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English - Essential

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​​​​Applied senior subject

Essential English develops and refines students' understanding of language, literature and literacy to enable them to interact confidently and effectively with others in everyday, community and social contexts. Students recognise language and texts as relevant in their lives now and in the future and learn to understand, accept or challenge the values and attitudes in these texts.

Students engage with language and texts to foster skills to communicate confidently and effectively in Standard Australian English in a variety of contemporary contexts and social situations, including everyday, social, community, further education and work-related contexts. They choose generic structures, language, language features and technologies to best convey meaning. They develop skills to read for meaning and purpose, and to use, critique and appreciate a range of contemporary literary and non-literary texts.

Students use language effectively to produce texts for a variety of purposes and audiences and engage creative and imaginative thinking to explore their own world and the worlds of others. They actively and critically interact with a range of texts, developing an awareness of how the language they engage with positions them and others.

Pathways

A course of study in Essential English promotes open-mindedness, imagination, critical awareness and intellectual flexibility — skills that prepare students for local and global citizenship, and for lifelong learning across a wide range of contexts.

Objectives

By the conclusion of the course of study, students will:

  • use patterns and conventions of genres to achieve particular purposes in cultural contexts and social situations
  • use appropriate roles and relationships with audiences
  • construct and explain representations of identities, places, events and concepts
  • make use of and explain the ways cultural assumptions, attitudes, values and beliefs underpin texts and influence meaning
  • explain how language features and text structures shape meaning and invite particular responses
  • select and use subject matter to support perspectives
  • sequence subject matter and use mode-appropriate cohesive devices to construct coherent texts
  • make mode-appropriate language choices according to register informed by purpose, audience and context
  • use language features to achieve particular purposes across modes.


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Last reviewed 02 June 2023
Last updated 02 June 2023