Fellow BoS users,
The story I am about to tell you will sound unbelievable - many will call me liars, I will be called an idiot, my own brother didn't believe me (But like you know, brothers), but I can confirm it is true. I have omitted names for obvious reasons, but I hope my point comes across well.
In year 8, after being denied Dux of my year due to my bad English mark, I vowed revenge (Also after reading 2BR02B and "A poetry reading at west point" - two of the worst pieces of writing I have read in my life). Having to do this compulsory subject, but then to tell me I was not good enough - I wasn't taking it. I then hatched a plan to prove - English is completely arbitrary. Students realistically cannot be expected to do well in it. (I encourage you to go to the "Should English be Compulsory" Forum here). It started big as a whole scientific experiment, then reduced in size after realising that I did not have as many resources available to me, and technically has not finished, but I got a response today I had to share with you.
Me and some other students (STEM and non-STEM alike) together wrote a 1000-word short story (Note, I have not published it, and will not. Sorry) utilising as many techniques as we could. We had been working on this since year 10 and perfected it down to the very last word. Note by perfected it, we didn't want it to be good, no. We just needed it to sound old. It just needed to be, realistically, written a bit of time ago. Some may know where I am going with this...
Since I am in year 11, our first topic is "Reading to Write", where we need to link a bunch of books we have read into a document and explain why we linked them in. We took this file, uploaded it to a weebly website we made, and linked that into it. Then, we wrote a 874 word analysis on it for a section that was supposed to be 200 words max. Our teacher, looking at this, pulled me out of class (We did it on my file) and asked why I wrote so much. I explained how much I loved this story, and how good it was. After reading it, he could not help but agree. We then proceeded to do a 2-day in-class analysis, with him outlining how brilliant it was. Note - we were extremely lucky here. If he even looked up the author, he would know it was B.S., but by some praise of God, he only looked only at the link provided. Now, all that was left to do was submit it for our writing assessment. (Our school didn't cancel hand-ins for Corona, and an english teacher isn't allowed to mark their own student's work).
Marks came back today - I got 17/20. I emailed my teacher, explaining it. After a stern email back, he is arguing some marks for me, but I think it is fair to say that we did it.
English is stupid - We did the dream
TLDR - We told a teacher something we wrote was professional, they loved it, we gave it in for an assessment, we only got 17/20
The story I am about to tell you will sound unbelievable - many will call me liars, I will be called an idiot, my own brother didn't believe me (But like you know, brothers), but I can confirm it is true. I have omitted names for obvious reasons, but I hope my point comes across well.
In year 8, after being denied Dux of my year due to my bad English mark, I vowed revenge (Also after reading 2BR02B and "A poetry reading at west point" - two of the worst pieces of writing I have read in my life). Having to do this compulsory subject, but then to tell me I was not good enough - I wasn't taking it. I then hatched a plan to prove - English is completely arbitrary. Students realistically cannot be expected to do well in it. (I encourage you to go to the "Should English be Compulsory" Forum here). It started big as a whole scientific experiment, then reduced in size after realising that I did not have as many resources available to me, and technically has not finished, but I got a response today I had to share with you.
Me and some other students (STEM and non-STEM alike) together wrote a 1000-word short story (Note, I have not published it, and will not. Sorry) utilising as many techniques as we could. We had been working on this since year 10 and perfected it down to the very last word. Note by perfected it, we didn't want it to be good, no. We just needed it to sound old. It just needed to be, realistically, written a bit of time ago. Some may know where I am going with this...
Since I am in year 11, our first topic is "Reading to Write", where we need to link a bunch of books we have read into a document and explain why we linked them in. We took this file, uploaded it to a weebly website we made, and linked that into it. Then, we wrote a 874 word analysis on it for a section that was supposed to be 200 words max. Our teacher, looking at this, pulled me out of class (We did it on my file) and asked why I wrote so much. I explained how much I loved this story, and how good it was. After reading it, he could not help but agree. We then proceeded to do a 2-day in-class analysis, with him outlining how brilliant it was. Note - we were extremely lucky here. If he even looked up the author, he would know it was B.S., but by some praise of God, he only looked only at the link provided. Now, all that was left to do was submit it for our writing assessment. (Our school didn't cancel hand-ins for Corona, and an english teacher isn't allowed to mark their own student's work).
Marks came back today - I got 17/20. I emailed my teacher, explaining it. After a stern email back, he is arguing some marks for me, but I think it is fair to say that we did it.
English is stupid - We did the dream
TLDR - We told a teacher something we wrote was professional, they loved it, we gave it in for an assessment, we only got 17/20