Ack, I haven't read the rest of the posts yet but this one was long so I had to reply to it!
Originally posted by eviltama
Being a creative person, i found the Advanced course thoroughly boring.
The concept of the new syllabus is a wider variety of ways of reading texts. In my opinion the older syllabus was more boring than the current one because there was a greater emphasis on the technical details of the language rather than the overarching theoretical and philosophical contexts through which we read texts.
English used to be where we learnt how to expand our horizons... write stories, poems, read new interesting books which were meant to encourage us to better our literacy skills. Now english can be learnt out of study books.
I disagree; because English is more theoretical now you will get greater benefit from a teacher than a study guide. You're right that they often don't obviously 'encourage us to better our literacy skills'; I think that the syllabus is more subtle than an obvious 'this is good, read it'. If a text isn't enjoyable, it's more likely to ask you why you don't enjoy it than forcing you to study the elements (metaphors, techniques etc).
The irony of this situation is that we did not get to study Shakespeare as it's usually studied; our teacher told us, quite bluntly, to 'get a study guide and read about the characters'. What we were observing were the ways of reading that text, which, to me, is more interesting than iambic pentameter.
Point three, if u gave out Emma by Jane Austen to normal ppl on the street...
I didn't study this (I did In The Wild), but as far as I can tell no study guide will ever be able to comprehensively compare the two texts. There ARE other modules, besides, which allows schools to cater for their students.
Just as an aside, in my school the Emma/Clueless people were laughed at for not having enough decent philosophical detail to include in their essays. Blade Runner and Brave New World offered much wider scope for analysis, in my opinion, although Emma is a quite fascinating novel. And you could always look at it as a prime example of a Victorian text, compared to the twentieth century Clueless.
The new syllabus is a shocker. The concepts in most cases are much to complex for ordinary ppl to comprehend and even if we could understand what they were talking about the rest of the work is too boring.
The irony of the situation is that people are being forced to understand these concepts in everyday life. Ignorance may be bliss, but it doesn't get you anywhere.
Capitalism, consumerism, feminism and Marxism are only a few of the terms we're being forced to come to terms with (no pun intended). We're expected to understand what these concepts are and how they affect us in twenty-first century Australia; that's what the English syllabus is about. I agree that English is probably not the best term for it, but eh...
I know I've mentioned before - more objectively, should I add - that I have my problems with the new syllabus, and I don't intend to contradict myself (apologies if I have, I thoroughly enjoyed studying the course). The more I mention the new syllabus, however, the more I wish I'd done the old one as a comparison. :\