects offer students opportunities to enjoy language and be empowered as functional, purposeful, creative and critical language users who understand how texts can convey and transform personal and cultural perspectives. In a world of rapid cultural, social, economic and technological change, complex demands are placed on citizens to be literate within a variety of modes and mediums. Students are offered opportunities to develop this capacity by drawing on a repertoire of resources to interpret and create texts for personal, cultural, social and aesthetic purposes. They learn how language varies according to context, purpose and audience, content, modes and mediums, and how to use it appropriately and effectively for a variety of purposes. Students have opportunities to engage with diverse texts to help them develop a sense of themselves, their world and their place in it. The subject English focuses on the study of both literary texts and non-literary texts, developing students as independent, innovative and creative learners and thinkers who appreciate the aesthetic use of language, analyse perspectives and evidence, and challenge ideas and interpretations through the analysis and creation of varied texts. Students have opportunities to engage with language and texts through a range of teaching and learning experiences to foster: skills to communicate effectively in Standard Australian English for the purposes of responding to and creating literary texts and non-literary texts skills to make choices about generic structures, language, textual features and technologies for participating actively in literary analysis and the creation of texts in a range of modes, mediums and forms, for a variety of purposes and audiences enjoyment and appreciation of literary and non-literary texts, the aesthetic use of language, and style creative thinking and imagination, by exploring how literary and non-literary texts shape perceptions of the world and enable us to enter the worlds of others critical exploration of ways in which literary and non-literary texts may reflect or challenge social and cultural ways of thinking and influence audiences empathy for others and appreciation of different perspectives through studying a range of literary and non-literary texts from diverse cultures and periods, including Australian texts by Aboriginal writers and/or Torres Strait Islander writers. Page 1 of 73

Pathways English is a General subject suited to students who are interested in pathways beyond school that lead to tertiary studies, vocational education or work. A course of study in English promotes open-mindedness, imagination, critical awareness and intellectual flexibility skills that prepare students for local and global citizenship, and for lifelong learning across a wide range of contexts. 1.1.2 Learning area structure All learning areas build on the P 10 Australian Curriculum. Figure 1: Learning area structure P 10 Australian Curriculum English Senior Secondary English Learning Area General results may contribute to an Australian Tertiary Admission Rank (ATAR) calculation results contribute to the Queensland Certificate of Education (QCE) includes external assessment Applied no more than one Applied subject can contribute to an ATAR calculation results contribute to the QCE English Literature English & Literature Extension Essential English English as an Additional Language Page 2 of 73

1.1.3 Course structure English is a course of study consisting of four units. Subject matter, learning experiences and assessment increase in complexity from Units 1 and 2 to Units 3 and 4 as students develop greater independence as learners. Units 1 and 2 provide foundational learning, which allows students to experience all syllabus objectives and begin engaging with the course subject matter. Students should complete Units 1 and 2 before beginning Unit 3. It is recommended that Unit 3 be completed before Unit 4. Units 3 and 4 consolidate student learning. Only the results from Units 3 and 4 will contribute to ATAR calculations. Figure 2 outlines the structure of this course of study. Each unit has been developed with a notional time of 55 hours of teaching and learning, including assessment. Figure 2: Course structure English Unit 1 Perspectives and texts Unit 2 Texts and culture Unit 3 Textual connections Unit 4 Close study of literary texts Examining and creating perspectives in texts Responding to a variety of nonliterary and literary texts Creating responses for public audiences and persuasive texts Examining and shaping representations of culture in texts Responding to literary and nonliterary texts, including a focus on Australian texts Creating imaginative and analytical texts Exploring connections between texts Examining different perspectives of the same issue in texts and shaping own perspectives Creating responses for public audiences and persuasive texts Engaging with literary texts from diverse times and places Responding to literary texts creatively and critically Creating imaginative and analytical texts Assessment Formative internal assessment/s Assessment Formative internal assessment/s Students should have opportunities in Units 1 and 2 to experience and respond to the types of assessment they will encounter in Units 3 and 4. For reporting purposes, schools should develop at least one assessment per unit, with a maximum of four assessments across Units 1 and 2. Assessment Summative internal assessment 1: Extended response written response for a public audience (25%) Summative internal assessment 2: Extended response persuasive spoken response (25%) Assessment Summative internal assessment 3: Examination imaginative written response (25%) Summative external assessment: Examination analytical written response (25%) Page 3 of 73

1.2 Teaching and learning 1.2.1 Syllabus objectives The syllabus objectives outline what students have the opportunity to learn. Assessment provides evidence of how well students have achieved the objectives. Syllabus objectives inform unit objectives, which are contextualised for the subject matter and requirements of the unit. Unit objectives, in turn, inform the assessment objectives, which are further contextualised for the requirements of the assessment instruments. The number of each objective remains constant at all levels, i.e. Syllabus objective 1 relates to Unit objective 1 and to Assessment objective 1 in each assessment instrument. Syllabus objectives are described in terms of actions that operate on the subject matter. Students are required to use a range of cognitive processes in order to demonstrate and meet the syllabus objectives. These cognitive processes are described in the explanatory paragraph following each objective in terms of four levels: retrieval, comprehension, analytical processes (analysis) and knowledge utilisation, with each process building on the previous processes (see Marzano & Kendall 2007, 2008). That is, comprehension requires retrieval, and knowledge utilisation requires retrieval, comprehension and analytical processes (analysis). By the conclusion of the course of study, students will: Syllabus objective Unit 1 Unit 2 Unit 3 Unit 4 1. use patterns and conventions of genres to achieve particular purposes in cultural contexts and social situations 2. establish and maintain roles of the writer/speaker/signer/designer and relationships with audiences 3. create and analyse perspectives and representations of concepts, identities, times and places 4. make use of and analyse the ways cultural assumptions, attitudes, values and beliefs underpin texts and invite audiences to take up positions 5. use aesthetic features and stylistic devices to achieve purposes and analyse their effects in texts 6. select and synthesise subject matter to support perspectives 7. organise and sequence subject matter to achieve particular purposes 8. use cohesive devices to emphasise ideas and connect parts of texts 9. make language choices for particular purposes and contexts 10. use grammar and language structures for particular purposes 11. use mode-appropriate features to achieve particular purposes Page 4 of 73

1. use patterns and conventions of genres to achieve particular purposes in cultural contexts and social situations When students use patterns and conventions of genres, they apply knowledge and understanding of them to purposefully construct texts by combining elements to form a coherent whole. In their development of texts, students demonstrate understanding of genres and their features as influenced by cultural contexts and social situations. 2. establish and maintain roles of the writer/speaker/signer/designer and relationships with audiences When students establish and maintain roles of the writer/speaker/signer/designer and relationships with audiences, they set up and sustain a purposeful relationship within a specific context to create a rapport with, position, or have a particular influence over, the audience. Students demonstrate their understanding of the relationship between context, audience and purpose of a text by making decisions about language, subject matter, register and mode-appropriate features. 3. create and analyse perspectives and representations of concepts, identities, times and places When students create perspectives and representations, they develop points of view and devise textual constructions of concepts, identities, times and places. When students analyse perspectives and representations, they examine in detail how meaning is constructed in texts. 4. make use of and analyse the ways cultural assumptions, attitudes, values and beliefs underpin texts and invite audiences to take up positions When students create texts that make use of cultural assumptions, attitudes, values and beliefs, they manipulate these to invite audiences to take up positions. When students analyse, they examine in detail the ways cultural assumptions, attitudes, values and beliefs underpin texts and explore how these invite audiences to take up positions. 5. use aesthetic features and stylistic devices to achieve purposes and analyse their effects in texts When students use aesthetic features and stylistic devices (the aspects of texts that prompt emotional and critical reactions) to achieve purposes, they apply their knowledge and understanding of these to express a thought, feeling, idea or viewpoint to purposefully invite an audience to respond in a particular way. When students analyse the effects of aesthetic features and stylistic devices in texts, they examine those features in detail to explore how they shape meaning and invite audiences to respond in particular ways. 6. select and synthesise subject matter to support perspectives When students select subject matter, they make purposeful choices about the inclusion of material to support perspectives. When students synthesise, they combine elements to construct coherent texts. 7. organise and sequence subject matter to achieve particular purposes When students organise subject matter, they arrange material systematically and purposefully, e.g. by paragraphing. When students sequence subject matter, they place information in a continuous or connected manner to achieve particular purposes. 8. use cohesive devices to emphasise ideas and connect parts of texts When students use cohesive devices, they apply mode-appropriate language structures to emphasise and develop ideas, and connect parts of texts. Page 5 of 73

9. make language choices for particular purposes and contexts When students make language choices, they make decisions about the selection of vocabulary that is appropriate to particular purposes and contexts. 10. use grammar and language structures for particular purposes When students use grammar, they apply knowledge of morphology and syntax to create and express meaning in texts. When students use language structures, they systematically arrange words, phrases, clauses and sentences to express meaning in texts for particular purposes. 11. use mode-appropriate features to achieve particular purposes When students use mode-appropriate features, they select written, spoken/signed, visual, non-verbal or digital features appropriate to the text type to express meaning in texts for particular purposes. Mode-appropriate features include: written, e.g. conventional spelling and punctuation spoken/signed, e.g. pronunciation, phrasing and pausing, audibility and clarity, volume, pace, silence non-verbal, e.g. facial expressions, gestures, proximity, stance, movement complementary features, including digital features such as graphics, still and moving images, design elements, music and sound effects. 1.2.2 Underpinning factors There are three skill sets that underpin senior syllabuses and are essential for defining the distinctive nature of subjects: literacy the set of knowledge and skills about language and texts essential for understanding and conveying English content numeracy the knowledge, skills, behaviours and dispositions that students need to use mathematics in a wide range of situations, to recognise and understand the role of mathematics in the world, and to develop the dispositions and capacities to use mathematical knowledge and skills purposefully 21st century skills the attributes and skills students need to prepare them for higher education, work and engagement in a complex and rapidly changing world. These skill sets, which overlap and interact, are derived from current education, industry and community expectations. They encompass the knowledge, skills, capabilities, behaviours and dispositions that will help students live and work successfully in the 21st century. Together these three skill sets shape the development of senior subject syllabuses. Although coverage of each skill set may vary from syllabus to syllabus, students should be provided with opportunities to learn through and about these skills over the course of study. Each skill set contains identifiable knowledge and skills that can be directly assessed. Page 6 of 73

Literacy in English Literacy is important in the development of the skills and strategies needed to express, interpret, and communicate complex information and ideas. In English, students apply, extend and refine their repertoire of literacy skills and practices by establishing and articulating their views through creative response and argument. They experiment with different modes, mediums and forms to create new texts and understand the power of language to represent ideas, events and people. These aspects of literacy knowledge and skills are embedded in the syllabus objectives, unit objectives and subject matter, and instrument-specific marking guides (ISMGs) for English. Numeracy in English Students use numeracy in English when they practise and apply the skills of interpreting and analysing, comparing and contrasting, making connections, posing and proving arguments, making inferences and problem-solving as they create and respond to a range of texts. For example, students use numeracy skills when they create and interpret sequences and spatial information in non-fiction texts or consider timing and sequence when developing photo stories. They draw conclusions from statistical information and interpret and use quantitative data as evidence in analytical and persuasive texts. These aspects of numeracy knowledge and skills are embedded in the syllabus objectives, unit objectives and subject matter, and ISMGs for English. Page 7 of 73

21st century skills The 21st century skills identified in the following table reflect a common agreement, both in Australia and internationally, on the skills and attributes students need to prepare them for higher education, work and engagement in a complex and rapidly changing world. 21st century skills Associated skills 21st century skills Associated skills analytical thinking innovation problem-solving initiative and enterprise decision-making curiosity and imagination critical thinking reasoning reflecting and evaluating intellectual flexibility creative thinking creativity generating and applying new ideas identifying alternatives seeing or making new links effective oral and written communication relating to others (interacting with others) communication using language, symbols and texts communicating ideas effectively with diverse audiences collaboration and teamwork recognising and using diverse perspectives participating and contributing community connections adaptability/flexibility operations and concepts personal and social skills management (self, career, time, planning and organising) character (resilience, mindfulness, open- and fair-mindedness, selfawareness) leadership information & communication technology (ICT) skills accessing and analysing information being productive users of technology digital citizenship (being safe, positive and responsible online) citizenship cultural awareness ethical (and moral) understanding English helps develop the following 21st century skills: critical thinking creative thinking communication collaboration and teamwork personal and social skills information & communication technology (ICT) skills. These elements of 21st century skills are embedded in the syllabus objectives, unit objectives and subject matter, and ISMGs for English. Page 8 of 73

1.2.3 Aboriginal perspectives and Torres Strait Islander perspectives The QCAA is committed to reconciliation in Australia. As part of its commitment, the QCAA affirms that: Aboriginal peoples and Torres Strait Islander peoples are the first Australians, and have the oldest living cultures in human history Aboriginal peoples and Torres Strait Islander peoples have strong cultural traditions and speak diverse languages and dialects, other than Standard Australian English teaching and learning in Queensland schools should provide opportunities for students to deepen their knowledge of Australia by engaging with the perspectives of Aboriginal peoples and Torres Strait Islander peoples positive outcomes for Aboriginal students and Torres Strait Islander students are supported by successfully embedding Aboriginal perspectives and Torres Strait Islander perspectives across planning, teaching and assessing student achievement. Guidelines about Aboriginal perspectives and Torres Strait Islander perspectives and resources for teaching are available at www.qcaa.qld.edu.au/k-12-policies/aboriginal-torres-strait-islanderperspectives. Where appropriate, Aboriginal perspectives and Torres Strait Islander perspectives have been embedded in the subject matter. Through the study of texts, students are provided with opportunities to develop their understanding and appreciation of the diversity of cultures and histories of Aboriginal peoples and Torres Strait Islander peoples and their contributions to Australian society. 1.2.4 Pedagogical and conceptual framework Education in the discipline of English offers students ways of thinking about, creating and engaging with texts and how they represent the world and human experience. The framework for the subject s interrelated objectives is informed by an understanding of the relationships between language, text, purpose, context and audience, and how these relationships shape meaning and perspectives. Students engage critically and creatively with a variety of texts, taking into account the ways: language and structural choices shape perspectives to achieve particular effects ideas, attitudes and perspectives are represented in texts and the effects of these representations on readers, viewers and listeners that meanings in texts are shaped by purpose, cultural contexts and social situations texts position readers, viewers and listeners. All senior secondary English subjects aim to develop students critical and creative thinking, both independently and collaboratively, and their capacity to understand and contest complex and challenging ideas in order to form their own interpretations and perspectives, and to understand the interpretations and perspectives of others. Page 9 of 73

1.2.5 Subject matter Subject matter is the body of information, mental procedures and psychomotor procedures (see Marzano & Kendall 2007, 2008) that are necessary for students learning and engagement with English. It is particular to each unit in the course of study and provides the basis for student learning experiences. Subject matter has a direct relationship to the unit objectives, but is of a finer granularity and is more specific. These statements of learning are constructed in a similar way to objectives. Each statement: describes an action (or combination of actions) what the student is expected to do describes the element expressed as information, mental procedures and/or psychomotor procedures is contextualised for the topic or circumstance particular to the unit. The subject matter is grouped according to three interrelated areas of study: texts in contexts language and textual analysis responding to and creating texts. In English, Units 3 and 4 are organised into two topics. The interrelated areas of study are covered within each topic. Text selection Teachers must give students opportunities to engage with a wide range of texts to encourage their development as language learners and users. Students are encouraged to read widely across the course. There must be a range and balance in the texts that students read, listen to and view. Courses should include texts from different times, places and cultures, including texts that aim to develop in all students an awareness of, interest in, and respect for the literary traditions and expressions of other nations in the Asia Pacific region. Australian texts, including texts by Aboriginal writers and/or Torres Strait Islander writers, must be included across the course of study and within each unit pair of the course. At least one of the Australian texts studied over the four units of the course must be by an Aboriginal writer or Torres Strait Islander writer. Schools may include texts translated from other languages. Units 1 and 2 Across Units 1 and 2, students must study at least three texts. The selection must include three of the following four categories: one complete play one complete prose text (novel or non-fiction or a collection of short stories) a selection of poetry (at least five poems) a multimodal text (film, television program, documentary, multimedia). At least one of the texts studied must be Australian. Page 10 of 73

Other types of texts that students could study include: essays interpretations of literary texts speeches mass media texts and social media texts, such as news and current affairs, advertising, YouTube, social commentary, blogs, vlogs, podcasts popular culture texts journal and feature articles everyday texts of work, family and community life live performances graphic novels and digital stories. Unit 2 includes a focus on Australian texts. Units 3 and 4 Across Units 3 and 4, students must study at least four texts from the prescribed text list. The selection must include three of the following four categories: one complete play one complete prose text (novel or non-fiction or a collection of short stories) a selection of poetry (at least five poems) a multimodal text (film, television program, documentary) Other types of texts that students could study include: essays interpretations of literary texts speeches mass media texts and social media texts, such as news and current affairs, advertising, YouTube, social commentary, blogs, vlogs, podcasts popular culture texts journal and feature articles live performances graphic novels and digital stories. Unit 3 must include a study of media texts. A text studied in Unit 3 or Unit 4 cannot be studied in Unit 1 or Unit 2 of this syllabus, or in any units in the General syllabus of Literature. Page 11 of 73

Aesthetic features and stylistic devices Engaging with aesthetic texts allows us to rehearse different ways of seeing the world and different emotional reactions (Misson & Morgan 2006, p. 136). Such engagement is crucial for developing empathy. The aesthetic is far more than that which is simply beautiful in a text. It refers to the complex relationship between perception and sensation, and encompasses a wide range of emotional and critical responses to texts. Aesthetic features and stylistic devices refer to those aspects of texts that prompt emotional and critical reactions. As such, the aesthetic is closely tied to reader/audience positioning. Aesthetic features and stylistic devices may draw upon and interplay with textual features already used for other purposes. The experience of reading aesthetic texts and the experience of writing them are closely interrelated. The more students engage with the aesthetic dimension of texts, the more they learn to read with their own writing in mind, and write with their reader in mind. Creators of aesthetic texts, including students as writers, engage in a creative process when crafting texts. This process involves manipulating, refining, and experimenting with language choices and text structures to produce more successful texts. Style refers to the distinctive ways in which aspects of texts are arranged, the ways particular techniques and forms have been used to create an imaginative reality, and how these arrangements, techniques and forms affect the reading or viewing experience of an audience. Style can distinguish the work of individual writers, the work of a particular period, or works of a particular genre or type of text. Examples of aesthetic features include: poetic devices such as alliteration, assonance, imagery, metaphor, personification, simile, symbolism written devices such as imagery, irony, metaphor, motif, personification, representation, symbolism spoken devices such as imagery, motif, rhetoric, symbolism film devices such as costuming, editing, imagery, motif, photography, screenplay, symbolism dramatic devices such as costuming, dialogue, motif, style, symbolism. Stylistic devices can be any literary device or technique, such as: text structures juxtaposition, e.g. of two contrasting settings approaches to narration the use of narrative viewpoint approaches to characterisation use of figurative devices use of rhetorical devices, e.g. repetition control of sentence length and form literary patterns and variations sound devices visual devices. Page 12 of 73

Analytical essay The central purpose of an analytical essay in English is to inform the reader of an interpretation of a literary text. This analysis is written in a formal tone, includes relevant literary terminology and follows appropriate academic conventions. The audience of an analytical essay is an educated reader familiar with the literary text being discussed. Like any genre, there are many valid ways to respond in an analytical essay. An analytical essay is structured around a thesis, which is a statement of the central argument of an essay. This thesis presents an interpretation of a literary text or texts. It is supported by arguments and substantiated by relevant evidence, in the form of discussion, exploration and examination of a literary text. As the focus of an analytical essay is an interpretation of a literary text, the majority of supporting evidence is comprised of references to this text. 1.3 Assessment general information Assessments are formative in Units 1 and 2, and summative in Units 3 and 4. Assessment Unit 1 Unit 2 Unit 3 Unit 4 Formative assessments Summative internal assessment 1 Summative internal assessment 2 Summative internal assessment 3 Summative external assessment 1.3.1 Formative assessments Units 1 and 2 Formative assessments provide feedback to both students and teachers about each student s progress in the course of study. Schools develop internal assessments for each senior subject, based on the learning described in Units 1 and 2 of the subject syllabus. Each unit objective must be assessed at least once. For reporting purposes, schools should devise at least two but no more than four assessments for Units 1 and 2 of this subject. At least one assessment must be completed for each unit. The sequencing, scope and scale of assessments for Units 1 and 2 are matters for each school to decide and should reflect the local context. Teachers are encouraged to use the A E descriptors in the reporting standards (Section 1.4) to provide formative feedback to students and to report on progress. Page 13 of 73

1.3.2 Summative assessments Units 3 and 4 Students will complete a total of four summative assessments three internal and one external that count towards their final mark in each subject. Schools develop three internal assessments for each senior subject, based on the learning described in Units 3 and 4 of the syllabus. The three summative internal assessments will be endorsed and the results confirmed by the QCAA. These results will be combined with a single external assessment developed and marked by the QCAA. The external assessment results for English will contribute 25% towards a student s result. Summative internal assessment instrument-specific marking guides This syllabus provides ISMGs for the three summative internal assessments in Units 3 and 4. The ISMGs describe the characteristics evident in student responses and align with the identified assessment objectives. Assessment objectives are drawn from the unit objectives and are contextualised for the requirements of the assessment instrument. Criteria Each ISMG groups assessment objectives into criteria. An assessment objective may appear in multiple criteria, or in a single criterion of an assessment. Making judgments Assessment evidence of student performance in each criterion is matched to a performance-level descriptor, which describes the typical characteristics of student work. Where a student response has characteristics from more than one performance level, a best fit approach is used. Where a performance level has a two-mark range, it must be decided if the best fit is the higher or lower mark of the range. Authentication Schools and teachers must have strategies in place for ensuring that work submitted for internal summative assessment is the student s own. Authentication strategies outlined in QCAA guidelines, which include guidance for drafting, scaffolding and teacher feedback, must be adhered to. Summative external assessment The summative external assessment adds valuable evidence of achievement to a student s profile. External assessment is: common to all schools administered under the same conditions at the same time and on the same day developed and marked by the QCAA according to a commonly applied marking scheme. The external assessment contributes 25% to the student s result in English. It is not privileged over the school-based assessment. Page 14 of 73

1.4 Reporting standards Reporting standards are summary statements that succinctly describe typical performance at each of the five levels (A E). They reflect the cognitive taxonomy and objectives of the course of study. The primary purpose of reporting standards is for twice-yearly reporting on student progress. These descriptors can also be used to help teachers provide formative feedback to students and to align with ISMGs. Reporting standards A The student, in responding to and creating texts, demonstrates discerning application of knowledge of the relationships between text, context, audience and purpose through: analysis and creation of perspectives and representations of concepts, identities, times and places in texts; analysis and use made of the ways cultural assumptions, attitudes, values and beliefs underpin texts and invite audiences to take up positions; and analysis and use of aesthetic features and stylistic devices to achieve particular effects. The student demonstrates discerning organisation and development of texts for purpose, audience and context through: use of genres and the role of writer/speaker/signer/designer to achieve consistently controlled relationships with audiences in a variety of cultural contexts and social situations; selection, synthesis, organisation and sequencing of subject matter to support perspectives, including use of modeappropriate cohesive devices to emphasise ideas and connect parts of texts. The student demonstrates discerning use of textual features for purpose, audience and context through: combination of a range of grammatically accurate/appropriate language structures and language choices, including aesthetic and stylistic, to achieve particular purposes; and use of mode-appropriate features to achieve particular purposes. B The student, in responding to and creating texts, demonstrates effective application of knowledge of the relationships between text, context, audience and purpose through: analysis and creation of perspectives and representations of concepts, identities, times and places in texts; analysis and use made of the ways cultural assumptions, attitudes, values and beliefs underpin texts and invite audiences to take up positions; and analysis and use made of aesthetic features and stylistic devices to achieve particular effects. The student demonstrates effective organisation and development of texts for purpose, audience and context through: use of genres and the role of writer/speaker/signer/designer to achieve control over relationships with audiences in a variety of cultural contexts and social situations; selection, synthesis, organisation and sequencing of subject matter to support perspectives, including use of mode-appropriate cohesive devices to emphasise ideas and connect parts of texts. The student demonstrates effective use of textual features for purpose, audience and context through: combination of a range of grammatically accurate/appropriate language structures and language choices, including aesthetic and stylistic, to achieve particular purposes; and use of mode-appropriate features to achieve particular purposes. Page 15 of 73

C The student, in responding to and creating texts, demonstrates suitable application of knowledge of the relationships between text, context, audience and purpose through: analysis and creation of perspectives and representations of concepts, identities, times and places in texts; analysis and use made of the ways cultural assumptions, attitudes, values and beliefs underpin texts and invite audiences to take up positions; and analysis and use made of aesthetic features and stylistic devices to achieve particular effects. The student demonstrates suitable organisation and development of texts for purpose, audience and context through: use of genres and the role of writer/speaker/signer/designer to establish and maintain relationships with audiences in a variety of cultural contexts and social situations; selection, synthesis, organisation and sequencing of subject matter to support perspectives, including use of mode-appropriate cohesive devices to emphasise ideas and connect parts of texts. The student demonstrates suitable use of textual features for purpose, audience and context through: combination of a range of mostly grammatically accurate/appropriate language structures and language choices, including aesthetic and stylistic, to achieve particular purposes; and use of mode-appropriate features to achieve particular purposes. D The student, in responding to and creating texts, demonstrates a superficial application of knowledge of the relationships between text, context, audience and purpose through: analysis and creation of perspectives and representations of concepts, identities, times and places in texts; analysis and some use made of ways cultural assumptions, attitudes, values and beliefs underpin texts and invite audiences to take up positions; and analysis and some use made of aesthetic features and stylistic devices. The student demonstrates inconsistency in organisation and development of texts for purpose, audience and context through: use of genres and the role of writer/speaker/signer/designer to establish relationships with audiences in a variety of cultural contexts and social situations; selection of subject matter and organisation and sequencing of subject matter to support perspectives, including some use of mode-appropriate cohesive devices to connect parts of texts. The student demonstrates inconsistency in use of textual features for purpose, audience and context through: grammar, language structures and language choices, including some aesthetic and stylistic, and use of mode-appropriate features. E The student, in responding to and creating texts, demonstrates fragmented application of knowledge of the relationships between text, context, audience and purpose through: analysis and creation of perspectives and representations of concepts, identities, times and places in texts; and analysis of the ways attitudes, values and beliefs underpin texts. The student demonstrates fragmented organisation and development of texts for purpose, audience and context through: use of genres and the role of writer/speaker/signer/designer; selection and sequencing of subject matter; and some connections between parts of texts. The student demonstrates fragmented use of textual features through: grammar, language structures and language choices, and mode-appropriate features. Page 16 of 73

2 Unit 1: Perspectives and texts 2.1 Unit description In Unit 1, students explore individual and/or collective experiences and perspectives of the world through engaging with a variety of texts in a range of contexts. They examine how perspectives and representations of concepts, identities and/or groups are constructed through textual choices such as language, medium, style and text structures. This unit allows students to explore how meaning is shaped through the relationships between language, text, purpose, context and audience. Students respond to a variety of non-literary texts and literary texts, and create texts of their own for a variety of purposes and audiences. In responding to texts, students analyse the perspectives and representations of concepts, identities and/or groups in texts and how these shape their own and others ideas and perspectives. Analysis may include, for example: examining ways in which concepts, identities and/or groups are reported differently in the media and how these are represented to position readers and viewers exploring how writers convey perspectives and representations through textual structures, conventions, style and language, and how the meaning of a text is affected by the contexts in which it is created and received examining ways perspectives and representations are conveyed through argument, rhetoric, tone, register, style and language to influence audiences. In creating texts, students demonstrate their understanding of the relationships between text, purpose, context and audience by purposefully shaping perspectives and representations of concepts, identities/and or groups. Students experiment with, and make choices about, textual structures, medium, conventions and language to develop voice and style and position audiences. Unit requirements In Unit 1, students must be given opportunities to engage in a study of at least one text (a play, a prose text or a multimodal text such as a film) or a selection of poetry. Across Units 1 and 2, students must study at least three texts. The selection must include three of the following four categories: one complete play one complete prose text (novel or non-fiction or a collection of short stories) a selection of poetry (at least five poems) a multimodal text (film, television program, documentary, multimedia). Page 17 of 73

Other types of texts that students could study include: essays interpretations of literary texts speeches mass media texts and social media texts, such as news and current affairs, advertising, YouTube, social commentary, blogs, vlogs, podcasts popular culture texts journal and feature articles everyday texts of work, family and community life live performances graphic novels and digital stories. 2.2 Unit objectives Unit objectives are drawn from the syllabus objectives and are contextualised for the subject matter and requirements of the unit. Each unit objective must be assessed at least once. Students will: 1. use patterns and conventions of genres to achieve particular purposes in cultural contexts and social situations involving public audiences 2. establish and maintain roles of the writer/speaker/signer/designer and relationships with a range of audiences, including public audiences 3. create and analyse perspectives and representations of concepts, identities, times and places in a range of texts 4. make use of and analyse the ways cultural assumptions, attitudes, values and beliefs underpin a range of texts and invite audiences to take up positions 5. use aesthetic features and stylistic devices to achieve purposes and analyse their effects in texts 6. select and synthesise subject matter to support perspectives 7. organise and sequence subject matter to achieve particular purposes 8. use cohesive devices to emphasise ideas and connect parts of texts 9. make language choices for particular purposes and contexts 10. use grammar and language structures for particular purposes in written, spoken and/or multimodal texts 11. use mode-appropriate features to achieve particular purposes. Page 18 of 73

2.3 Areas of study Subject matter Texts in contexts When students work with texts in contexts, they will: read, listen to and view a range of texts to explore how the personal, social, historical, and cultural contexts in which these texts are produced influence their meaning investigate the relationships between language, text, purpose, audience and context by exploring how texts create various representations of human experience within individual and/or collective contexts explore the ways texts establish and maintain relationships with public audiences to achieve particular purposes in cultural contexts and social situations explore the intertextual relationships among texts to identify how and why texts conform to conventions of particular genres or modes, such as life-writing, poetry, reflective texts, documentaries, media texts and speeches consider how patterns and conventions of genres, such as text structures, language features and stylistic choices, are used in different types of texts. Language and textual analysis When students work with language and textual analysis, they will: analyse perspectives and representations of concepts, identities and groups in a variety of texts, e.g. by exploring how representations of individuals are shaped within autobiographical and biographical texts or by exploring how representations of groups, such as teenagers or minority groups, are constructed in media texts explore how texts invite readers/viewers to take up positions, e.g. by analysing how documentaries use editing, music, visuals, juxtaposition etc. to invite audiences to support the perspectives offered explore how different cultural assumptions, values, attitudes and beliefs underpin texts examine the ways generic patterns, language features, text structures and conventions communicate perspectives and representations develop knowledge and understanding of strategies for convincing argument, and rhetoric and sites of their use and application, including various modes such as public debate, public forums, online publications, digital texts and graphic texts identify and consider the use of aesthetic features and stylistic devices and their effects in texts analyse how language choices are used for different purposes and contexts question the assumptions and values in texts, e.g. assumptions made about gender or teenagers in advertising texts identify omissions, inclusions, emphases and marginalisation in texts. Page 19 of 73

Responding to and creating texts When students respond to and create texts, they will: consider how personal responses to texts are shaped by elements of an individual s contexts, e.g. locality, family background, beliefs, experiences, gender, age, psychology, culture discuss how texts may be read in different ways analyse examples of persuasive texts for public audiences, focusing on the use of rhetoric analyse examples of written responses for public audiences, focusing on style and tone use appropriate language, aesthetic features and stylistic devices to sustain a perspective synthesise subject matter and substantiate their own responses using textual evidence use cohesive devices to develop and emphasise ideas and connect parts of texts use appropriate form, content, style and tone for different purposes and audiences in real and imagined contexts use text structures, grammar and language features related to specific genres for particular effects use mode-appropriate features to achieve particular purposes participate in teacher-modelled, guided, shared and independent construction of texts in a variety of modes and classroom contexts use strategies for planning, drafting, editing and proofreading to produce appropriately sequenced and coherent texts reflect on and respond to feedback. 2.4 Assessment guidance In constructing assessment instruments for Unit 1, schools should ensure that the objectives cover, or are chosen from, the unit objectives. If one assessment instrument is developed for a unit, it must assess all the unit objectives; if more than one assessment instrument is developed, the unit objectives must be covered across those instruments. All assessments in Unit 1 are school-based. Schools should devise at least one but no more than two assessment instruments. Students should have opportunities in Units 1 and 2 to experience the types of assessment they will encounter in Units 3 and 4. Students should be provided with opportunities to respond: in different contexts, for different purposes and audiences, including public audiences in different modes, including written, spoken/signed and/or multimodal under supervised conditions to a seen or unseen question/task. Page 20 of 73

3 Unit 2: Texts and culture 3.1 Unit description In Unit 2, students explore cultural experiences of the world through engaging with a variety of texts, including a focus on Australian cultures for at least half of the unit. Building on Unit 1, students develop their understanding of how relationships between language, text, purpose, context and audience shape meaning and cultural perspectives. By engaging with a variety of texts, including Australian texts, students examine the relationship between language and identity, the effect of textual choices and the ways in which these choices position audiences for particular purposes, revealing attitudes, values and beliefs. Students respond to and create imaginative and analytical texts of their own. In responding to texts, students analyse the relationship between language, representation, identity and cultural context, uncovering cultural assumptions, attitudes, values and beliefs that underpin texts. In creating texts, students purposefully shape perspectives and representations that reveal certain cultural attitudes, values and beliefs. Unit requirements In Unit 2, students must be given opportunities to engage in a study of: at least two texts (selected from: a play, a prose text, a multimodal text such as a film, or a selection of poetry) at least one of the two texts should be an Australian text. Unit 2 must include a focus on Australian texts, including texts by Aboriginal writers or Torres Strait Islander writers. Schools may choose to focus on texts from another cultural context for the other half of the unit. Across Units 1 and 2, students must study at least three texts. The selection must include three of the following four categories: one complete play one complete prose text (novel or non-fiction or a collection of short stories) a selection of poetry (at least five poems) a multimodal text (film, television program, documentary, multimedia). Page 21 of 73