This article reminds me of something I heard on 2GB or whatever it is my dad listens to. The host was having a go at the BOS because they had heard that there was a subject called 2u Surfing, and was having a good ole whinge about the degeneration of students nowadays and how we are the dumbest cohort to go through the hsc, bla bla. Like fair enough, the subject is a bit ridiculous, but the guy was having a go, with no knowledge of what he was talking about. A BOS rep called up and tried to explain to him that even though the subject might exist, it isn't a board -developed course, and thus UAC won't recognise it - so you can study virtually whatever you want, but it won't necessarily count for anything.
Anyway, my point is, (a bit circumlocutory, I know), but the writer of this article doesn't really seem to know what they're talking about. I mean, yes, some of the texts on the BOS list aren't exactly prestigious four-hundred year old novels, but the course is designed to give students an understanding an appreciation of a range of texts. And it's english! We all HAVE to do it, so good on them for trying to appeal to those who are less interested in the subject. But also, there are a number of extremely valued texts on the set list for study: Shakespeare's plays, Coleridges poems, Keats, Orwell's 1984 and I'm sure there are dozens of others. What a class studies is essentially up to their teacher; what they think the students are capable of, what they will enjoy, and what they themselves feel they can teach well. Our class studied two novels, but one was Jesse Martin's Lionheart, which goes to show that it isn't the type of text that is responsible for the extent to which a piece challenges the reader. We also studied Harwood's poetry, and the plays Hamlet and Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead. So I don't think you can say that the course itself is "dumbing down" students, but rather giving a broad scope to cater for a vast range of students.
(My apologies for how long-winded that may have seemed)