The course is broken into four parts. Your English language skills and your textual analysis skills will be increasingly challenged and refined by the topics studied. You will be assessed through spoken and written assignments during each part of the course.
The focus of this part is to explore how people are influenced in thought and culture by the language they use. It will also investigate how languages change and adapt to suit the cultural context. Each topic will consider a different aspect of language and culture and explore case study examples as well as developing your own language skills.
This part of the course will explore the different ways language is used to communicate in the mass media. We will explore the different potentials for educational, political or ideological influence of the media and investigate the way language and images inform, persuade or entertain.
The purpose of the part is to master detailed analysis of literature, explore texts and their relation to context, and develop oral commentary skills. We will be studying these texts in preparation for the oral commentary assessment. You will get an extract of 40 lines from one of the texts, and your spoken analysis of the extract will be recorded under timed conditions.
Start with the following videos and reading for context and interpretation
Accidental Death of an Anarchist
You will find the Language A: language and literature subject outline will answer most questions about assessment, but you should read the complete guide to be familiar with all expectations of the course.
There are four assessment objectives for the course. These are summarised here but see page 10 of the guide for more details.
It is important you become confident with the language and terminology used in the course guide. The descriptions below should help you with some of the basic language but you need to spend time making sure you fully understand any new terms.
From the perspective of critical literacy a text is any visual or written information. In expressing a thought, idea, belief or facts a text is designed to make an impression upon the reader. The construction of this impression is what we will learn to interpret as critical readers, and will learn to create as writers. Once a writer has decided on the message or purpose of the text, they will normally choose the genre or text type to best address the intended audience.
For the composition of a text to be most effective a writer needs to consider lexical cohesion and the careful use of literary devices suited to the genre. The genre will also define the structure of the text. For further analysis we also need to consider the context and page layout
By adopting this detailed approach of New Criticism to a text you will be able to both analyse with detail and specificity, and understand what it would take to recreate texts of this type.
Context is the social environment in which a text is produced. Context might be historic, cultural, economic, political, religious, gendered, ethnic or ideological. The social context will influence what texts are produced and how they are interpreted. You must learn to recognise contextual factors and the influence they have on a text. Understanding how different audiences might react to texts due to their different contexts will be a significant part of your reading and writing process.
Texts have multiple meanings and interpretations. It is important to remember that there is no "right" answer, responses are subjective and often conflicting. In learning to be a critical reader you need to identify and explain the many factors that influence you responses to texts. Through self-reflection, reasoning and critical theory you will understand more about why you respond the way you do, and when and why other readers might interpret texts differently.
Interpretation requires exploration of the construction and the meaning of texts. Some important terms are context, genre, denotation and connotation.
Literary Criticism and Linguistic analysis of texts will help you develop and explain a variety of interpretations.
Your ability to compose careful, accurate, precise English suited to a variety of styles and situations is a major part of the course assessment. It is vital to spend time developing and practicing writing skills and perfecting your style.
Clarity, variety, effective intonation and adaptability are key speaking skills you will need to demonstrate through the course assessments. In both formal and informal oral activities, showing eloquence and sophistication in your ability to speak English is essential. Practice and self criticism will ensure you progress through the course.
There are lots of brilliant resources available to help you perfect and refine you accuracy of English. Make use of them.