So, to anyone on the forums, how would you change your current or past (to all those graduated) subjects at a year 12 level?
There is no right or wrong answer, you could take something out, add something in, change the core of the subject, add new topics, redo criteria, literally anything you want. The core is to just see what you would think make the subject better or more fun. It could be just something you want personally, or something that could benefit other students.
English
What I would think make english better (personal likes though)
This will never happen, but I would love if every student got to choose their own book, and for 3 months, they would be allowed to write an indepth analysis of the characters, plot, themes, and ideas. That would be amazing.
I wish there was more of a creative focus in year 12. I know it's not everyone's favourite, and I believe creativity takes time, so what if there was another long term project that meant students could create their own stories over a few months? Or even a collections of short stories over the year.
What I would change:
- I would remove half the booklist to give more relevant up to date books with topics that could relate more to the general 17/18-year-old.
- I'd make the comparison task between adaptions compared to here is a book, and here is a movie that's similar. I think greater diversity of what is being compared would be great too. For instant two short movies by the same creator? An animation and a live-action movie on the same topic.
-Time limits. I think they should be extended...
-Quote sheets. Remembering quotes should say if you know the book well, it just says your good at remembering...
Biology
What I would change:
-I would add more medicine components. Doing more on how certain parts of the bodywork, how drugs interact with them etc.
- Diseases being explored in more depth.
- I didn't like unit 4 at all, but I think expanding the evolution topic to animals would be fascinating.
- Spend some time going on how the environment affects lifeforms, (radiation, harsher climates etc)
What I'd get rid of:
- All the evolution stuff in unit 4. This is really just what I'd get rid off, I found those topics to be not my cup of tea.
Hey Geoo!
I love the concept of this forum thread and personally, I agree with
most of the points that you highlighted in your response - especially for English and Biology. However, I would have to slightly disagree with you when you discussed not studying the concept of "evolution" in Biology.
As a QCE student, I'm not entirely sure of the VCE Biology syllabus, but for my state, we're studying genetics before we study evolution which I think is great. Personally, I believe that the concept of "genetics" is the foundation of Evolution as a concept and without the foundation, learning the concept of evolution may seem useless or complex as there is no connection between the other concepts learnt throughout the year.
As a result, I believe that learning about the concept of evolution is useful in our Biology studies, especially since the concept of "genetics" would be perceived as the theory of the subject, rather than how the concept of "evolution" enables you to put your knowledge of "genetics" in a more practical way.
For English, however, I completely agree with what you said about the personalisation of the subject. The state-specific academic boards such as QCAA, VCAA etc. should write a prescribed text list with several texts that are
relevant to the audience of coming-of-age/young-adult teenagers and then enable students to choose texts from the list as it may be difficult to keep track of and maintain a lot of texts (if that makes sense).
Personally, I believe that a "pretty decent" prescribed text list to have would be something similar to, and are in no particular order, is below. And also please note that several of these "themes" may overlap, which would give students the flexibility to choose their preference from the list without being restricted to just one theme from a particular novel. The examples below are just novels, but please feel free to suggest other modes of texts (such as poetry, graphic novels, plays, films/tv series etc.) in the forum thread!
Gender Roles1. Jane Eyre
2. Little Women
3. Anne of Green Gables
4. Pride & Prejudice
Identity1. Frankenstein
2. The Catcher in the Rye
3. Simon vs. The Homo Sapiens Agenda
4. Divergent
The "Tensions" Between Differences - not sure if this heading makes sense. But please suggest any ideas that I can change it to. I just phrased it really badly. 1. To Kill A Mockingbird
2. The Book Thief
3. The Hate U Give
4. Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe
Feel free to add more "themes" and text suggestions related to the "themes" as well as I would love to hear about what you think! I also agree with your idea of how students should be able to do each individual analytical task(s) over a span of three months or even through two terms (to learn about the text for the first term and write an analysis about the text over the next term - an example for self-paced learning) rather than cramming all of the content, features and analysis of characters, themes, chapters/acts into a few weeks.
Personally, I think that it would be beneficial if for certain assessment tasks (for any subject) if students were given the option to learn and study/revise at their own pace or work at a similar pace that they learn for school at the moment. For example, for a self-paced curriculum, it would enable students who don't have a "photogenic" memory or are not able to "keep up" with the standard workload a chance to really "flourish" and "thrive" in secondary school as the pressure of time is relieved with their own personal preferences.
Please let me know what you think of my suggestions, as I would love to hear from you!
Have a great week and good luck with your upcoming exams or assignments (if you have any)!
Kind regards,
Darcy Dillon.