Is VCE English worth taking?

Deciding whether to take VCE English? This honest guide weighs the pros and cons, who the subject suits, and how scaling should, and should not, factor in.

Whether to take VCE English is, for most students, not really a choice: an English study is required for your ATAR, and mainstream English is the default. It scales close to neutral, with steady rather than high scaling. The real question is which English subject suits you best. Scaling should not drive that choice, since scaling only helps if you score well. English suits students who want a straightforward, widely supported English option.

Key takeaways

  • An English subject is required for your ATAR.
  • English scales close to neutral.
  • The real choice is which English suits you.
  • It is the default, widely supported option.
  • Choose your English for fit, not scaling.
  • The goal is to score as well as you can.

It depends on your goals

There is no universal answer to whether you should take English. It depends on your strengths, your interests, and where you want to go after school. A subject that suits one student can be wrong for another.

So the useful question is not “is English a good subject?” but “is English right for me?” That frames the decision around your own situation, which is what matters.

The case for taking it

English is universally required, widely taught and supported, and a straightforward choice for most students. Its scaling is steady, and a strong score is valuable in every ATAR.

So there are real reasons to take English if it fits you. These strengths matter most when the subject matches your interests and goals, since that is when you are likely to score well.

The case against

English scales close to neutral rather than up, and it is essay-based, so it rewards strong reading and writing. Students who prefer literary study might consider Literature instead.

So English is not right for everyone. These drawbacks matter most if the subject does not suit your strengths or goals, in which case another subject may serve you better.

Is VCE English hard?

English is a moderately demanding subject, essay-based and rewarding clear analysis and writing. But “hard” is relative. A subject that is demanding for one student can suit another’s strengths well. So judge difficulty against your own abilities and interests.

So do not be put off, or drawn in, by a subject’s reputation alone. What matters is whether its demands match your strengths, since that shapes how you will do and how much you enjoy it.

How scaling should factor in

English scales close to neutral, but scaling should not drive your choice. Scaling only helps if you score well. A subject you struggle in gains you little, whatever its scaling.

So treat scaling as a minor factor, behind fit and interest. A subject that suits you can give a strong scaled score even if its scaling is modest. See English scaling explained.

Who VCE English suits

VCE English suits students who want a straightforward, widely supported English option, which for most students is the default choice. These students tend to engage with the subject, do the work, and score well, which is what produces a good result.

So if that sounds like you, English may be a strong choice. If not, it is worth looking at subjects that fit your strengths better, since fit is the best predictor of how you will do.

What it pairs well with

English fits alongside every VCE program, since an English study is required, and pairs naturally with the humanities. A coherent set of subjects can make your workload more manageable and support the pathways you want.

So consider English as part of your whole subject pattern, not in isolation. How it fits your other choices, and your goals, matters as much as the subject itself.

How to decide

To decide, weigh your interest, your strengths, any prerequisites for the courses you want, and how English fits your pattern, with scaling as a minor factor. Talk to your teachers and current students.

So base your decision on fit and goals, not scaling reputation or what others do. The right subjects are the ones you can score well in and that support where you want to go.

See how it scales

If scaling is one of your considerations, our VCE English scaling calculator shows roughly how a score scales, so you can weigh it alongside fit and interest.

Treat the result as indicative, since scaling changes each year, and remember your study score is what your scaled score depends on.

The workload to expect

English carries a real workload. English scales close to neutral rather than up, and it is essay-based, so it rewards strong reading and writing. Students who prefer literary study might consider Literature instead. So it is worth being honest about the time and effort it will take alongside your other subjects.

So factor the workload into your decision. A subject you can keep up with will serve you better than one that overwhelms your schedule, however appealing it looks on paper.

Why interest matters

Interest is not a soft factor. It strongly predicts how well you will do. Students who find English engaging tend to do the work, stay motivated, and score better, which lifts their scaled score.

So weigh whether you genuinely find English interesting. Enjoying a subject makes the work sustainable and the results stronger. That matters more than a subject’s reputation or scaling.

Prerequisites and pathways

Some university courses expect or require certain VCE subjects. If a pathway you are considering expects English, that is a strong reason to take it, whatever its scaling. Missing a required subject can limit your options.

So check whether the courses you might want list English as a prerequisite. Aligning your subjects with your intended pathway is one of the most practical reasons to choose a subject.

What if you are unsure?

If you are genuinely unsure, it can help to start Units 1 and 2 and reassess, when you have a real sense of the subject. Talking to your teachers and current students also gives a clearer picture than a reputation.

So do not agonise in the abstract. A little first-hand experience, and advice from people who know the subject, tells you far more about whether English is right for you.

Thinking beyond the ATAR

The ATAR matters, but it is not the only reason to choose English. A subject that builds skills or knowledge for your future pathway has value beyond its scaled score.

So weigh what English gives you for the course or career you want. A subject that supports your goals can be worth taking even if its scaling is modest.

Balancing your subject load

Consider English as part of your whole subject load, not in isolation. A balanced set, matched to your strengths and workload, tends to produce better results than a set chosen only for scaling.

So think about how English fits with your other subjects. A manageable, coherent load helps you score well across all of them.

Common questions

Is VCE English worth taking?

It depends on your strengths, interests and goals. English is compulsory for the ATAR with steady scaling, so the real question is which English suits you, and the goal is to score well. Choose it if it fits you and supports where you want to go, and weigh scaling only as a minor factor behind fit and interest.

Is VCE English hard?

English is a moderately demanding subject, essay-based and rewarding clear analysis and writing. But difficulty is relative to your own strengths and interests, so a subject that is demanding for one student can suit another well. Judge it against your abilities, not its reputation alone.

Does VCE English scale up or down?

VCE English tends to scale close to neutral, because it is the reference subject that most others are scaled against, taken by nearly every student. But scaling should not drive your choice, since scaling only helps if you score well in the subject.

Who is VCE English best suited to?

VCE English suits students who want a straightforward, widely supported English option, which for most students is the default choice. If the subject fits your strengths and goals, it may be a strong choice; if not, a subject that suits you better will usually serve you more.