Bobness said:
Are you making any sense at all with the bolded comment? What analogy are you even alluding to?
Yes we do study spelling (of text names at the very least, for eg if you consistently misspell Skrzynecki's name in your paper you will invariably lower - significantly from first hand hearsay - your final grade due to impression marks) and punctuation (techniques such as rhetorical questions, exclamatory remark and typographical separations all rely on this) in HSC english.
You're still a student so you are viewing everything from your limited pinhole vision, once you actually consider the grander scale of things it will dawn on you exactly how much the process of learning even HSC english benefits long term written expression. Of course there are flaws in the system (or any human-defined structure) but the meaning is there, albeit latent.
Pardon me for being presumptious, but are you not faring too well in english at present? Your subject selection implies you are a 'humanities' student though, so i take it that a poor experience with a teacher / peer / what you have read has made you so spiteful?
First of all, the bolded comment; it was referring to you saying to [the other dude?] to do ESL because he didn't like the course.
Perhaps a repeated mistake on something such as the authors name might draw penalty, but mistakes throughout the test [...or at least, at my school, which I suppose is the limit of my experience] do not. I would also put my money on HSC marking centres
at the very least not having stringent controls over penalties relating to those kinds of errors.
Obviously your third paragraph is one which I cannot argue (even if "I'm not sure about that" was an understatement). I haven't finished school so I couldn't say. But what would you say is the fault with most of the alternatives people have suggested here? -the Queensland English course, having to do English but not having it necassarily counted towards your HSC [maybe not for ESL students, but for those... and I say this with a cringe at the thought of some people... who are fluent English speakers] and maybe one or 2 other decent alternatives? Answering that probably won't change anything, but I'd still like your (and others') opinion.
Also, I'm doing quite well in English [top of my adv. class (although there is a "top" advanced class which I'm not in) and about 30/220 overall this year]. It is true that I very much dislike it, and yes I have had a bad teacher in the past, but that was a while ago and I still liked English after her. Presently I have quite a good teacher... only I'm reading all class.
Aside from that, apart from having an moron who likes to blurt out stupid shit such as "I don't get what that story is about... I get that there's like a storm and that Prospero is angry... but that's it." -upon completing reading the whole book over about 10 lessons. But I just find her funny, and certainly not the weaver of any ill-feelings I have towards English. If by "what you've read" you mean a book I've read for English, or even other peoples posts or... anything really: then no, that isn't the cause of my spite. I'd say it's just anger that the course (so far as my experience with it seems) condones a separation of emotion from the work of authors, directors, poets- all artists, which is bound to fail. For me it destroys all joy that I may have been able to experience from the text. Even Frontline has become tiresome for me after we not only grasped the meaning and as a class put together a list of techniques, but then went on to grind the most insignificant details with the most insignificant final outcomes on the essential value of the text.
Anyway, sorry for having a go at you there, in all other circumstances and threads I have respected what you have said and usually agreed, but that opening remark had me riled up.
Graney said:
You're supposed to fully know spelling and punctuation before the end of year ten. Normal students do. The HSC course is not remedial english ffs.
I stated HSC english had been more usefull to me in preparation for tertiary science than any other subject, to which you replied:
Essays, paper writing, research. They are the core of most degrees, in any field. No subject deals with them like HSC english, and it does a fairly good job as an introduction to them.
Obviously the years up to year 10 are a failure then, looking at an astounding number of people.
Sorry, obviously didn't register that bit... but still, I have also said (not sure if it was in my reply to you) that for essays and research (especially in relation to how those 2 things are done at uni-level) Extension History is
far and away the best. Obviously not everyone will be adept at either of the histories, or even if they are, be up to the huge challenge of Extension - but then again, if the course you wanted to do required those skills then you'd choose it. English deals neigh on zilch in terms of research, you have to read a text and then interpret it, with not even a hint of cross-referencing or anything.