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English Version 2.0

  1. Introduction
  2. Curriculum
  1. F
  2. 1
  3. 2
  4. 3
  5. 4
  6. 5
  7. 6
  8. 7
  9. 8
  10. 9
  11. 10

Level 7

Level 7 Description

The English curriculum is organised under 3 interrelated strands: Language, Literature and Literacy. While each strand articulates the essential skills of English, they should be seen as interlinked and interconnected. Together, the 3 strands focus on developing students’ knowledge, understanding and skills in listening, speaking, reading, viewing and writing...

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Level 7 Content Descriptions

Language

Language for interacting with others
  1. understand how language expresses and creates personal and social identities (VC2E7LA01)
    1. understanding local idioms and discussing their connection with personal and social identities
    2. developing dialogue that reveals character in comics, cartoons and animations
  2. understand the language of evaluation and substantiation (VC2E7LA02)
    1. building knowledge about words of evaluation, including words to express emotional responses to texts, opinions of characters and their actions, and appreciation of the aesthetic qualities of text
    2. analysing how evaluative language can be used to assess the qualities of a narrative or persuasive text, for example its impact on the reader or the author’s skill in the use of language
    3. recognising how evaluative language is used to critically assess the validity of evidence and the reliability of sources
    4. recognising and discussing the language used to substantiate a position or an argument, including language used in illustrations and graphic representations
Text structure and organisation
  1. identify and describe how texts are structured differently depending on their purpose, and how language features vary in texts (VC2E7LA03)
    1. examining the structures of book or film reviews and how they might move from description of context to summary of the text and then to a position on the text
    2. recognising the social purpose of a persuasive text and how the purpose is reflected in the text structure and by the language features; for example, analysing the structure and language features of advertising posters
    3. describing the structure and language features of literary texts, arguments, discussions, creative and analytical responses to literary texts, films or popular media, and discussing how the structure and language serves the purpose of the text
  2. understand that the cohesion of texts relies on devices that signal, structure and sequence, such as overviews, examples, and beginnings and endings (VC2E7LA04)
    1. comparing and analysing the structure of media texts such as digital news sites or print media, and identifying strategies used to create cohesion
    2. identifying the ways that authors foreshadow how a text will unfold; for example, identifying the topic sentence, the key idea, sentence openers and text connectives
Language for expressing and developing ideas
  1. understand how complex and compound-complex sentences can be used to elaborate, extend and explain ideas (VC2E7LA05)
    1. identifying and experimenting with a range of clause structures and discussing the effect of these in the expression and development of ideas
    2. consolidating knowledge of simple, compound and complex sentences, recognising that a simple sentence can express sophisticated ideas and a complex sentence need not express complex ideas
    3. examining the addition of ideas using a compound-complex sentence, for example ‘When the protagonist finally took action, the relationships between all other characters changed significantly.’
  2. understand how consistency of tense through verbs and verb groups achieves clarity (VC2E7LA06)
    1. identifying and discussing how verb tense is maintained in compound, complex and compound-complex sentences
    2. identifying and discussing different forms of verb tenses and their use to maintain consistency of tense in different sentences, for example ‘I organise the cake stall every week, and I am running the meeting this weekend as well.’
  3. explore how still images, moving images and sound can be used to create a perspective (VC2E7LA07)
    1. comparing how perspectives are created in animations and advertisements
    2. comparing how different advertisements advertise the same product, using techniques to create different perspectives for effect
    3. analysing how the illustrations in picture books, graphic novels and advertisements use size, colour, angle, proximity, vector and salience to influence the reader or audience
    4. exploring how the use of camera angles constructs perspective and affects representation
  4. explore the role of vocabulary in building specialist and technical knowledge, including terms that have both everyday and technical meanings (VC2E7LA08)
    1. recognising vocabulary used to represent high-utility, abstract academic concepts, for example ‘factor’, ‘hypothesise’, ‘issue’ and ‘critique’
    2. identifying vocabulary used to write about a topic; for example, using terms for poetic devices and words to explain the effects of the devices in poems
  5. understand the use of punctuation including colons and brackets to support meaning (VC2E7LA09)
    1. examining the impact of information added to sentences when colons and brackets are used

Literature

Literature and contexts
  1. identify and explore ideas, points of view, characters, events and/or issues in literary texts, drawn from different historical, cultural and/or social contexts by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander authors and a wide range of Australian and world authors (VC2E7LE01)
    1. exploring ideas about heroism in literary texts by a wide range of world authors
    2. discussing the similarities and differences in character representations in film adaptations of novels and plays
    3. investigating representations of characters and events in literary texts by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples
    4. exploring depictions of the city or the bush in Australian poems and short stories from different eras
Engaging with and responding to literature
  1. develop an opinion about characters, settings and events in literary texts, identifying areas of agreement and difference with others’ opinions and justifying a response (VC2E7LE02)
    1. establishing forums and criteria for discussing the relative merits of characters, settings and events in literary texts
    2. comparing personal opinions on texts and justifying responses in discussions, which may include referencing behaviours such as integrity and loyalty
  2. explore the ways that literary devices and language features, such as dialogue, and still and moving images are used to create character, and to influence emotions and opinions in a range of literary texts (VC2E7LE03)
    1. comparing the representation of a character’s appearance in a novel and film version of the same text
    2. explaining the impact and significance of language features in a text
Examining literature
  1. identify and explain the ways that characters, settings and events combine to create meaning in literary texts (VC2E7LE04)
    1. analysing and explaining the structure and features of short stories, discussing the purposes and appeal of different authorial choices for structure
    2. exploring traditional stories from Asia and discussing their features, for example use of the oral mode, visual elements and verse to convey the narrative
  2. identify and explain how literary devices create layers of meaning and aesthetic qualities in literary texts, including poetry (VC2E7LE05)
    1. explaining the sound and rhythm of poetry using metalanguage (for example, ‘end and internal rhyme’, ‘metre’ and ‘alliteration’) and discussing how layers of meaning are created
    2. viewing or reading Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander films, plays and poetry, and explaining the layers of meaning created by imagery
    3. determining criteria for evaluating the aesthetic value of a literary text and sharing opinions
    4. comparing a film adaptation of a literary text using specific language for naming the text structure, literary devices and language features of film and novels, and sharing opinions about the aesthetic and social value of each
Creating literature
  1. create texts that experiment with literary language features and devices encountered in texts (VC2E7LE06)
    1. using aspects of texts in imaginative recreations such as re-situating a character from a text into a new situation
    2. creating a prequel using an imagined series of life events of a character, presented as a series of flashbacks in a scripted monologue
    3. creating chapters for an autobiography, short story or diary
    4. experimenting with different narrative structures such as the epistolary form, flashback and multiple narrators
    5. experimenting with imagery, sentence variation, metaphor and word choice when creating a literary text
    6. transforming familiar print narratives into short video or film narratives, drawing on knowledge of the type of text and possible adaptations to setting for a new mode

Literacy

Interacting with others
  1. use interaction skills when discussing ideas and information, including evaluations of the features of texts (VC2E7LY01)
    1. participating in pair, group, class, school and/or community speaking and listening situations, including informal conversations, discussions, debates and presentations
    2. using effective strategies for dialogue and discussion in a range of formal and informal contexts, including speaking clearly and coherently and for an appropriate length of time, clarifying and rephrasing comments of others
    3. identifying key evidence supporting an argument in a discussion between 2 speakers
    4. choosing vocabulary and sentence structures for purposes and audiences, adapting language choices to meet the perceived audience needs
    5. ensuring that ways of communicating for particular audiences are acknowledged
  2. deliver structured spoken texts for a specific purpose and audience, employing formal language and using appropriate features of voice and multimodal or digital elements (VC2E7LY02)
    1. selecting features of voice (such as tone, volume, pitch and pace) for different audiences and purposes, recognising the effects these have on audience understanding and engagement
    2. sharing feedback with a peer while planning and rehearsing a presentation
Word knowledge
  1. understand how to use spelling rules, base words, suffixes, prefixes, spelling patterns and word origins (etymology), including Greek and Latin roots, to learn new words and how to spell them (VC2E7LY03)
    Content description does not require elaboration.
Texts in context
  1. explain the effect of current technology on reading, creating and responding to texts, including media texts (VC2E7LY04)
    1. investigating the influence of communicative technologies such as SMS, email and GIFs on written language
    2. analysing the impact of interactive elements of digital texts on texts such as magazines read in a digital form
    3. identifying changes in topics considered to be newsworthy as a result of technological change
Analysing, interpreting and evaluating
  1. analyse the ways in which language features shape meaning and vary according to audience and purpose (VC2E7LY05)
    1. explaining the relationship between language features, and audience and purpose, such as identifying which group would be the most likely target audience for the information in an advertisement and justifying why
    2. examining depictions of the histories and cultures of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples, discussing language features that shape meaning
  2. explain the structure of ideas such as the use of taxonomies, cause and effect, extended metaphors and chronology (VC2E7LY06)
    1. identifying cause and effect in explanations and how these are used to convince an audience of a course of action
  3. use comprehension strategies such as visualising, predicting, connecting, summarising, monitoring, questioning and inferring to analyse and summarise information and ideas (VC2E7LY07)
    1. comparing the presentation of ideas in formal and informal speeches and determining the reasons for the differences
    2. analysing visual features including choice of image, colour, composition and font on a book cover when predicting the tone of a text
    3. determining and summarising the key idea(s) of paragraphs and chapters in an extended text
Creating texts
  1. create different types of texts, written and spoken, selecting aspects of subject matter and particular language and print, multimodal and/or digital elements to convey information and ideas to a specific audience (VC2E7LY08)
    1. compiling a portfolio of texts in a range of modes related to a particular concept, purpose or audience, for example a class anthology of poems or stories
    2. monitoring ideas developed at each stage of creating a presentation in a blog or journal
    3. preparing a presentation combining print, visual and audio elements to explore and interpret ideas, drawing on knowledge and research about ideas and opinions different from their own
    4. using appropriate text conventions to create scripts for interviews, presentations, advertisements, radio segments, podcasts, digital and online reflections, including vlogs
  2. review and edit their own texts and the texts of others by removing repetition, refining ideas, reordering sentences and adding or substituting words for impact and coherence, and reflect on these processes (VC2E7LY09)
    1. editing for meaning by removing unnecessary repetition, reordering sentences and varying sentence structures to refine ideas, adding or substituting words for impact, and reviewing accuracy of grammar, spelling and punctuation
    2. editing texts collaboratively on a tracked, word-processed document

Level 7 Achievement Standard

By the end of Level 7, students demonstrate the following skills in English.

Speaking and Listening

When interacting with others, students explore specialist and technical vocabulary and use language to express social identities....

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Level 8

Level 8 Description

The English curriculum is organised under 3 interrelated strands: Language, Literature and Literacy. While each strand articulates the essential skills of English, they should be seen as interlinked and interconnected. Together, the 3 strands focus on developing students’ knowledge, understanding and skills in listening, speaking, reading, viewing and writing...

Show more

Level 8 Content Descriptions

Language

Language for interacting with others
  1. understand how language shapes relationships and roles (VC2E8LA01)
    1. understanding that group identities are formed through language that reflects shared values, beliefs and behaviours, and through language choices that engender solidarity, such as specialist terminology, acronyms and terms of address (for example, teenage groups and sportspeople have adopted particular words and ways of communicating)
    2. investigating the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS) Map of Indigenous Australia and identifying language names that inform relationships to Country/Place
  2. understand how language features such as simile and metaphor can add layers of meaning to the language of evaluation and substantiation (VC2E8LA02)
    1. identifying how authors use rhetorical devices that reveal the dark or serious aspects of a topic in humorous or amusing ways; for example, by making a statement but implying or meaning the opposite (irony), exaggerating or overstating something (hyperbole), imitating or mocking something (parody), and making something appear less serious than it really is (understatement)
Text structure and organisation
  1. explain how texts are structured depending on their purpose and how language features vary, recognising that some texts are hybrids (VC2E8LA03)
    1. recognising how texts such as critical responses to texts, expositions, text interpretations and discussions are typically structured to achieve their purpose
    2. discussing how the placement of images and written text in a linear or non-linear way, such as in online texts, is used differently in a variety of texts for specific purposes
    3. explaining the structure and language features of texts (such as narratives, literary recounts, memoirs, drama scripts, types of poems, formal speeches, comparisons, creative responses, discussions and debates) and explaining how these structures and language features support their purpose
  2. understand how cohesion in texts is improved by strengthening internal structures and sequence, with evidence, quotations and substantiation of claims (VC2E8LA04)
    1. writing paragraphs of extended length that explain, substantiate and exemplify a particular viewpoint
Language for expressing and developing ideas
  1. examine a variety of clause structures, including embedded clauses, that add information and expand ideas in sentences (VC2E8LA05)
    1. evaluating how speechmakers influence audiences through embedded clauses to add information
    2. exploring how clauses and embedded clauses can be used to express ideas more succinctly
  2. understand the effect of nominalisation in texts (VC2E8LA06)
    1. highlighting examples of nominalisation in a range of texts, including informative texts, and explaining the impact on content and tone
    2. nominalising relevant verbs in a series of sentences and discussing the impact of the change in tone on potential audiences
  3. explore how still images, moving images and sound use intertextual references to enhance and layer meaning (VC2E8LA07)
    1. identifying intertextual references in advertisements and discussing their impact on layering meaning, for example the interrelationship of words and images or words and sound
  4. examine the role and use of academic vocabulary (VC2E8LA08)
    1. identifying the vocabulary of academic report writing on a topic, for example the use of words such as ‘evidence’, ‘consequence’, ‘contradiction’ and ‘acknowledge’ for the topic ‘sustainability’
    2. comparing and contrasting vocabulary choices in academic texts, considering how they are used to communicate precise information or convey abstract ideas
  5. understand and use punctuation conventions, including semicolons and dashes, to extend ideas and support meaning (VC2E8LA09)
    1. creating dialogue in a drama or play, showing interruptions, asides and pauses for effect

Literature

Literature and contexts
  1. explain the ways that ideas, issues and points of view in literary texts drawn from diverse historical, cultural and social contexts by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander authors, and a wide range of Australian and world authors, may represent the values of individuals and groups (VC2E8LE01)
    1. discussing representations of characters from historical contexts in literary texts; for example, discussing the romantic representation of the Australian swagman and the values it reflects
    2. explaining attitudes and ideas about the natural world in literary texts drawn from contexts different to their own
Engaging with and responding to literature
  1. explore opinions about the language features, literary devices and text structures that contribute to the styles of literary texts (VC2E8LE02)
    1. comparing reviews of a literary text and evaluating opinions that challenge or support their personal opinions
    2. reflecting on and evaluating opinions and arguments about aspects of literary texts, including characterisation, setting and plot
  2. explain how language and still and moving images in a range of literary texts influence an audience’s response to and formation of social and/or ethical positions (VC2E8LE03)
    1. discussing how a complex picture book combines words and images to position readers to respond
    2. sharing opinions about how a film positions the viewer to respond to a character
Examining literature
  1. identify intertextual references in literary texts and explain how the references enable new understandings (VC2E8LE04)
    1. identifying intertextual references through allusion or quotation in written texts and discussing how knowledge of other texts influences the reader’s understanding and appreciation
  2. explore how language features such as sentence patterns create tone and voice, and how literary devices such as imagery create meaning and aesthetic qualities in literary texts (VC2E8LE05)
    1. recognising that tone is influenced when an author uses active or passive voice
    2. examining how writers use tense and relatively simple language choices or more elaborate and complex syntax, and how these influence meaning
    3. recognising that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander authors use words and language to set tone when writing or speaking about specific themes, for example words used to set the tone when writing or speaking about Country
Creating literature
  1. create texts that experiment with literary language features and literary devices for particular purposes and effects (VC2E8LE06)
    1. creating short stories focusing on characters and dialogue
    2. combining literary devices to evoke a reader response
    3. collaborating with a peer, which may include using online spaces, to write a short script with 2 characters, focusing on dialogue choices for each character

Literacy

Interacting with others
  1. use interaction skills for identified purposes and contexts, including when supporting or challenging the stated or implied meanings of texts in discussion (VC2E8LY01)
    1. participating in pair, group, class, school and community speaking and listening situations, including informal conversations, discussions, debates and presentations
    2. listening to a conversation or speech, identifying the point being made, and explaining the tone and manner of presentation
    3. using effective strategies for dialogue and discussion in a range of formal and informal contexts, including speaking clearly and coherently and at appropriate length, asking questions about stated and implied ideas, and restating and summarising main ideas
  2. deliver structured spoken texts for particular purposes and audiences to suit formal and informal contexts, using features of voice and multimodal or digital elements (VC2E8LY02)
    1. integrating multimodal features in a spoken presentation to support the audience’s understanding
    2. selecting features of voice, such as tone, volume, pitch and pace, with particular attention to the effects these may have on audience reaction and acceptance of the ideas presented
Word knowledge
  1. explore and use learnt knowledge to spell technical and academic words consistently and accurately (VC2E8LY03)
    1. understanding the different ways that complex words are constructed, and drawing on morphemic knowledge and knowledge of unusual letter combinations when spelling these words
    2. understanding where to obtain the spelling of Aboriginal language words and Torres Strait Islander language words, for example the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS) Map of Indigenous Australia, and the Bunjilaka Aboriginal Cultural Centre
Texts in context
  1. describe how representations of people, places and events reflect the context of the text (VC2E8LY04)
    1. identifying and explaining how social media texts reflect the context in which they are created
    2. identifying how speeches for reconciliation reflect the context in which they are created
Analysing, interpreting and evaluating
  1. analyse and evaluate the ways that language features represent perspectives on an issue, event, situation, individual or group, and the ways that quotations and sources are used and repurposed in a text (VC2E8LY05)
    1. evaluating an author’s use of language features to present an opinion about those features
    2. evaluating the use of sources and quotations and presenting an opinion about how an author has supported an idea
    3. researching and discussing Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual Property (ICIP)
  2. analyse how authors organise ideas to develop and shape meaning (VC2E8LY06)
    1. identifying the structure of ideas in a range of texts
    2. examining texts that structure ideas according to proposition and support, cause and effect, and compare and contrast, and determining their effectiveness
    3. exploring texts that attempt to solve problems in a particular way; for example, organising information by considering strengths as well as problems that arise from a particular approach
    4. analysing how the organisation of a webpage shapes its meaning
  3. use comprehension strategies such as visualising, predicting, connecting, summarising, monitoring, questioning and inferring to interpret and evaluate ideas in texts (VC2E8LY07)
    1. reflecting on content by connecting and comparing information across and between texts
    2. determining and applying criteria for evaluating the content of a website, for example criteria for content and website purpose and its effectiveness
    3. analysing the selection and composition of an image in a text and evaluating its effect on the credibility of the story
Creating texts
  1. create different types of texts, written and spoken, that raise issues, report events and advance opinions, using deliberate language and textual choices, and print, multimodal and/or digital elements as appropriate (VC2E8LY08)
    1. experimenting with and editing text structures and language features (for example, paragraph order and content) and language choices to refine and clarify ideas
    2. selecting vocabulary to position and persuade the reader; for example, adjusting language to show or acknowledge power
    3. choosing vocabulary and sentence structures and using literary devices such as similes, metaphors and personification to meet perceived audience needs, for example when debating a topic or creating a voice over for a media presentation
    4. collaborating with peers to develop a persuasive advertising campaign about a contemporary issue
  2. review and edit to refine and clarify ideas to improve the effectiveness and coherence of their own texts and the texts of others, and reflect on these processes (VC2E8LY09)
    1. editing imagery and word choices when creating a literary text and reflecting on the effect of those changes
    2. editing for accuracy of grammar, spelling and punctuation, and for meaning by experimenting with different order of ideas, a range of sentence structures, literary devices and vocabulary to clarify meaning for academic texts where appropriate
    3. using conceptual maps or journals to plan and reflect on each stage of creating a written or multimodal text

Level 8 Achievement Standard

By the end of Level 8, students demonstrate the following skills in English.

Speaking and Listening

When interacting with others, students explore academic vocabulary and use language to support relationships and roles....

Show more

Level 9

Level 9 Description

The English curriculum is organised under 3 interrelated strands: Language, Literature and Literacy. While each strand articulates the essential skills of English, they should be seen as interlinked and interconnected. Together, the 3 strands focus on developing students’ knowledge, understanding and skills in listening, speaking, reading, viewing and writing...

Show more

Level 9 Content Descriptions

Language

Language for interacting with others
  1. understand how language strengthens relationships and roles (VC2E9LA01)
    1. identifying the various communities to which they belong and how language reinforces membership of these communities, for example the intimate language of family members, the jargon of teenage groups, the technicality of some online communities, the language specific to recreational groups and the interaction patterns of the classroom
    2. investigating language used by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander authors to reinforce relationships to Country/Place and with others, for example ‘Welcome’ for the Wurundjeri People is ‘Wominjeka’
  2. understand how the language of evaluation and substantiation expresses individual views and values through language features such as allusion, evocative vocabulary and metaphor (VC2E9LA02)
    1. comparing texts that use evaluative language in different ways (for example, print advertisements, editorials, talkback radio, podcasts and poetry) and identifying wording that appraises indirectly through evocative language, similes and metaphors that direct readers’ views in particular ways
Text structure and organisation
  1. explore the ways that text structures and language features can be adapted and altered according to purpose (VC2E9LA03)
    1. comparing the use of linear and non-linear narratives in a range of short stories, and determining the purpose and effect of the different structures
    2. comparing the opening paragraphs of different public texts such as feature articles, and determining the purpose and effect of the different structures and language features
  2. understand how a range of cohesive devices, including nominalisation, condense information in texts and link, expand and sequence ideas (VC2E9LA04)
    1. sequencing and developing an argument using language structures that suggest conclusions (‘therefore’, ‘moreover’, ‘so’), give reasons (‘since’, ‘because’) or suggest conditionals (‘if … then’)
Language for expressing and developing ideas
  1. explore how authors vary sentence structures for effect, such as using a sentence fragment, or intentionally using a dependent clause on its own (VC2E9LA05)
    1. identifying the effects of using an interrupting clause inside another clause (for example, ‘His friend, who had left home the previous year, suddenly returned.’), intentionally using a dependent clause on its own (for example, ‘If you see what I mean.’) or using a sentence fragment (for example, ‘Breathtaking!’)
  2. understand how abstract nouns can be used to summarise ideas in text (VC2E9LA06)
    1. exploring sections of academic and technical texts, and analysing the use of abstract nouns (for example, ‘the previous argument’ or ‘the prologue’) to summarise and distil information, structure the argument and summarise preceding explanations
  3. analyse how symbols in still and moving images and the use of sound augment meaning (VC2E9LA07)
    1. investigating the use of symbols (for example, specific seasons, weather and colours in images, films and picture books) and evaluating their contribution to viewers’ understanding, recognising that visual and verbal symbols have different meanings for different groups and cultures
    2. understanding the use of symbols by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples, where a symbol may have many meanings or have different meanings across language groups; for example, artwork enables the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People from a particular Country/Place to identify symbols and interpret the artwork
    3. exploring how recurring sounds or music make meaningful connections in text
  4. analyse how vocabulary choices contribute to style, mood and tone (VC2E9LA08)
    1. identifying the words used to create nuanced meaning; for example, identifying the words that create a sarcastic tone in a text
    2. identifying how the vocabulary used in a text contributes to its stylistic effectiveness
  5. understand and use punctuation conventions to condense information and for referencing and citing others for formal and informal purposes (VC2E9LA09)
    1. understanding when to and how to cite in essays, reviews and academic assignments, and when it is appropriate to use direct quotations or to report sources more generally

Literature

Literature and contexts
  1. analyse the representations of people and places in literary texts, drawn from diverse historical, cultural and social contexts, by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander authors and a wide range of Australian and world authors (VC2E9LE01)
    1. exploring and comparing representations of values of characters; for example, exploring the values associated with authority, community and family in literature drawn from different cultures and times
    2. analysing how texts by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander authors reflect unique ways of being, knowing, thinking and doing
    3. exploring the ways in which a wide range of Australian novels, poems and films represent water and characters’ relationships with water
Engaging with and responding to literature
  1. explore and develop responses, including personal responses, to literary texts, comparing initial and subsequent impressions (VC2E9LE02)
    1. interrogating and making judgements about a text, comparing others’ ideas against their own and reaching an independent decision or consensus about the interpretations and ideas expressed
  2. analyse how literary devices and language features, and still and moving images, shape an audience’s preference about the social, moral or ethical positions presented in literary texts (VC2E9LE03)
    1. reflecting on and discussing responses to literature (including characterisation, setting details, plot events, themes and literary devices used to achieve particular effects) and collaboratively formulating a list of factors that distinguish value
Examining literature
  1. analyse the effect of text structures, language features and literary devices such as extended metaphor, metonymy, allegory, symbolism and intertextual references (VC2E9LE04)
    1. examining how different authors make use of devices such as imagery, and explaining the effect of these choices on audiences
    2. identifying examples of literary devices in a range of poems and considering how they contribute to meaning and influence the emotional responses of the audience
  2. analyse the ways that text structures, language features and literary devices in literary texts create aesthetic qualities (VC2E9LE05)
    1. comparing texts created by the same author to determine literary style, assessing their appeal and presenting comparisons to others
Creating literature
  1. create texts, which may be hybrid, that experiment with literary text structures, language features and devices, and voice, for purposes and audiences (VC2E9LE06)
    1. taking an existing short story, poem, play or speech in print form and creating a short film
    2. adapting traditional and contemporary literature through textual intervention, prequel or sequel

Literacy

Interacting with others
  1. use interaction skills to discuss opinions regarding texts that have different purposes and audiences, analysing how language features position an audience to respond in particular ways (VC2E9LY01)
    1. discussing how stereotypes are created through language and how they position listeners to respond
    2. using effective strategies for dialogue and discussion in a range of formal and informal contexts, including speaking clearly and coherently and for an appropriate length of time, presenting an opinion and listening to the opinions of others
  2. deliver structured spoken texts for particular purposes, demonstrating different levels of formality in consideration of audience, using features of voice and multimodal or digital elements (VC2E9LY02)
    1. using graphics and text animations to accompany spoken text; for example, presenting a news item suitable for a current affairs program that uses images with spoken text to influence a viewer’s response
    2. selecting features of voice such as tone, volume, pitch and pace for their specific effects, to create tone or to persuade an audience
Word knowledge
  1. use learnt knowledge to spell accurately and consistently, and understand that non-standard spelling is used in texts for particular effects, such as characterisation and humour, and to represent accents and distinctive speech (VC2E9LY03)
    1. exploring the spelling of neologisms and their effect in media texts such as online posts, for example ‘selfie’ and ‘Paralympics’
    2. analysing how spelling is used to represent the distinctive speech of a character by noting where authors have dropped letters from words to emulate the sound of spoken words
Texts in context
  1. analyse how representations of people, places, events and concepts reflect contexts (VC2E9LY04)
    1. examining the representation of public figures in media and recognising how these vary in different contexts
    2. identifying and analysing how news is conveyed in texts; for example, analysing representations of an event at a particular time reported in the media
    3. comparing texts from different time periods and analysing the language features used to represent individuals or groups
Analysing, interpreting and evaluating
  1. analyse and evaluate how language features are used to explicitly represent values, beliefs and attitudes (VC2E9LY05)
    1. analysing the use of language in the coverage of a contentious issue in a range of news services and social media
    2. explaining how authors use language features to represent ideas and convey opinions
    3. comparing a range of advocacy, campaign or inspirational speeches from films or media and identifying language features that influence the listener
  2. analyse the organisation of ideas in paragraphs and extended texts, and evaluate its impact on meaning (VC2E9LY06)
    1. evaluating techniques used in texts to organise ideas and evoke emotional responses, such as comparison, contrast, exaggeration, juxtaposition, the changing of chronological order, and the expansion and compression of time
    2. explaining whether the author conveys meaning effectively, through the sequence of information and evidence
  3. use comprehension strategies such as visualising, predicting, connecting, summarising, monitoring, questioning and inferring to compare and contrast ideas and opinions in and between texts (VC2E9LY07)
    1. comparing and contrasting visual representations of ideas, issues or events in online news reporting
    2. comparing representations of an event in print and digital sources, summarising their qualities, identifying opinions and analysing evidence
    3. summarising articles representing a current event, comparing and contrasting ideas and opinions in and between texts
Creating texts
  1. create different types of texts, written and spoken, that present a point of view and advance, illustrate or expand ideas, including texts that integrate print, multimodal and/or digital elements in deliberate consideration of an audience (VC2E9LY08)
    1. developing an argument that has a series of sequenced and linked paragraphs, beginning with a contention, followed by a series of supported points that develop a line of argument, and a conclusion that summarises the main line of argument
    2. creating informative texts that explain and analyse complex phenomena using well-chosen facts and precise language
    3. choosing text structures and adapting literary devices such as similes, metaphors and personification to meet the perceived needs of an audience when debating a topic, creating a voice over for a media presentation or presenting a seminar
    4. collaborating with peers to develop imaginative recreations of part of a text or to represent a key idea in a text
  2. review and edit their own texts and the texts of others to improve clarity, coherence and control over content, organisation, paragraphing, sentence structure, vocabulary and multimodal elements, and reflect on these processes (VC2E9LY09)
    1. editing by checking for run-on sentences, ensuring detail or repetition is used for effect, and ensuring paragraphs are linked in ways that develop the narrative
    2. reviewing and editing their own and others’ texts, which may involve using online applications, for accuracy of grammar, spelling and punctuation, and to achieve particular purposes and address specific audiences by improving clarity and control of content through organising, developing, extending and linking ideas
    3. discussing, with a peer, choices of literary devices used in a literary text, and evaluating the potential effect of each choice on an audience

Level 9 Achievement Standard

By the end of Level 9, students demonstrate the following skills in English.

Speaking and Listening

When interacting with others, students explore vocabulary of mood and style and use language to strengthen relationships and roles....

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