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Saturday, February 15, 2020

Authors and Authority


There's a collection of memes that have retained some currency among teenagers these last few years and they're aimed squarely at the not-so-humble English teacher. In the simplest terms, it goes:

AUTHOR: "The curtains were blue"
ENGLISH TEACHER: *Insert analysis that seems over-the-top and ignores the fact that curtains are sometimes just blue*

At some point, sometimes perhaps only on the most symbolic of levels, the English teacher has to do battle with the senior English student as said student asserts that not everything can be analysed from an English standpoint. This debate can be fun and, in a way, plays right into the teacher's hands as it involves students exercising their critical thinking skills and forming independent opinions. In laying groundwork for the Year 11 'Reading to Write' Common Module, however, it also provides an opportunity to talk about something completely different to the merits of metaphor and analysis: the concept of literary authority. 

On this subject, the French semiotician Roland Barthes famously said,
"The birth of the reader must be at the cost of the death of the author"
We can use this quote to introduce students to the concepts of post-modernism and literary authority. The idea that an author doesn't get the final say on what they write is a genuinely unsettling question for many students to deal with, and the debates that arise from this can be challenging and disruptive to even the teacher's concept of what English is all about. At the heart of this idea though is something that gets to the very core of our role as teachers...

We teach with the aim of relinquishing our authority as knowledge-holders, and we teach to empower the student to become their own authority on the text. 

This isn't a straight-forward exchange or journey, and the success rate inevitably varies, but if even just one of our students becomes confident and equipped enough to develop a contrary opinion backed by their own judiciously-selected evidence... then this is the apotheosis of teaching, is it not?

Perhaps the quote should be:
"The birth of the student must be at the cost of the death of the teacher"
In engaging teenagers with such a challenging idea it becomes necessary to break it down and develop material that will re-contextualise academic theory within a 21st century adolescent space. I've included a PowerPoint below that went some way towards helping my current Year 11 Advanced English students.
  • Slide 1 - Students engage with both sides of the debate via the Roland Barthes quote and one of the previously mentioned memes.
  • Slide 2 - Students engage with a popular online meme to break down the idea of looking at a text from multiple points of view. This text, supposedly drawn by a young child, gives a straightforward account of a young student's current home life. In isolation, the text can be viewed as an authentic example of the unreliable narrator - a storyteller who is unwilling or unable to relate the reality of the events around them. The point here is that students are asked to consider four separate ways of 'reading' the text; the ultimate goal being to disrupt/challenge the concept of the author having ultimate authority over the meaning of the text. 
  • Slide 3 - Examine a range of statements that reposition the concept of authority and authorship. Students are then asked to assign each statement a score based on how much they are in agreement with it. The class can then decide (argue) over the placement of each statement on a line that shows a spectrum of agreement/non-agreement. [Numeracy in English. Nice!]
Here's the PowerPoint: Authors and Authority.

Tuesday, February 11, 2020

Literacy and the Orca

Screenshot from the documentary Blackfish
Prospective English teachers (student teachers at university) are often told that the English method can be applied to every kind of text. One of the few parts of the senior syllabus that pays lip service to this is the Craft of Writing module in Year 12, in which informative texts are mentioned as one of the genres of writing that students will explore. Strangely though, despite this being mentioned in the module descriptor, there are no informative texts in the Module C prescriptions list nor is it expected for students to interact or engage with informative texts in the HSC Examination.

So why is it there?

If we consider that the HSC Examination implies the endpoint of what a student is expected to learn (in my mind it's the only truly summative assessment in the entire course of a student's primary and secondary schooling) then the logic follows that the curriculum for each stage should be backward-mapped from here. Yes, we don't asses informative texts in the HSC Examination, but the inclusion of this idea in the module descriptor is intended to support the literacy of our students. 

There is no specific Literacy subject in Stage 6 yet literacy is an integral part of our learning. The public is fixated on it, the government is fixated on it, and the media is fixated on it. We have NAPLAN and Minimum HSC Standards and PAT Testing but all of these things exist outside of the KLAs. We're often told that literacy should be taught in all subjects (and to some degree it is) but it often falls onto the shoulders of the English subject to show leadership in relation to it because reading and writing is our area. And it is - inescapably - embedded into the content dot points of our syllabus outcomes in ways that it isn't for other KLAs. 

The point I'm making here is that we should be building the understanding of our students in regard to reading informative texts because it's a key part of literacy. Having a sophisticated understanding of informative texts and how they work isn't going to be assessed directly in the HSC Examinations but it will be assessed indirectly in the sense that this kind of understanding is of invaluable benefit to students when they undertake a range of examinations across a range of KLAs. 

Where the Orcas Come In
In Year 10 at my school we have a unit of work called 'Charity and Change' that focuses on students identifying a charitable cause and pitching their own charity for a fictional sum of funding. In preparation for their project on this, the students are currently undertaking a case study on the documentary Blackfish and the issues it examines in relating to Orca captivity. In order to contextualise this it's necessary for students to have an understanding of what Orcas are and what their historical relationship with humans has been. 

In a sociology subject it would be fine to just have students examine the information directly, however, in English it becomes harder to link something as straightforward as this to the outcomes for Stage 5, especially if you've already created an assessment task that's tied into particular outcomes (in this case, EN5-1A, EN5-2A and EN5-8D). In order to make good use of a context lesson like this it can become a case of combing through the English syllabus content dot points in order to find windows into the requisite skills that will assist students in reading this genre of text.

So, before I get to the reading skills, I wanted to first have an information sheet supports the watching of Blackfish by covering the following content:
  • What an Orca is and how it operates in the wild
  • What makes them 'special' in terms of their intelligence
  • The relationship between Orcas and the Yuin Aboriginal people of the South-East Australian coast
  • The broader relationship between Orcas and human societies
  • The current ecological status of Orcas 
All of this is included in this sheet: Orca Information

Then in terms of the skills that students would be using to read the text this is where the English outcomes needed to come in. I ended up finding the following content dot points to support this:
  • EN5-2A: use comprehension strategies to compare and contrast information within and between texts, identifying and analysing embedded perspectives, and evaluating supporting evidence
  • EN5-8D: examine how language is used to express contemporary cultural issues
  • EN5-8D: explain and analyse cultural assumptions in texts, including texts by and about Aboriginal Australians
These have been used to construct some questions that will scaffold students in gaining a greater awareness of the processes we employ when reading informative texts. These questions should redirect student focus into using particular reading skills, such as:
  • The strategies used to comprehend informative texts - such as the conventions used to structure said texts
  • The ability to recognise perspectives
  • Identifying where evidence has been used to support an argument or point
  • Looking more closely at word choices and why they've been made
  • Examining the Aboriginal perspective and contrasting attitudes that relate to it
A sheet of these questions can be found here: Orca Questions

The questions are broken up paragraph by paragraph so students don't get lost in the text. As 'whole text' comprehension isn't one of the skills being taught here it therefore becomes a waste of time not to direct student attention to specific parts of the text.

Happy reading!

Some Further Reading:
Eden: Paradise and Purgatory by the Sea - my visit to the Eden Killer Whale Museum 
Killer Whales Learn to Speak Dolphin - an interesting article on the concept of dolphin 'accents' and 'dialects' 
Defenders of Wildlife: Orca - a site with a lot of information about a specific Orca population 
The History of Whaling in Twofold Bay - the curious story of 'Old Tom', the Orca that worked alongside human whalers in Eden and Boydtown

Saturday, February 1, 2020

Standard Module A: Language, Identity and Culture

Some of the texts in Module A for Standard English
Before we get stuck into the prescriptions for Standard Module A: Language, Identity and Culture, here's a quick break-down in terms of representation.

Regarding text types, this module includes:
  • 1 fiction novel
  • 1 memoir
  • 1 suite of short stories
  • 2 suites of poetry 
  • 3 plays
  • 1 documentary
  • 2 films
In terms of authorship, it breaks down as thus:
  • 7 male composers, 9 female composers
  • 14 Australian authors (2 of whom are Aboriginal, 7 Asian-Australian), 1 British, 1 Jamiacan-British
  • 7 of the texts were created in the 21st century, 1 in the 1990s, 1 in the 1950s, 1 in the 1910s, and 1 approximately in the late 19th century.
Prose Fiction Options
There are two options in this part of the module; a collection of short stories and a novel. The novel in this section is the only text in the module written by a non-white, non-Australian author.

Short Stories by Henry Lawson
  • The Drover's Wife
  • The Union Buries Its Dead
  • Shooting the Moon
  • Our Pipes
  • The Loaded Dog
What is it: This suite of short stories covers a range of themes from Australia's colonial period. 'The Drover's Wife' and 'The Union Buries Its Dead' deal with the harsh reality of colonial life in the Australian bush; 'Shooting the Moon' tells a smirking story of fiscal irresponsibility and forged loyalties; 'Our Pipes' uses the symbol of the smoking pipe to explore coming-of-age, identity, and loss, and 'The Loaded Dog' tells the humorous tale of a dog running around with a live explosive in its mouth.

Scope for Study: Context will be key here, especially if working with students from multiple cultural backgrounds. The texture of Lawson's short stories can be hard to get a contemporary grasp on when read quietly and without an understanding of what life was like for white Australians in the second half of the 19th century. Students will need to experience the stories aloud, as if listening to an eloquent raconteur around a fire, and with glossaries on hand to translate the now antiquated colloquialisms that pepper Lawson's narratives.

NESA Annotations: As far as I can tell, there are no annotations for these Henry Lawson short stories in any of the three Annotations documents released by NESA.

Verdict: I'm unsure of this one. I can see the merit in doing this as part of a comparative study but I think, in isolation as a textual study of its own, it would be an increasingly hard sell to win over Standard English students. I'm not even sure if 'The Loaded Dog' is all that funny either. It ends with a bunch of dogs getting blown to pieces and all the characters laughing about it... 'uproarious' isn't a term I'd use for this! Some of the stories are fascinating from a historical standpoint when considered alongside an understanding of yesteryear's values, but I think an examination would need to be made about the absence of Aboriginal representation (aside from racist references in 'The Drover's Wife'). As a Prescribed Text, I think this would live or die on the basis of an individual teacher's passion for it or on the cultural context of the students studying it. 

Small Island by Andrea Levy
What is it: In 1948 London, with the bombings and war with Hitler now over, Queenie Bligh finds herself without her husband and in need of an income. Flying in the face of the attitudes of the times, Queenie opens her house up to Jamaican boarders, most notably former RAF Airman Gilbert Joseph and his newlywed wife Hortense. The West Indian migrants have come to England in search of a better future but instead find a country cold and largely unaccepting of their skin colour. Meanwhile, after disappearing into a military prison in India, Queenie's long-lost husband Bernard begins to make his way back home... 

Scope for Study: Small Island provides fertile ground for exploring complex issues relating to the Jamaican diaspora and England - notably the impact of colonialism and the extra dimensions this brings to the immigration narrative, the role of racism in shaping inter-cultural relations, and the degree to which identity is tied to place. Students will also need to contend with the role of language through the text's use of Jamaican and British dialects in its portrayal of multiple first person perspectives.

NESA Annotations: Annotations for Small Island can be found in the 2015-2020 document, with reference to the text's inclusion in the old Standard English 'Distinctive Voices' Elective for Module A. The novel's value is highlighted through Levy's winning of multiple awards, as well as its skillful exploration of "themes of prejudice, empire, war and love". Other aspects identified by the annotations are: the text's historical authenticity, the use of extensive flashbacks to create a non-linear narrative, the use of multiple narrative points of view, and the language utilised to craft the distinctive voices of the four protagonists.

Verdict: It's a nice book and I'd probably enjoy it outside of an educational context. But as a text intended for Standard English students to study? I just don't see how it could ever work. For starters, it's over 500 pages along. Then add in the fact that the narrative is quite complex in its use of four separate viewpoints (two of which are rendered in the Jamaican-English dialect), and that the plot unfolds across five years in three different countries. If a teacher somehow saw past all of this and was brave enough to try it with a Standard English class then there's a whole other issue to contend with as well - that of probable parental complaints. Some scenes are quite sexually graphic, and one scene in particular depicts racially-charged sexual violence with an underage prostitute. It boggles my mind how this particular book ended up on this list.   

Poetry / Drama Options
The largest amount of options for this module fall in this section, and this is where I suspect the majority of schools draw their Poetry/Drama text from. There are two sets of poetry, and three plays to choose from.

Contemporary Asian Australian Poets edited by Adam Aitken, Kim Cheng Boey and Michelle Cahill
  • 'This is Where it Begins' by Merlinda Bobis
  • 'Home' by Mariam Wei Wei Lo
  • 'New Accents' by Ouyang Yu
  • 'Mother' by Vuong Pham
  • 'Circular Breathing' by Jaya Savige
  • 'Translucent Jade' by Maureen Ten
What is it: Six Asian-Australian poets from a diverse range of backgrounds explore themes relating to identity and culture. 'This is Where it Begins' looks at the role of storytelling as a cultural event, 'Home' examines the multiple definitions of home that inform the persona's viewpoint of the concept, and 'New Accents' utilises humour and brevity to poignantly lay bare the shame, burden, impact, and prejudices that arise from a migrant's mispronunciation of words. In 'Mother' the persona compares the hopes and dreams of a Vietnamese refugee with that of her privileged daughter, and 'Translucent Jade' considers the idea of cultural heritage being bound up in objects. Finally, the poem 'Circular Breathing' muses on the concept of a connection between the persona and Aboriginal culture.

Scope for Study: The breadth of styles in the poetry of these six poets makes it difficult to create a thesis of study based solely on structure and technique (which is for the best, really!). Instead, students will need to consider the shared 'Asian-Australian' experience and other themes that arise from this, such as the relationship between the past and the present, the role of culture in forging identity, and the sincere wish of each poet in wanting to better navigate the awkward space between the two cultures they inhabit.

NESA Annotations: There are two sets of annotations in the 2019-2023 NESA Annotations document - one for Standard and one for EAL/D. The Standard section asserts that students will develop empathy through their engagement with different perspectives and representations. Stylistic elements of poetry that are singled out for examination include: stanzaic patterns, enjambment, repetition, bilingualism, wordplay, figurative language, and descriptive language. The annotations also suggest that students should reflect on the 'intercultural insights' offered by the poetry in relation to contemporary Australian society.

Verdict: This option is unique among all the Prescriptions in that it is thematically-unified rather than the work of just one author. As such, it presents certain challenges, however, the poetry itself is still quite accessible for Standard English students. Provided that the teacher supplies the level of support needed to understand context, annotate the poems, and write personal responses to the themes therein, I can see this being a rewarding learning experience for our students.  

Inside My Mother by Ali Cobby Eckermann
  • Trance
  • Unearth
  • Oombulgarri
  • Eyes
  • Leaves
  • Key
What is it: This suite of Eckermann's poetry weaves a sparse yet evocative tapestry that taps into the processes of memory, the complex modern connection to culture, the ongoing trauma of the Aboriginal peoples in the wake of the Stolen Generations, and the problematic spaces that exist between the poet and her ancestors. 

Scope for Study: When considering this text Standard English students will be able to connect with various elements that have allowed Eckermann to create meaning through poetry. Among these are the poet's rejection of most forms of punctuation, the use of imagery and sensory descriptions to orient the reader in the poet's memories and thoughts, and the employment of structure to separate or combine ideas into a narrative. Teachers will also need to examine Eckermann's context as a survivor of the Stolen Generations and how her experiences are represented through her poetry in order to build and support student understanding.

NESA Annotations: Being quite a new text (published in 2015), 'Inside My Mother' has only been included in the latest 2019-2023 Annotations document. Recommendations are made to focus on the poet's personal experiences as supporting material for the selected poetry, and for each poem to be viewed "as a synecdoche for the loss of cultural identity". Students are also encouraged to consider the importance of family as a central concept in Aboriginal culture and the ways in which this is reflected in the text.

Verdict: Eckermann has been touted by some as the logical successor to Oodgeroo's legacy, which is quite a big claim but not entirely unfounded. It's just a shame that the poems selected are almost uniformly in the same three-lines-a-stanza style, especially when there are many other poems in the volume that don't follow this structure and creatively play with space and indentation in the 'concrete' style. The inclusion of the latter in particular would've worked really well with helping to 'sell' poetry to Standard English students as an intriguing and highly imaginative art form. I don't know if I could ever see myself teaching this text, I think I'd just feel disappointed that I couldn't use some of more inventive poetry within the volume that hasn't been prescribed.

Summer of the Seventeenth Doll by Ray Lawler 
What is it: It is 1953 and Melbourne woman Olive patiently awaits the arrival of Roo, a cane cutter from Queensland who travels south every summer to be with her. This is the seventeenth of these summers, and Roo's co-traveller Barney finds himself single once again after his lover Nancy has decided to get married in his seasonal absence. Olive is looking to fix Barney up with her fellow barmaid Pearl, a widowed single mother with reservations about the idea of an ongoing seasonal romance. Things become complicated in this fateful summer when Roo and Barney arrive with some news - Roo has hurt his back and may no longer be able to continue in the harsh work of the sugar cane harvest.

Scope for Study: In reference to Module A, Summer of the Seventeenth Doll offers a portrait of Australian life in another time. In the post-WWII context, cane-cutting was quickly becoming increasingly industrialised and no longer relied on the heavy hands-on input of the 'cane cockies'. Through its examination of this shift, the play offers a snapshot of the end of pre-multicultural Australia - a text written as the industry (and country) was undergoing significant cultural changes in response to the arrival of post-war migrants. Students will be able to examine this context and draw connections between the era and the characters - their dialects and values, the way their personal decisions and word choices are shaped by 1950s Australian morality, and the way in which the plot and structure of the play reflects a world in turmoil and decline.

NESA Annotations: Notes for this text can be found in the 2015-2020 Annotations document. Special note is made of its 'groundbreaking' use of Australian colloquial language and 'distinctly Australian characters', and themes that are particular to Australian society: 'mateship', nostalgia vs. pragmatism, the different kinds of adult relationships acceptable in 1950s Australian society, etc. The annotations also suggest that students compare and contrast the 'voices' of each of the play's characters and the ways in which they represent changing values in Australia at the time.

Verdict: It didn't take me long to read this one because it was so fan-bloody-tastic. I really felt the poignancy of the dying world presented by Ray Lawler, even moreso when you consider that he wrote this at the very time that it's set. It's so prescient and really cuts to the core of Anglo-Australian society in an unsentimental way, and the ending was like a strike of lightning. I think the potential for students to connect with this probably depends on how well the context is taught but, like most context-heavy texts, it will fall into place once enough groundwork is laid. Students should be able to 'get' the themes at its heart with little issue, and the dialogue feels authentic despite the gulf of years between the play's initial performance and the modern day.

Pygmalion by Bernard Shaw
What is it: Quite by chance, the academic phonetics expert Mr. Higgins meets a lower class flower girl called Eliza Doolittle outside the theatre one night and is taken by her accent. Eliza, hoping to better herself, seeks out Higgins afterwards to get tutored in 'speaking proper'. Higgins sees this as an opportunity to conduct an experiment in conquering the strictures of class, and the two begin a troubled journey that sees Eliza transformed (for better or worse) and Higgins challenged in regard to his amorality.

Scope for Study: Some contextual study will be needed to support Standard English students, specifically in understanding why Shaw saw a need to write this now iconic play. Coming at the end of the fin de siecle, the play presents the final days of the class system in England and reflects the rising class consciousness that had eroded the foundations of European society in the 19th century. Shaw's text comes at this issue sideways by highlighting vocabulary and dialect as symbols of class, with a theme of vocabulary being the key to articulating and understanding other people's thoughts. In a nutshell, students will need to understand the relationship between class and language in order to successful engage with Pygmalion.

NESA Annotations: None of the last three NESA Annotations documents (from 2009 to the present day) include annotations for Pygmalion. Bernard Shaw's play has popped on and off the Prescribed Texts list for, I suspect, at least 100 years, so I'm guessing the assumption here seems to be that we should all know it well enough to not need annotations.

Verdict: Pygmalion is undoubtedly a classic and its humour still holds up today, especially considering the ongoing divisions between Australia's own haves and have-nots. Due to its age I think it would be a challenging text to teach to a Standard English class, but not impossible - it just requires passion from the teacher and strong linking to context. Teachers will need to be wary of some of the nuances of language that have radically changed in connotation since the play's initial publication, for example, the line "you know you can't be a nice girl inside if you're a dirty slut outside" will unavoidably be a talking point with students, so you will need to be both brave and very sure of how you want to teach it. 

Shafana and Aunt Sarrinah by Alana Valentine
What is it: Shafana is a young Afghan-Australian woman who is studying science at university. Her closest relative and mentor is her aunt, Sarrinah, who has struggled to find skilled work in Australia due to her engineering qualifications not being formerly recognised in this country. In the course of working on a university assignment, Shafana has rediscovered her faith in Islam and is considering wearing the hijab. In seeking her aunt's blessing, however, Shafana finds that the older woman sees the religious veil as a barrier that will hold Shafana back in Australian society.

Scope for Study: Shafana and Aunt Sarrinah is a perfectly pitched text for Standard English in that it is challenging (in language, construction, and theme) whilst being relatively short. The brevity of this two-character play is such that it will allow plenty of time to examine the issues that are raised and the motifs that tie the text together. Students will need to be orientated to consider the play as a narrative set during the fallout of 9/11, an event that looms a lot larger in the teacher's psyche than it does for those who were born after it happened. Another challenge that the teacher will need to consider is how to present the text to a class - as a two-character piece it doesn't lend itself well to a whole class reading, and would probably be better absorbed as a presentation in which two teachers play the characters.

NESA Annotations: This text was first introduced in the last Prescribed Texts list as part of the previous Standard English Module C and, as such, annotations can be found in the 2015-2020 Annotations document. The text is described as significant due to its connection to the earlier multiculturally-themed 1968 play Norm and Ahmed. Attention is also paid to the play's role in challenging the negative attitudes that some students may hold towards Islam as a result of the media, particularly in relation to stereotypes regarding Muslim women and the impact of 9/11. 

Verdict: As it's written by a non-Afghan writer Shafana and Aunt Sarrinah could be viewed as problematic, however, there are several elements that may mitigate this, such as the author's close collaboration with refugees and the Afghan-Australian community. There is some scope here for students to engage with the marginalisation of voices in a multicultural society, and there will be many points that prompt class-wide discussion. I haven't taught this text but several colleagues at my school have, and it's worth noting that there were particular students who refused to engage with the text as a result of their own prejudices. Student performance in assessment tasks reflected this and, with that in mind, I feel that this might therefore be better utillised as a Year 11 text rather than something that performance in the HSC hinges on (not that we have that choice, just something to keep in mind next time teachers are consulted on the English syllabus).
 
Nonfiction / Film / Media Options
There are four options in this section, some of which might arguably be considered some of the more obscure texts to be featured in the overall Prescriptions. One is a non-fiction book, and the other three are films.

Unpolished Gem by Alice Pung
What is it: The author, a Cambodian-Chinese refugee, relates her upbringing in the Footscray area of Melbourne. With the use of an episode structure, Unpolished Gem charts Alice's beginnings as part of a family navigating their way through a new cultural landscape after escaping the horror of Pol Pot's Year Zero, her teenage depression when faced with crippling questions about her future, and the difficulties she faces in starting a romantic relationship with a 'skip' Australian.

Scope for Study: Unpolished Gem is a fairly accessible text for Standard English teenagers in that it utilises an authentic and honest voice to examine the intersection of two very different cultures with a lot of humour. Students will be able to engage with this humour and examine the way it disarms and cajoles the reader into identifying with Alice in her role as a figure trapped between two worlds. There is also scope for introducing the narrative device of 'stream-of-consciousness', which Pung employs increasingly in the last third of the memoir, signifying her journey towards self-actualisation.

NESA Annotations: No other text (that I've come across so far) has as many entries in the various NESA Annotation documents as Unpolished Gem. It is featured twice in the 2009-2014 annotations, both as a Standard and an ESL text, and again as an ESL text in the 2015-2020 annotations. From a Standard English viewpoint, the annotations support the now defunct Standard Module C Into the World Elective and highlight the importance of this text as providing an access point for students of South-East Asian heritage. The rest of the annotations don't really go too much beyond a few generalised comments about 'different narrative techniques' and 'aspects of Australian history'.

Verdict: Unlike the majority of the other texts in this list, which are largely monocultural or presented from a monocultural viewpoint, Unpolished Gem closely examines the nature of a hyphenated identity. Pung operates in a space between her Cantonese-speaking parents and wider Australian society, which adds a layer of internal conflict to the narrative that pulls together the various chapters set across a 19 year time period. We witness Pung's loss of language through her eyes and the impact that language can have on a family living in a new land. Perhaps most importantly, Unpolished Gem is a very worthy text because it encourages empathy and lets students see inside the experiences of someone who has lived the refugee experience.

One Night the Moon, directed by Rachel Perkins
What is it: Real life family Paul Kelly, Kaarin Fairfax, and Memphis Kelly play the Ryans, a colonial family living in the remote outback of Australia during the 1930s. One night daughter Emily climbs out the window to follow the moon into the wilderness and disappears, prompting a frantic manhunt led by her father Jim. The local police enlist the assistance of an Aboriginal tracker named Albert Yang, however, Jim's racist attitudes prevent the man from helping, and the search begins to look hopeless as a result.

Scope for Study: One Night the Moon is an unusual text within the Prescriptions List as it is both a musical and a non-feature film (too long to be considered a short film, too short to be considered a 'movie'). It is also an extremely valuable text as it is directed by an Aboriginal filmmaker, Rachel Perkins (daughter of famed activist Charles Perkins) and thus provides an Aboriginal voice on issues relating to Aboriginal identity and culture within the colonial context. The film features a lot of material that bears student examination, such as: the use of dutch angles, the purpose of each song, the employment of an elliptical structure for the narrative, and the contrast between Aboriginal and European viewpoints.

NESA Annotations: Covered in the 2015-2020 Annotations document, where it was included as part of the Distinctive Voices elective. Themes mentioned include loss, reconciliation, prejudice, and distinctive cultural values and perspectives. Mention is also made of the film's use of multiple genres (such as the 'opera film', fable genre, and the Australian 'lost child' myth) to create a "visually rich portrait of the unique Australian landscape". On a side note, it's unfortunate and disappointing to see such a relatively recent document using the word 'Aborigines'.

Verdict: This is a beautiful film and, while some Standard English students may roll their eyes at the use of country/folk ballads throughout, its brevity and relative straight-forwardness will make it accessible for study. Perkins' vibrant and organically loose camera movement gives the proceedings an ethereal atmosphere while keeping things moving along, and it's also interesting watching Paul Kelly in the only acting role he's ever undertaken. An examination of context, irony, and the way One Night the Moon utilises musical genres will also allow students to gain an appreciation for the disparity between (and inability of) the colonial and Aboriginal worlds to co-exist in the early 20th century.

The Castle, directed by Rob Sitch
What is it: The Kerrigans are a typical Australian family living in the Melbourne suburb of Coolaroo. When the government informs everyone on their street that their homes are about to be absorbed so that a multinational company can expand the airport, patriarch Darryl Kerrigan is appalled and dismayed. Darryl decides to fight the matter in the High Court of Australia by rallying the support of his neighbours and enlisting the help of a shonky low-level lawyer. The odds have never looked worse!

Scope for Study: The Castle should be well-known to a good portion of Standard English students due to both its perennial showing on free-to-air TV and its cult following among several generations of Australians. Drilling down into its use of humour and shared lexicon will only go as far as the teacher is able to link it to student experience, and attention will therefore need to be paid to highlighting the inherent 'Australian-ness' of the text that has both made it so popular in Australia and so indifferently received in overseas markets.

NESA Annotations: Another one where NESA have not provided annotations in any of the three Annotation documents from the last ten years.

Verdict: I love The Castle but my experience teaching it was with an ESL class where the majority of the migrant students did not get the humour at all. Truth be told, it was a very labouring and strange experience to see so many of its best jokes fall completely flat with an audience that, even after understanding why it was considered funny, would shrug and say 'so what?' Humour is, of course, highly subjective. I think it would be useful to gauge what sort of class you have before attempting to teach this one.

Reindeer in My Saami Heart, directed by Janet Merewether
What is it: In this documentary Australian filmmaker Janet Merewether visits northern Sweden to interview Inghilda Tapio, a poet and one of the Saami, Scandinavia's indigenous people. Tapio recounts a childhood of discrimination in which the Swedish government practised policies of dehumanisation and cultural destruction, and compares this to the contemporary struggles of the Saami people in their attempt to hold onto their reindeer-oriented culture.

Scope for Study: Students will be able to draw parallels between the history and experiences of the Saami people with the Stolen Generations. Reindeer in My Saami Heart also provides scope for Standard English students to engage with sophisticated concepts such as the power of language to represent experience and the ongoing battle of indigenous peoples the world over to resist the Eurocentric colonisation of the mind. The documentary is also open to study in its use of a rich sound design and traditional artwork to recreate the nomadic and ancient lifestyle of the Saami. Teachers will also do well to examine the film's intertextual ties with Tapio's own poetry.

NESA Annotations: Like Contemporary Asian Australian Poets, this text has two sets of annotations in the 2019-2023 NESA Annotations document - one for Standard and one for EAL/D. The Standard section highlights Tapio's role as an advocate for an ethnic minority, and calls attention to the construction of the documentary from a range of materials that utilise pathos to provoke an  emotional response from the viewer. The annotations also identify the maintenance of Saami language as crucial to the survival of indigenous culture.

Verdict: The story of the Saami is a fascinating one and is, in most cases, something completely unknown to Australian teenagers. Reindeer in My Saami Heart will probably therefore challenge the views of students in relation to the indigenous world as not something restricted to just Australia or America. That said, it has to be admitted that this documentary's gentle, poetic style may be alienating to Standard English students and, on a practical level, it's one of the harder texts to track down on the Prescriptions List. I think it would take a special kind of Standard English class to engage well with this film.