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Detailing devils in Australian English curriculum

By David Long - posted Monday, 13 January 2014


The promise by this curriculum that the study of English will help students … to become citizens and workers who are ethical, thoughtful and informed is another example of how this curriculum makes bold assertions that sound nice but are fraught with difficulties.

Why, for example, are workers specifically designated as being in need of an ethical and thoughtful education? How do the ethics of citizens, managers or the self employed differ from those of workers? And what thoughtful person would dare to say that their parents, brought up on state curricula, are uninformed, thoughtless or unethical?

It is a worthwhile task to make every citizen ethical. However, the reference to making "workers" ethical, thoughtful and informed seems to imply some sort of crypto-Marxist differentiation between workers and citizens and this in turn suggests that the drafting committee had specific texts and literature in mind that would achieve the desired result of ethical workers and citizens. What are those texts?

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It is distinctly possible that the Committee believes that ethical, thoughtful and informed workers and citizens can be produced through the methodology of critical literacy, a methodology, already fashionable with English teachers and academics and which can be found in the draft curriculum. Critical literacy purports to teach students how to deconstruct texts critically in order to show how the author treats ethical issues such as feminism, multiculturalism, workers' rights capitalism, homosexuality, etc. It is common for this technique to be used to analyse Shakespeare from a feminist perspective by deconstructing Romeo and Juliet.

A group of Australian education scientists have praised critical literacy theory, justifying its political agenda as 'the promotion of a healthy democracy'. One has even gone so far as to link it to a longer term 'commitment to humane values and a sense of the ethical'; which seems to tie in nicely with the National curriculum: English.

The fallacy of the theory is self evident. Students would first need to deconstruct critical literacy theory to see the hidden socio-political agenda of the authors. Only then would they realise that they could never apply the theory objectively since it would carry the subjective bias of the author. This is precisely the criticism that the philosopher Friedrich Niezsche made of the study of history.

Obviously, academics will never allow school children to criticize their theories.

There are many, many issues in the curriculum which are causes for concern. The use of words like creativity and multiculturalism as bona fides ends for an English course, seem to miss the point of literacy and education in general. The focus on Asia to the exclusion of Australia's part in Western civilisation and the body of literature to which that leads is not just a poor choice. It is the height of thoughtlessness, if not ignorance. The curriculum even goes so far as to insist that the Dreamtime stories of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island peoples, their religious 'oral texts', be read. That assertion may be pregnant with contradiction but in contradistinction it is no where suggested that children read extracts from the King James Bible which has arguably had the same influence on the literature of English speaking peoples as Shakespeare.

There is, however, one glaring error. The release of the draft curriculum was accompanied by a request for criticism. The Board constrained the means by which criticism could be made, allowing only annotations to the text, as to preclude any criticism of the overall methodology of the document, of the assumptions that underpin it and of its general effect on the literacy of future students.

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The National Curriculum: English is not a new curriculum this much is evident from a careful reading of the document itself. It is an attempt to redirect the education of children towards the collection of left wing opinions that have captured the Australian universities over the past fifty years.

ACARA has gone to great lengths to ensure that such criticism cannot become part of the official feed-back that they have called for. It says it wants your feedback, but it wants it inserted into an electronic copy of the draft curriculum alongside specific topics which are repeated many times, thus involving you in a very lengthy, time consuming process whereby the structure and content of the curriculum will remain unchanged and your criticisms will appear as margin notes to their document.

It does not seem to have occurred to ACARA that there might be criticisms which go to the fundamental assumptions of what is, in every respect, a vague, generalised document whose details (where the devil always lurks) are missing (although there are occasions when the devil does emerge from between the type).

Good teachers will continue to make the most of it; but in the long run it will be the children who will be denied their literacy and literacy is, after all, the first visible sign of civilization, of the conscious cultivation of human reason.

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About the Author

David Long is a lawyer and writer with an interest in classical political philosophy and Shakespeare. He has written previously for The Bulletin and The Review.

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Creative Commons LicenseThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

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