Accreditation period Units 1–4: 2024–2028
Sample teaching and learning activities
Unit 1
Outcome 1
Identify and describe primary aspects of the nature and functions of human language.
Examples of learning activities
Detailed example
Collect a range of text types in the written mode to explore how the language choices made in those texts are influenced by the function, tenor and contexts.
For example:
- students collect two types of writing: an advertisement on a food item and an informative food label; compare both types, exploring how they are similar or different in terms of language choice
- students collect recipes aimed at children and recipes aimed at adults and analyse how language differs when it is aimed at different audiences
- students compare a spoken recipe with a written recipe and analyse how different modes influence different language choices.
Outcome 2
Identify and describe types of language acquisition, and to discuss and investigate language acquisition in the context of linguistic theories.
Examples of learning activities
Detailed example
Linguistic Investigation / Fieldwork
- Determine a research question related to an element of the key knowledge, for example:
What characteristics of language acquisition are evident in children at a particular period?
This question can be further refined and tested by the fieldwork / investigation, for example:
How do samples of language use by children between the ages of two and three support the theory of Universal Grammar? - Determine subjects for study, for example:
Clips of children speaking on YouTube or another online site, siblings, friends, children at an early childhood centre or kindergarten. - Discuss and explore the issues of consent. If observing children in family or educational settings that are not online, how do you organise permission.
For more detailed information about seeking consent, see the
Fieldwork implementation on-demand video - Determine relevant data to be collected. This can include observational notes based on non-invasive observations and / or recordings.
- Review data collection, annotate notes and transcribe recordings if desired.
- Develop a summary of findings based on analysis of data and consider in light of the original question.
Produce a short report based on the fieldwork process
Unit 2
Outcome 1
Identify and describe language change and its effects on the English language and analyse attitudes to language change.
Examples of learning activities
Detailed example
Develop a fact file of key information about each topic in the chosen elective option.
Each fact file could contain:
- A Cornell notetaking sheet for each topic:
- students undertake guided reading or guided research on each topic
- this could be jigsawed in groups and then collated
- Annotated texts for each topic, demonstrating the influences on language:
- students could access their own texts or have these provided
- using a gradual release model, support student annotations of texts
- subsystems provide a framework for the nature of annotations, in addition to contextual factors organised around technological, socio-cultural and socio-political concepts
- A written analysis which synthesises each topic into a cohesive summary, using annotated texts as evidence:
- this could be a guided analytical commentary, or structured as a research essay.
Outcome 2
Identify and explain the effects of the global spread of English through spoken and written texts.
Examples of learning activities
Detailed example
Create a text (spoken or written) in a variety of English spoken by, for example, Italian speakers or Sinhalese speakers or Vietnamese speakers or Chinese speakers or African speakers etc. Students can choose from a wide range of domains (for example, food, travel, festival etc.) and text types or genre (advertisement, a poem, a short story, an interview, travel guide or information brochure etc.) to create the texts. Their texts must be accompanied by:
- an explanation of how the cultural context influences the language features [lexical choices, syntax, semantics, discourse features etc.]
- an analysis of how it varies from Standard English
- a commentary on how this variety maintains its distinctiveness and functions as a marker of identity for its users.
Unit 3
Examples of learning activities
General introduction to formality / informality
Outcome 1
Identify, describe and analyse distinctive features of informal language in written and spoken texts.
Examples of learning activities
- Record and transcribe a short segment of a television program and examine the features of spontaneous spoken language and, in multimodal texts, examine the importance of body language and paralinguistic cues. Suitable programs could include
The Project,
Q&A,
You Can’t Ask That,
Frankly,
One Plus One,
The Cook Up with Adam Liaw.
- Examine a transcript of a telephone conversation or a segment of talkback radio and discuss the significance of back channelling and other strategies in spoken discourse.
- Use YouTube to listen to the stand-up routines of comedians, for example at the annual Melbourne International Comedy Festival
- discuss why most comedians use informal language features in their prepared routines; current Australian comedians can include: Steph Tisdell, Nazeem Hussein, Celia Pacquola, Jordan Raskopoulos, Hannah Gadsby, Tom Ballard.
- what effect does the use of informal language have on their audience and the success of their routine?
- Consider when, how and why we ‘play’ with language when interacting with small children, friends, family members and partners
- what innovative words or catchphrases are unique to students’ families or friendship groups?
- Write a list of expressions that are particular to a workplace or other professions which would not be considered Standard English; discuss when and why these words are used.
- Examine the Classification website and discuss the issue of swearing; consider how words can lose their intensifying effect over time.
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Explore the characteristics and features of informal texts through a specific field.
- Read some of Danny Katz’s writing in The Age newspaper; in groups, discuss the language features and structures which contribute to the informal register which is characteristic of Katz’s writing.
- Select two students to discuss an interesting event which occurred recently, for example a party or school formal, and record this conversation; have one student write down an account of the same event; use the account and the recording to examine the syntactic and discourse features of the two texts, noting the differences between speech and writing; students could then accurately transcribe the conversation, using accepted notation.
- Look at Instagram posts for Pride Month from accounts such as RainbowRoo or Minus18. Examine how these organisations use informal language to meet the positive face needs of their readers / followers.
- Watch an episode of Hard Chat on YouTube. Examine how Tom Gleeson challenges his guests’ positive face needs within the comedic context of the ‘interview’.
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Analyse the effect informal contexts have on language choices, exploring identified online communities, like Reddit.’
Detailed example
Characteristics and features of informal texts
- As a class, list written and spoken texts from within a specific field. Students could contribute to deciding on the field but ideas include the weather, travel, fashion and health.
- The field of health, for example, could use text samples from government
Health advice, a short extract from the
Health Report, a posting on a wellness blog, a short extract from a wellness podcast, or a recording of a conversation between friends.
- In pairs, plot these texts along a continuum from most informal to most formal, and be prepared to justify the continuum in the classroom selection.
- Discuss how the situational and cultural context of each text influences its structure and language.
- Listen to a recording of an informal spoken text from the field of your choice. In the example of health, consider an extract from a wellness podcast.
- Transcribe a section and annotate, identifying the features of spoken language referred to in the study design.
- Discuss the link between the spoken language features and the context of the transcript.
- Write up notes into an extended analytical commentary.
Detailed example
Analyse the effect of informal contexts on language choices.
Analyse the characteristics and features of informal spoken English.
- Investigate a subreddit (a specific community or topic within Reddit):
- r / AustralianPolitics
- r / AusFinance
- r / australianwildlife
- r / AustralianMakeup
- r / AusMentalHealth
- Select conversations from within two different subreddits.
- Note down language that seems to be specific to that community, and language that reflects the online context.
- Discuss the different language used in the different subreddits and whether, despite the potentially serious nature of some of them (such as those to do with politics or finance), the language is still more likely to be informal due to the online context.
- Write a report discussing the various language features of subreddits.
Outcome 2
Identify, describe and analyse distinctive features of formal language in written and spoken texts.
Examples of learning activities
- In groups, select examples of formal language from a field such as education; discuss why a formal register has been used in each of these texts and the possible impact on participants’ face needs: textbooks, school website and song, reports, Principal’s assembly speech, parental correspondence, behaviour contracts.
- Collect samples of texts in a formal register from domains which generate a range of formal language texts, including the law and government; read and examine the Victorian Charter of Human Rights and Responsibilities; list in a tabular format the language features of the charter across each of the subsystems; present findings to the class as an oral presentation, short recording (audio or audio visual), PowerPoint presentation, poster or analytical commentary.
- After close reading, write an analysis of semantic patterning of a literary text; this could include extracts from poetry, novels and plays. Semantic patterning includes figurative language, irony, metaphor, oxymoron, simile, hyperbole, personification, animation, puns, lexical ambiguity.
- Identify and discuss the phonological patterning of a ballad or a hymn.
- Investigate the language characteristic in ‘oaths’, such as the ‘Olympic Oath’, ‘Scouting Promise’ or ‘Australia’s Pledge of Commitment’ for new citizens, and how the language reflects the situational and cultural contexts.
- Read a legal document such as a will, a building contract or a piece of legislation and discuss the common sentence types used, how cohesion and coherence are achieved, and the use of any jargon; discuss the prevalence of coordinating conjunctions.
Discuss the syntactic patterning present, as well as the use of semantic features; write an essay explaining the role of these semantic and syntactic patterns in creating coherence and cohesion, and how they enhance the overall effect of the speech.
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In small groups, compile a list of all the words and phrases used in society today to describe ‘death’ and ‘sex’; decide which are euphemisms and which are dysphemisms, and discuss the different connotations of each.
- Consider changes being made to the original language of, for example, Roald Dahl’s books regarding appearance and gender. Other authors whose texts have undergone similar treatment include Agatha Christie and Ian Fleming. Consider the implications of changing original language in terms of negotiating social taboos or promoting social harmony, against the preservation of literature written in different times and contexts. Students could read extracts from the original version of a novel and compare the language that has been changed in the revised version.
- Using on online thesaurus tool, list a range of words and phrases to express sympathy and condolences and examine their typical linguistic features.
- Create and transcribe conversations dealing with embarrassing or difficult topics, such as body odour, sacking an employee, breaking off a relationship, a parent / teacher interview, criticising another’s actions; discuss the language features used, including euphemisms and other politeness strategies, and how these facilitate such interactions and assist in meeting face needs.
- Compare the way that the same event (particularly something of a dramatic nature, such as a natural disaster, a death or a crime) is reported in a range of different media (print and digital); examine how lexical and syntactic choices in particular reveal assumptions about readers’ values and general knowledge. Also examine how different media groups show respect / empathy / bias / neutrality.
- Examine and analyse the language used in the websites of the major Australian political parties; explore the varying levels of formality and the way language is used positively and negatively to promote a certain point of view.
- Investigate media releases presented by the Premier or Prime Minister on different topics. (These are published on their websites.) How does their language change depending on the perceived seriousness of the issue being presented?
- Write an essay on a topic related to the use of formal language, for example ‘In this age of digital communication, is formal language an endangered species in Australian society?’
- Examine newspaper headlines for examples of passive voice and nominalisation. For example ‘Player injured, Melbourne derby abandoned after violent pitch invasion’ (The
Age, 17 December, 2022). What effect does the use of passive voice and / or nominalisation have in headlines?
- Students identify ways that they use jargon in their workplace, sport, school subjects and hobbies. How does it enable them to communicate more clearly, precisely and quickly? Consider how it allows them to show their expertise in their workplace etc.
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Explore the characteristics and features of formal texts through a government website.
Detailed example
Characteristics and features of formal texts
- Go to the website of the
Australian War Memorial and list different examples of formal language. These could include the Privacy and Copyright statements as well as information about the Memorial’s history and activities.
- Pick one text and analyse the discourse and language features which contribute to this text’s formal register. Consider lexicon, including jargon; sentence types and structures; use of passive voice; information flow; and politeness strategies.
- In groups, discuss how the language in various sections of the website is carefully constructed to present a positive image of Australia’s war involvement. Present findings to the class.
- Listen to the audio and read the transcript of Kevin Rudd’s
Apology to Australia’s Indigenous Peoples speech 2008,
Paul Keating’s Remembrance Speech 1993 or
The Uluru Statement from the Heart.
- Discuss the syntactic patterning present in each text, as well as the use of semantic features.
- Write an essay explaining the role of these semantic and syntactic patterns in creating coherence and cohesion, and how they enhance the overall effect of the text.
Detailed example
Investigate the use of euphemistic language in news media
- Collect a range of headlines that use euphemistic language. Examples could be language like ‘2GB terminates Chris Smith’s contract after Christmas party incident’ compared to ‘TV and radio presenter Chris Smith sacked from 2GB and Sky News after Christmas party scandal’.
- Organise the euphemisms into categories – death, unemployment, sex or sexuality etc.
- Which categories are more likely to be referred to euphemistically in news media? Does the news organisation reporting the issue have an impact on the language used, such as online-only news like news.com.au compared to The
Age?
- Discuss the effect that the euphemistic language has in relation to face needs, social harmony or negotiating taboos.
- Write an analysis of the types of euphemistic language used in news media and what their purposes are.
Unit 4
Outcome 1
Identify, describe and analyse varieties of English in Australian society, the attitudes towards them and the identities they reflect.
Examples of learning activities
Detailed example
- Explore the language in this video from
YouTube by transcribing the video into a spoken text. Turning on closed captioning can assist with this process.
- Using metalanguage, analyse the use of at least three features of Australian English. Label these with metalanguage and ensure you link to how they support the wider purpose and intent of the text.
- Analyse the use of patterning in this text. Find at least two examples.
- Watch the video again on
YouTube and include an annotation of the spoken features. How does this change the reading of the text?
- In groups, research the use of Australian English in advertising. Find an example from three different generations and compare and contrast. What does this tell you about an evolving or stagnant Australian identity?
Outcome 2
Identify, describe and analyse how variation in language, linguistic repertoires and language choices reflects and conveys people’s identities.
Examples of learning activities
- Revise and add to the range of definitions for ‘identity’. Provide students with a sheet with a circle on it. Ask them to add facets of their own identity as they read the definitions.
- Discuss a variety of identity features that influence the social and personal variation of English in Australia:
- specific examples for close focus include (but are not limited to) age, gender, occupation, interests, socioeconomic, aspiration, sexuality, and education
- label ‘common’ features such as phonological differences, lexis use and syntactic differences in each
- consider frequent stereotypes associated with these identities and subsequently the language features attributed to them
- Develop a character profile that includes key stereotypes about a particular demographic in contemporary Australian society (for example, a 65 year-old woman), and ask students to
- identify the type of language that describes the character
- discuss why certain features are present in this language
- label the language profile using metalanguage
- discuss to the idea of attitudes and stereotypes
- Look at historical and modern theories on language and gender. Lakoff (Language and Women’s Place) is a good place to start. Explore critiques of her claim that women use less taboos, such as
Do Women Really Demonstrate a Lakoff Power in their Language?
- label the features that are primarily under discussion using metalanguage (e.g. discourse particles)
- encourage students to outline one thing they agree with and one thing they challenge
- Discuss the changing nature of how we address ourselves:
- the discussion could include but is not limited to pronoun use and terms of address
- investigate with the class what these changes can tell us about how we identify ourselves
- find contemporary examples of people in the media and analyse the way they are choosing to represent themselves.
- Allocate each student a ‘myth’ on language and gender:
- ask them to agree or dispel it using research and their own anecdotal experience
- encourage students to address why this attitude might exist and what it tells us about our wider culture
- Watch clips from ‘Who sounds gay’ by David Thorpe. What does his research suggest about idiolects and stereotypes?
- Discuss the notion of a prestige variety of language:
- reflect upon your own attitudes toward people who speak differently to you
- which varieties are given prestige status in your school, local community, in the media, in Australia?
- talk about the role of Aboriginal English and how our notions of prestige can disadvantage those who speak this as a first language.
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Ask students to do a research project on a particular interest group or occupation:
- ideas can include gaming, LGBTQIA+ community, feminism, downball; find specific language features of this identity group
- ask students to label these using metalanguage.
- Use
The Atlantic article to introduce students to the concept of group identities in families; students quiz their family on what language reflects their unique group identity.
- Listen to two Australian podcasts covering different interest areas; students identify 5 to 10 features that give insight into the identities of the hosts and discuss why.
- Write an essay exploring the notion ‘Language has the capacity to demonstrate who we are and where we’re going’.
Detailed example
Ask students to do a research project on a particular interest group or occupation:
- Ideas can include gaming, LGBTQIA+ community, feminism, downball; find specific language features of this identity group.
- Ask students to label these using metalanguage.
- Ask students to add their findings to a collaborative document and create links between shared history, features and connect these to social context.
Research your / a sociolect and respond to the following questions:
- Why is language important in the sphere you have chosen?
- What is the history of this group and the language they use?
- What are some specific features (using metalanguage) of language in this sociolect
- What values / interests are revealed through the language of this sociolect
- Using your sociolect as an example, respond to the following prompt:
Language has the capacity to reveal facets of who we are and where we belong.