Literacy Skills (VCE VM)
Unit 1
In unit 1 the student will be working towards the demonstration of two areas of study. The first area of study focuses on the structures and features of a range of texts – print, visual and film – and the personal reasons readers may have for engaging with these texts. Students will read or watch a variety of texts for a personal purpose, such as finding information. Additionally, students will read texts that serve a variety of purposes, from everyday content written to convey information, to texts written for specific workplaces or educational settings. They will extend their knowledge and understanding of the layout and format of a range of text types and use indexes, headings, subheadings, chapter titles and blurbs to locate and extract information pertaining to the purpose and key ideas within the written and spoken language.
In the second area of study students build on and work to consolidate their digital literacy skill by develop their capacity to critically assess digital texts, including webpages for vocational and workplace settings, podcasts and social media. They will continue to develop the analytic skills they used in Area of Study 1 to identify and discuss aspects of digital texts. As a part of their studies, students will discuss the reliability and effectiveness of websites in connecting with audiences and delivering factual messages and information. They will identify the ways a visitor encounters and experiences digital texts, considering their purpose and the social, cultural, vocational and workplace values associated with it. They will explore text through the prism of their own experience, knowledge, values and interests, and also those of others.
Unit 2
In Unit 2 students be studying two areas of study, building on skills learnt in unit 1.In area of study 1, students will engage in issues that are characterised by disagreement or discussion, developing and expanding upon students’ learning from Unit 1. Students will consider the values and beliefs that underpin different perspectives and how these values create different biases and opinions,including thinking about how these issues might arise in particular vocational or workplace settings. To do this students will read, view and listen to a range of texts and content that demonstrate diverse opinions on a range of local and global issues. Students will engage with a range of content from print, visual, aural and multimodal sources and will discuss and explain how personal and vested interests, including those of particular vocations or workplaces, affect their own responses to an issue. Students will practise note-taking and responding to short-answer questions as well as formulating their own oral and written opinions.
Unit 3
In Unit 3 of literacy Skills the students will explore two areas of study. In the first area of study students will become familiar with and develop confidence in understanding and accessing texts of an informational, organisational or procedural nature. Students will learn to recognise, analyse and evaluate the structures and semantic elements of informational, organisational and procedural texts as well as discuss and analyse their purpose and audience. Students will develop their confidence to deal with a range of technical content that they will encounter throughout adulthood, such as safety reports, public health initiatives, tax forms and advice, contracts, promotional videos and vocational and workplace texts. In the second area of study students focus on texts about an individual’s rights and responsibilities within organisations, workplaces and vocational groups. Students read and respond to a variety of technical content from a vocational, workplace or organisational setting of their choice, demonstrating understanding of how these texts inform and shape the organisations they interact with.
Unit 4
In this Unit students will explore two areas of study, the first area of study students will investigate, analyse and create content for the advocacy of self, a product or a community group of the student’s choice, in a vocational or recreational setting. Students will research the differences between texts used for more formal or traditional types of advocacy, influence or promotion, as well as some of the forms that are increasingly being used in the digital domain for publicity and exposure. Students will consider which elements are important for creating a ‘brand’ (including personal branding) and how different texts, images, products and multimedia platforms work together to produce one, central message to influence an audience. Students will compare and contrast the ways in which same message can be presented through different platforms and participate in discussions that consider the effectiveness of these messages, considering their purpose and the social and workplace values associated with them.
In the next area of study students will use their knowledge and understanding of language, context and audience to complete an oral presentation that showcases their learning. The presentation needs to be developed in consultation with the teacher and should focus on an area of student interest with a clearly stated vocational or personal focus. Students are encouraged to connect this area of study to their learning in Unit 4 of either Work Related Skills or Personal Development Skills. If students are not undertaking either of these studies, they may select an option from either of the two outlined below: Literacy for civic participation or Literacy for everyday contexts.