• Congratulations to the Class of 2024 on your results!
    Let us know how you went here
    Got a question about your uni preferences? Ask us here

English Syllabus Change from 2027 (1 Viewer)

Study to success

Active Member
Joined
Sep 24, 2024
Messages
122
Gender
Female
HSC
2026
One of the texts I'm doing for yr 11 next year will be on the hsc prescribed text list for 2027
 

oml

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 5, 2023
Messages
85
Location
dreaming big
Gender
Female
HSC
2025
I've heard my English teacher talking about this and I feel like they've made it harder (obvs personal opinion, I'm just 16 don't come for me 😢) I've heard they're introducing more indigenous texts and students can't be holistic with Indigenous texts. On top of that, the teachers will have to relearn the syllabus and majority of them will not have the same knowledge. My teacher also mentioned that some of the work they've heard will be assessed, including Aboriginal native language, and I feel like that would be difficult to answer questions and understand in the HSC exam.Idek what section this will be in but that's all I've heard. The one thing that sucks is putting Othello in year 12, that was the easiest text ever now cmon 😭
 

MJRey

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 30, 2022
Messages
386
Gender
Female
HSC
2022
i feel bad for those who will be doing the new syllabus as they won't have any resources
Same, honestly feel so sorry for everyone in 2027 onwards. Some of my cousins who are sitting their HSCs next year are pissed about the changes too, but they feel lucky they'll be the last cohorts with the decent syllabus.
 

ljc10

New Member
Joined
Sep 8, 2022
Messages
4
Gender
Male
HSC
2024
While a lot of you are annoyed about the Advanced syllabus, at least they have added some very different texts that allow for deeper analysis such as Question 7 in Common Mod and The Prince and Julius Caesar as a pairing in Mod A. The extension changes are far more concerning in my opinion as while they have tried to ensure the electives are less focused on -isms a lot of depth has been lost. Finally, while understandably the addition of texts composed by Indigenous Australian authors has sparked conversation, I think there are some truly brilliant texts here that shouldn’t be discounted simply because you view them as a means of enacting the government / NESA’s agenda. Dropbear for example is fantastic despite questions I have about the Hybrid Worlds module as a whole. All in all while it is good that there is debate and concern about the changes, it is definitely not all bad, and the introduction of contemporary acclaimed texts will shift the style of students’ analysis, but in no way will it lessen the sophistication of the ideas they discuss and express.
 

Forenza

New Member
Joined
Apr 16, 2020
Messages
13
Gender
Female
HSC
2023
i feel bad for those who will be doing the new syllabus as they won't have any resources
not only is it a lack of resources, it’s going to be a lot of teacher’s first time reading/teaching some of the texts. One thing that makes the new syllabus slightly difficult for the 2027 HSC students (even 2028,2029) is that their analysis will be placed at a disadvantage as the one’s being written studying the 2017 syllabus. This is not about the ability of students but rather because teaching the syllabus requires in length discussions amongst interschool faculties about ideas, key concepts, synthesising threads between texts along with how to combine research of (now) contemporary context into analysis. It’s not only resources from previous students but from HSC markers and teaching materials that would be absent. We’re only giving teachers 2 years until they have to teach the new material to to HSC students. But I guess every syllabus change would require a transition period.
 

anonymous1111

New Member
Joined
Sep 24, 2024
Messages
15
Gender
Male
HSC
2021
stop freaking out this happens with every syllabus change. the 2019 people may have had some texts from previous years but the modules were completely scambled so past analysis was made null. take 1984 which used to be in this module about power and politics, moved to human experiences. analysis from the former would def not apply to the latter the same way
 

synthesisFR

afterhscivemostlybeentrollingdonttakeitsrsly
Joined
Oct 28, 2022
Messages
3,312
Location
Getting deported
Gender
Female
HSC
2028
I'm also annoyed that they removed 1984 from the syllabus because it's an essential text that makes crucial points on the dangers of totalitarianism and how it subverts the truth, eradicates independent thought, destroys real human connection etc. In a world where tensions for WWIII are rising, I think a text like 1984 is more relevant now than ever and it's a huge mistake to replace it with lesser known Australian texts which don't explore these concepts with the same level of sophistication, depth and intensity.
first the social media ban and now this :mad: (i see a pattern)
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top