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The 2002 QSA English Syllabus was implemented with Year 11English students in 2003.
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UNIT
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DURATION
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DETAILS
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ASSESSMENT
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| UNIT ONE: Novel Study and Creative Writing | (7 weeks) Wednesday 29 January - Tuesday 25 March |
The creative
genre from Wednesday 29 January - Friday 21 February · Study of the novel from Monday 24 February - Tuesday 25 March |
Drafted assignment due Monday 31 March |
| UNIT TWO: Poetry | Thursday 3 April - Thursday 22 May | Study of Australian poetry | Analytical exposition completed in the double lesson May 22 |
| UNIT THREE: Persuasive Speaking - Sales Presentation | Monday 26 May-Wednesday 11 June | Talks to be completed from Thursday 5 June-Wednesday 11 June (4 lessons) | Speaking order and criteria sheet issued Monday 26 May |
| UNIT FOUR: Media Representations of Youth | Monday 14 July - Friday 15 August | 10 lessons allocated
to teach the unit. · 10 lessons to teach Feature Article Writing. |
Major research assignment, Feature Article on an aspect of youth today, complete with referencing, due Monday 18 August. Criteria Sheet issued Monday 21 July. |
| UNIT FIVE: Film Analysis. | Monday 18 August-Friday 5 September | Film study, examining discourse, viewer positioning, dominant and alternate interpretations. | Written assessment during the exam block. September 8 to September 12. |
| UNIT SIX: Drama And Monologue | Monday 18 September - Friday 7 November | Study of a play, completed by Wednesday 29 October. Study of the monologue Monday 3 November-Wednesday 12 November. | Unseen exam Periods
1 & 2 Thursday 30 October Monologues presented from Thursday 13 November- Wednesday 19 November. |
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The Report |
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HOW TO WRITE A REPORT What is a report? - A report is a style of writing that aims to concisely address a specific issue providing information and analysis about the issue. A report aims to persuade readers to accept its summary of the issues and to introduce the recommendations for improvement that it makes. Unlike analytical essays, a report is characterised by a title page, table of contents, numbered subheadings, bullet points, recommendations, appendices, referencing, a bibliography and shorter sentences. ORIENTATION TO ASSESSMENT TASK STEP
ONE - You must select a particular issue that the media has used
in its construction of the discourse of youth. Suggestions are listed
below: STEP TWO - You must search for newspaper, internet, radio or television news sources that deal with one of these issues. Begin by collecting anything that you think deals with the discourse of youth, so that it is easy for you to make your choice on the basis of the number of resources that you have at your disposal. Pay particular attention to the library lesson in which you will be given researching tips. Note, that where possible, you should try to collect information from a range of sources. This will mean that your conclusions are more valid. Make sure you use examples from a variety of sources in order to establish the credibility of your conclusions. Failure to do this will indicate a lack of understanding of aspects of the genre. STEP THREE - Analyse the dominant position of each of your sources and how that position has been constructed. Is the position a negative or a positive one? How has the author used privileging and silencing, binary oppositions, technical and symbolic codes, to assist in the communication of the message? How has the author used evocative language to assist in the communication of the message? Does the headline automatically predispose the reader to think in a particular way about youth? What photographs and statistics have been used to position the reader to accept the dominant position? STEP FOUR - Do some extra research from secondary sources on the extent to which the media constructs a narrow version of reality and its motivations for doing so. Consider the extent to which news stories tend to have a negative position in order to arouse the reader's sense of controversy. Consider the extent to which the media has historically portrayed youth in similar ways, and the reasons this might be so? Make sure you record referencing details correctly so that you can use them as authoritative appeal in your report. STEP FIVE - Draw some overall conclusions based upon your analysis. For instance, is the general tone of the articles partial or critical? If it is partial, what attributes have been highlighted and praised? If it is critical, what flaws have been highlighted and criticized? Is the portrayal of youth in relation to the issue justified, or is it motivated by other factors? STEP SIX - Consider the recommendations that you will make in order to correct the problems that you have identified. For instance, if you have concluded that your sources on the issue of your choosing are particularly negative, you need to consider ways to combat this negativity. Make sure your recommendations are concrete and practical. Don't just say things like, 'the newspapers should change' or 'the government should introduce legislation to stop the negative portrayals'. These proposals are overly simplistic. You need to think about establishing incentives for newspapers to change. Similarly, the government can't just wave a magic wand and fix the problem, even if it wanted to. You must be specific and demonstrate how your recommendations will remedy the identified problem. Consider the question, six months after your recommendations have been introduced, what changes would be noticed? STEP SEVEN - Collate the articles or transcripts that you have referred to, making sure you have included their bibliographic details. Keep these together so that you can easily place them in an appendix, when it comes time to write your report. PROPOSED STRUCTURE FOR YOUR REPORT
2.0 The
role of the media as a definer of versions of reality 3.0 The
media's association of the discourses of youth and drugs (or whichever
topic you select) 4.0 Conclusions 5.0 Recommendations 6.0 Appendix 7.0 Bibliography
or Reference List |