Tacitus
Member
- Joined
- Mar 25, 2010
- Messages
- 75
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2007
Massive wall of angry text incoming, read at own risk
I am an ex-English tutor. I started teaching with the best of intentions. Who wouldn't get a kick out of explaining the most controversial and subjective syllabus in the whole HSC to future doctors, lawyers, leaders and captains of industry?
I started out as an in-house tutor in a boarding house, with a couple individual clients on the side.
People started asking me questions. I gave them answers.
As the months flew by, I noticed people (the ones I hadn't seen yet ) were asking the same questions. Again, and again, and again.
Very few of them were about the actual texts, but about explaining the criticisms they got in their essay and how to actually write an English essay.
The current English syllabus is broken beyond repair. The entire allocation of marks is based on marking criteria which no two people will read the same way.
There is no class time given to grammar or syntax, which are the only things that every student uses - in every sentence they write, in every subject they are doing. As it happens, these can be easily objectively marked but are ignored by the syllabus. Very few students could tell you what a clause is without googling it. Even less could spot a split infinitive.
And then you get called out on your sentence structure in your creative writing. Markers sigh at the amount of split infinitives and broken clauses they see. And wonder why this is the case.
The explanation given for this is that HSC English is not designed to teach the language itself, but to develop analytical skills and critical thinking.
Which is, naturally, not taught in this way. The majority of the things learnt (read: memorised) in HSC English are quotes usually supplied with their own techniques. Every. Friggin'. Lesson. All that is taught is what to write, and not how to write. Analytical skills my ass.
Nobody will ever remember, much less want to remember, their Marxist reading of Shakespeare or the role of Aristotelian techniques in Romanticist literature. Critical thinking is not what is shoved down your throat and told to memorize, in the hope that you'll magically come to understand how this analysis from university academics was created.
Then you have to memorise and rote-learn essays, and they give you an obscure question, and you panic, and write down your pre-written response anyway.
And then they have the chutzpah to call you out in marker's comments for 'prepared responses'.
The exam marking process is the longest, slowest and most labour-intensive out of all the subjects in the HSC. This isn't just because every student does it. It is because they are forced to double-mark every piece submitted because they acknowledge that two teachers will not agree on a mark given to the same piece of writing. This would never happen in any other subject. Why? Because their syllabus doesn't force markers to interpret vague marking criteria by themselves like English does. They can't even agree on comprehension marks, for heaven's sake. Is this their fault? No. They're forced to. And they're forced to teach with that in mind.
Which leads to the biggest problem of all.
There is minimal class time given to essay writing and structure. There is nothing in the syllabus which teachers are told to teach about essays. There is no essay structure which is universally agreed upon and endorsed. They have to teach it solely from their own experience. And it's silly to expect they won't disagree on what is a good essay and what is not. The best you can hope for without an essay technique is that all the content and Excel analysis you memorized the night before is ordered in the right way.
So here's an essay writing guide, based on the FAQs I got.
This guide is mostly focused on Advanced, although Standard students may find it useful as well!
I am an ex-English tutor. I started teaching with the best of intentions. Who wouldn't get a kick out of explaining the most controversial and subjective syllabus in the whole HSC to future doctors, lawyers, leaders and captains of industry?
I started out as an in-house tutor in a boarding house, with a couple individual clients on the side.
People started asking me questions. I gave them answers.
As the months flew by, I noticed people (the ones I hadn't seen yet ) were asking the same questions. Again, and again, and again.
Very few of them were about the actual texts, but about explaining the criticisms they got in their essay and how to actually write an English essay.
The current English syllabus is broken beyond repair. The entire allocation of marks is based on marking criteria which no two people will read the same way.
There is no class time given to grammar or syntax, which are the only things that every student uses - in every sentence they write, in every subject they are doing. As it happens, these can be easily objectively marked but are ignored by the syllabus. Very few students could tell you what a clause is without googling it. Even less could spot a split infinitive.
And then you get called out on your sentence structure in your creative writing. Markers sigh at the amount of split infinitives and broken clauses they see. And wonder why this is the case.
The explanation given for this is that HSC English is not designed to teach the language itself, but to develop analytical skills and critical thinking.
Which is, naturally, not taught in this way. The majority of the things learnt (read: memorised) in HSC English are quotes usually supplied with their own techniques. Every. Friggin'. Lesson. All that is taught is what to write, and not how to write. Analytical skills my ass.
Nobody will ever remember, much less want to remember, their Marxist reading of Shakespeare or the role of Aristotelian techniques in Romanticist literature. Critical thinking is not what is shoved down your throat and told to memorize, in the hope that you'll magically come to understand how this analysis from university academics was created.
Then you have to memorise and rote-learn essays, and they give you an obscure question, and you panic, and write down your pre-written response anyway.
And then they have the chutzpah to call you out in marker's comments for 'prepared responses'.
The exam marking process is the longest, slowest and most labour-intensive out of all the subjects in the HSC. This isn't just because every student does it. It is because they are forced to double-mark every piece submitted because they acknowledge that two teachers will not agree on a mark given to the same piece of writing. This would never happen in any other subject. Why? Because their syllabus doesn't force markers to interpret vague marking criteria by themselves like English does. They can't even agree on comprehension marks, for heaven's sake. Is this their fault? No. They're forced to. And they're forced to teach with that in mind.
Which leads to the biggest problem of all.
There is minimal class time given to essay writing and structure. There is nothing in the syllabus which teachers are told to teach about essays. There is no essay structure which is universally agreed upon and endorsed. They have to teach it solely from their own experience. And it's silly to expect they won't disagree on what is a good essay and what is not. The best you can hope for without an essay technique is that all the content and Excel analysis you memorized the night before is ordered in the right way.
So here's an essay writing guide, based on the FAQs I got.
This guide is mostly focused on Advanced, although Standard students may find it useful as well!
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