scaredytiger said:
it actually does.
its there to teach you the skills to see the purpose behind things. most of the modules are on fictional texts, but those skills (if learnt properly) translate to advertising and other media.
i mean, look at today tonight - thats pure hyperbole.
look at the news - thats silencing certain views, for a dominant one.
it also teaches you essay writing for what purpose is required. which you need for pretty much any assignment in university.
my god, i have no problems with the skill base it requires.
I still disagree, although you have made some good points.
So, you've given an example of something it might help for - why does the study on BNW, for example, help this? Why don't they have certain outcomes of the course in mind, and manipulate the course so that it is ALL useful to those outcomes.
Who cares that Today Tonight is a hyperbole; without HSC English, I would still be able to know that it was a hyperbole even if I was unaware of that label. And it's not a very good reason to do English...
I've already stated that on the topic of essay writing, it differs for every subject. History prepares you much better for writing an Arts essay that English ever does. In fact, the undisputable best subject for it relevance to tertiary study is History Extention.
And the skills that English require I also have no problem with, which perhaps is why I think that HSC English is a drain.
patty4848 said:
Doesn't have a use for anyone???
2 or 3 of the people on this thread have already said that its been very helpful in their later life in uni and post-tertiary life. The thread isn't long, why don't you read it?
The topics in English are not designed so that when we are old and grey we will know how powerplay is represented in Antony and Cleopatra or how Emma is transformed into Clueless. They are designed to teach us about writing with a purpose, for a specific audience and in a specific context.
Nobody can disagree with this, but no greater subject is more valuable in post-secondary-school life than English. Its the principles and outcomes behind the topics that benefit you. That is why it is compulsory and that is why people like yourself should stop whinging and whining about English being pointless. You believe English is pointless to you. Your employer won't!
And I've said to those 2 or 3 people that they could have aquired those skills elsewhere, therefore still rendering English superfluous. If you were able to comprehend what I've been saying, you would have been able to answer that for yourself. Or maybe you haven't read the thread?
So why can't English be designed for specific contexts which might relate to tertiary study and careeers? There are much simpler and therefore better ways to teach a person how to write for a specific audience and context.
Which part of the HSC English course is currently helping you in your post-school life that could not be found elsewhere? And so I continue to complain about English. And would you like to advise me as to which employer cares that you know how Gwen Harwood uses themes of nature in her poetry? None that I know of. Employers care about a mark. A different English course would also give a mark, as would a different subject if you did not have to do English.