An Introduction to Indonesian Background Speakers Stage 6 in the New HSC
The new Indonesian Background Speakers Stage 6 Syllabus replaces the current syllabuses in 2 and 3 Unit Indonesian for Students Educated Through the Language (1994), but referred to as Indonesian for Background Speakers. The new syllabus will be implemented with Year 11 in 2000 and will be first examined in 2001.
The syllabus provides information that was formerly available in the Languages KLA Handbook. This includes descriptions of course requirements, assessment weightings for internal and external assessment and examination specifications.
What is similar?
The new Indonesian Background Speakers Stage 6 Syllabus represents a minor change to the current 2 and 3 Unit Indonesian for Students Educated Through the Language syllabuses. The new syllabus is similar in intent, structure, content and in method of assessment to the current syllabuses. There is a continued focus on analysing and evaluating prescribed texts. The macro skills of reading, writing, listening and speaking are implicit in the four objectives and are assessed in the internal assessment. The external assessment incorporates the macro skills of listening, reading and writing.
What are the overall improvements?
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The syllabus makes explicit what students are required to know and do.
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The syllabus objectives represent the communicative use of the language, and integrate the macro skills of reading, writing, listening and speaking. Special emphasis is given to the role of textual analysis.
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The language content is specified by prescribing themes and contemporary issues, with a section on texts and text types and grammar. Texts are prescribed for the HSC course.
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Assessment, both internal and external, is linked to the syllabus objectives and content.
The following changes have been made to particular sections of
the course
Rationale, Aims and Objectives (pp 6, 9)
The syllabus provides a comprehensive rationale for studying Indonesian, and has a clear set of aims and objectives, which provide statements of the overall purpose and intent of the syllabus.
Objectives focus on the knowledge, skills and understanding involved in exchanging information, opinions and ideas in Indonesian; producing original texts in Indonesian; analysing, evaluating and responding to texts in Indonesian; and understanding aspects of the Indonesian language and culture.
Outcomes (p 11)
The syllabus supports an outcomes-based approach to teaching and learning. The outcomes are designed so that students of Indonesian for Background Speakers can demonstrate what they know and can do as a result of teaching and learning in the course. The outcomes are derived from the objectives.
Content (pp 14–22)
The syllabus prescribes both themes and contemporary issues as the organisational
focus of the language content.
The four themes in the new syllabus are:
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The Individual and the Community
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Youth Culture
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Tourism in Indonesia
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The Environment.
Each theme has a number of prescribed contemporary issues that demonstrate
the particular focus of the themes.
While students will encounter a wider range of texts and text types than those
listed in the content section, the syllabus makes explicit those text types
students may be expected to produce in the external examination.
Grammatical elements which students are expected to know are identified, with
examples provided.
There are prescribed texts in the HSC course. These will be published in the
Board Bulletin and on the Board’s website (http://www.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au)
Assessment (pp 25–36)
The assessment is aligned to the syllabus objectives and content. Students
will be required to demonstrate achievement of the full range of outcomes
across the internal and external assessment components.
The internal assessment specifies the components to be assessed and their
weightings, as well as suggesting a variety of tasks that may be undertaken.
This ensures that a student’s achievement can be measured against a
wider range of syllabus content and outcomes than may be covered by the external
examination alone.
In the external assessment, students will be assessed on their ability to:
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exchange information, opinions and ideas in response to a written text
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express ideas through the creation of an original text in Indonesian
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analyse, evaluate and respond to spoken and written texts, including prescribed texts.
What will be needed to teach this subject?
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Indonesian Background Speakers Stage 6 Syllabus
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Indonesian Background Speakers course prescriptions, specimen examination paper, marking guidelines, and draft performance scale.
Current resources are appropriate for use with the new syllabus although there
may need to be some adjustment in the way teachers use them.
Texts currently prescribed (for the 2 Unit Background Speakers HSC course)
may continue to be used to support various aspects of the syllabus content.
For example, these texts may illustrate themes and contemporary issues, the
use of particular structures, or demonstrate the conventions of a particular
text type or discourse form.
Text books and resource materials that support language learning will continue
to apply as the themes and contemporary issues, grammatical items, text types
and tasks are similar to those in current syllabuses.
A list of a limited number of resources is on the Board’s
website (http://www.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au).
