Thanks Bhootnike, I'll probably be taking up English Language
@Menang, can you give me a brief outline of Literature & History?
Sorry if I'm asking a lot. :S
No worries Macaron

In
Literature, you study a number of texts throughout the year. If the curriculum hasn't changed by the time you're in Year 12, there are 5 SACs to complete (usually on one or two texts each) which will be 50% of your assessment. The final exam is the other 50%, where you'll have to choose 2 texts from the ones you've studied and read them (very) closely. In the exam, you'll be given three passages per text and you'll have 2 hours to write 2 essays.
EZ (EvangelionZeta - an English and Lit legend) has written a fuller guide to Literature available
here.
In
Revolutions you study two of four Revolutions (American, French, Russian or Chinese) - you school/teacher chooses this. There are two areas of study for each Revolution so it works out to be:
-One revolution per 'unit' (Unit 3 or Unit 4)
-One area of study per term.
In AoS1, you do ideas, movements, leaders and events that lead up to the Revolution itself.
In AoS2, you do 'creating a new society' where you study the successes (and mostly failures) of the new regime.
There's a lot of memory work (lots of dates and quotes to memorize) and you'll have to develop a keen awareness of the historiographical debate. It's a great course though, jam packed with lots of exciting events and complex issues.
In
Renaissance Italy the structure is a little different. It's much less chronological (ergo, less dates!) and more social and cultural. There's still a massive political side to it, of course, especially in the Florence-and-Venice-specific sections, but there's the added dimension of social life and the development of new art and architecture.
In Unit 3 you first spend a bit of time getting to new Italy - it's geographical and political states during the Renaissance, it's major industries in the different cities, it's alliance to either the Holy Roman Empire or the Papal States, that kind of thing. You then focus in on Florence, doing lots of study on the Medici and early Renaissance Art.
In Unit 4 you start of with a study in social life (either Venice or Florence), looking at things like marriage, religion, guilds, communities etc. The last thing you do is a focused study on Venice, which is quite exciting.
I can't say much about Australian History, having never done that.
Let me know if you have more questions.
