XJS and its respective weekend school spinoffs has effectively destroyed chinese at the vce level. Insider exam question 'guessing', sac ranking tampering, are all common practices employed, and I'm only just scratching the surface. XJS is meant to be a springboard for learning chinese. Instead, it's just a battlefield for competition, where an elitist attitude thrives amongst the 'more-gifted students' and higher-ups.
I've heard that VCAA introduced scaling for chinese as a way to compensate for the emergence of XJS. Believe it or not, XJS and scaling for chinese did not exist 20 years ago (I think XJS kicked off operations in 1992 or so). What VCAA was (and is still) trying to do is to simply, level the footing between the black-haired and non black haired. It failed with generous scaling, which actually amplifies the counterintuitive effect for non-background speakers, as their scaled scores would be pushed back and scaled less, compared to the easy scaled 40's obtained by the background speaker.
Discriminating based on ability? PFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFTTTTTTTTTTT. Are you kidding me. Are you REALLY kidding me. You're telling me, that I have to do some of English AND have it counted in my primary four, despite not speaking it at home, but that people who speak Chinese at home should be disadvantaged? What sort of stupid half-twisted logic is this? So we're being disadvantaged by the fact that we speak Chinese at home, and that we study it earlier? Well go have a cry VCAA, because penalising students from being good at Chinese is preposterous.
How is segregating skill levels disadvantaging or penalising anyone at all? By removing scaling, you're essentially removing a cog that's rather responsible for the disparity. If you have beginners up against beginners, and the advanced up against advanced, isn't that fair?
What about the other LOTEs like japanese and french? I'm not saying that those LOTE subjects are perfect, as there's heaps of stuff that is dodgy behind the scenes for all subjects, but would you ACTUALLY want your OWN CHILD, that started from scratch, to compete against kids that have been fed through XJS for their entire childhood? I sure as hell wouldn't.
I'm an ABC, second generation. I went to XJS for a year or two back in primary school, and dropped chinese completely until I got dragged back into it for VCE. I was extremely pleased with my result even though I couldn't write/read at all to save my life, but I can honestly say I did not deserve it. Why should I be worried or even be concerned about the disparity between the 'huang mao/from scratch student' with the 'xjs baby'? Because this is a problem that can really hurt the future of LOTE education. This is my children's future, and isn't something that should be treated lightly or glossed over at all.
Students should not be groomed to support an approach that encourages one to memorise essays and fancy chengyus you'll never see again for the rest of your life, for the sake of the '50 pursuit' in CSL. This is about learning a language, and if you can't align hard work together with good marks alongside the backdrop of a level playing-ground, then the subject is inherently broken.