Australian Curriculum Version 9.0

Language 
Language for interacting with othersunderstand how language can have inclusive and exclusive social effects, and can empower or disempower people (AC9E10LA01)

understand that language used to evaluate, implicitly or explicitly reveals an individual’s values (AC9E10LA02)
Text structure and organisationanalyse text structures and language features and evaluate their effectiveness in achieving their purpose (AC9E10LA03)
Language for expressing and developing ideasunderstand how authors use and experiment with punctuation (AC9E10LA09)
Literature 
Literature and contextsanalyse representations of individuals, groups and places and evaluate how they reflect their context in literary texts by First Nations Australian, and wide-ranging Australian and world authors (AC9E10LE01)
Engaging with and responding to literaturereflect on and extend others’ interpretations of and responses to literature (AC9E10LE02)

analyse how the aesthetic qualities associated with text structures, language features, literary devices and visual features, and the context in which these texts are experienced, influence audience response (AC9E10LE03)

evaluate the social, moral or ethical positions represented in literature (AC9E10LE04)

analyse how text structure, language features, literary devices and intertextual connections shape interpretations of texts (AC9E10LE05)
Examining literaturecompare and evaluate how ‘voice’ as a literary device is used in different types of texts, such as poetry, novels and film, to evoke emotional responses (AC9E10LE06)

analyse and evaluate the aesthetic qualities of texts (AC9E10LE07)
Creating literaturecreate and edit literary texts with a sustained ‘voice’, selecting and adapting text structures, literary devices, and language, auditory and visual features for purposes and audiences (AC9E10LE08)
Literacy 
Texts in contextanalyse and evaluate how people, places, events and concepts are represented in texts and reflect contexts (AC9E10LY01)
Interacting with otherslisten to spoken texts and explain the purposes and effects of text structures and language features, and use interaction skills to discuss and present an opinion about these texts (AC9E10LY02)
Analysing, interpreting and evaluatinganalyse and evaluate how language features are used to implicitly or explicitly represent values, beliefs and attitudes (AC9E10LY03)

analyse and evaluate how authors organise ideas in texts to achieve a purpose (AC9E10LY04)

integrate comprehension strategies such as visualising, predicting, connecting, summarising, monitoring, questioning and inferring to analyse and interpret complex and abstract ideas (AC9E10LY05)
Creating textsplan, create, edit and publish written and multimodal texts, organising, expanding and developing ideas through experimenting with text structures, language features, literary devices and multimodal features for specific purposes and audiences in ways that may be imaginative, reflective, informative, persuasive, analytical and/or critical (AC9E10LY06)

plan, create, rehearse and deliver spoken and multimodal presentations by experimenting with rhetorical devices, and the organisation and development of ideas, to engage audiences for different purposes in ways that may be imaginative, reflective, informative, persuasive, analytical and/or critical (AC9E10LY07)

© Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority (ACARA) 2010 to present, unless otherwise indicated. This material was downloaded from the Australian Curriculum website (v9.australiancurriculum.edu.au) (accessed 5 April 2024) and was not modified. The material is licensed under CC BY 4.0 (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0). Version updates are tracked in the ‘Version history’ section (v9.australiancurriculum.edu.au/help/version-history) of the Australian Curriculum website.

ACARA does not endorse any product that uses the Australian Curriculum or make any representations as to the quality of such products. Any product that uses material published on this website should not be taken to be affiliated with ACARA or have the sponsorship or approval of ACARA. It is up to each person to make their own assessment of the product, taking into account matters including, but not limited to, the version number and the degree to which the materials align with the content descriptions and achievement standards (where relevant). Where there is a claim of alignment, it is important to check that the materials align with the content descriptions and achievement standards (endorsed by all education Ministers), not the elaborations (examples provided by ACARA).