VCE English (Units 3 and 4) covers reading and responding to texts, creating texts, and analysing argument and persuasive language. Your study score combines your School-Assessed Coursework (SACs) with the end-of-year exam. After that, VTAC scales your score for your ATAR. Always confirm the current areas of study and assessment with VCAA, since study designs are updated periodically.
Key takeaways
- English is a Units 3 and 4 core subject.
- It covers responding to texts and analysing argument.
- An English subject is required for your ATAR.
- Your score combines SACs and the exam.
- Confirm the areas of study with VCAA.
- Then scaled by VTAC for your ATAR.
Course overview
VCE English is the core English subject. The scored part is Units 3 and 4, studied in Year 12. It is the core English subject, and an English study (English, EAL, English Language or Literature) is required for your ATAR. It develops your skills in responding to texts, creating texts, and analysing argument.
So Units 3 and 4 are where your study score is earned. The structure below is a guide. Always confirm the current design with VCAA, since details change.
Areas of study
The Units 3 and 4 course covers reading and responding to texts, creating texts, and analysing argument and persuasive language. Use the current VCAA study design for the exact areas of study.
Each area of study has its own key knowledge and key skills in the study design. These define what you can be assessed on. So use the current VCAA study design as your definitive guide.
How it is assessed
Your study score in English combines two things: your School-Assessed Coursework (SACs), done during the year, and your end-of-year exam. Together these produce your study score out of 50.
So both your SACs and the exam matter. Strong, consistent SAC work sets part of your score, alongside your exam performance.
SACs explained
SACs are School-Assessed Coursework: assessment tasks set by your school across Units 3 and 4. They are marked by your school, then moderated by VCAA against your exam performance.
So your SAC results matter, and moderation keeps them fair across schools. Performing consistently well in your SACs protects part of your study score.
The exam
The VCE English exam is a single end-of-year exam with two tasks: an analytical response to a studied text, and an analysis of argument and persuasive language. The exact format and weightings are set by VCAA and can be confirmed from the current study design and past exams.
So learn the exam structure early, using past exams as a guide. Knowing the format and timing lets you prepare your technique as well as your content.
Confirm details with VCAA
Study designs, areas of study and assessment can change between years. So treat this guide as an overview, not the final word. The authoritative source is always the current VCAA study design.
So before you rely on any specific detail, check it against VCAA’s current documents for English. This makes sure you study the right content and prepare for the right exam.
Preparing for VCE English
Good preparation means covering the study design, doing past exams, and keeping your SACs strong. Because your score combines SACs and the exam, steady work across the year matters.
So plan your study around the design and your SAC schedule, and practise under exam conditions. See the best English resources for the materials to use.
Scaling and your ATAR
After your study score is set, VTAC scales your English score against the cohort, and your scaled score feeds your ATAR. English tends to scale close to neutral, though this changes each year. See English scaling explained.
So the course leads to a study score, which is then scaled for your ATAR. What matters most is your score within the subject, whatever the scaling that year.
See how it scales
To see how a English score scales, use our VCE English scaling calculator. It gives an indication of how a raw score converts, so you can see how the subject fits your ATAR.
Treat the result as indicative, since scaling changes each year, and confirm all course detail with VCAA.
Units 1 and 2 first
Before the scored Units 3 and 4, most students take Units 1 and 2 of English in Year 11. These are not scored for your ATAR, but they build the foundation for Units 3 and 4.
So do not treat Units 1 and 2 as unimportant. A solid grasp of them makes Units 3 and 4 far more manageable, and gaps there can make Year 12 harder than it needs to be.
Skills the course builds
Beyond content, VCE English builds skills the exam tests: applying ideas to new situations, analysing information, and communicating clearly. It is the core English subject, and an English study (English, EAL, English Language or Literature) is required for your ATAR. It develops your skills in responding to texts, creating texts, and analysing argument.
So the course is not only about knowing content. It is about using it. Building these skills through practice, alongside your knowledge, is what prepares you for the exam.
How SACs are weighted
Your SACs across Units 3 and 4 each carry a set weighting toward your study score, within VCAA’s rules. Together they form part of your score, alongside the exam. Your school sets the tasks; VCAA moderates the marks.
So each SAC counts, and moderation keeps them fair across schools. Knowing your SAC schedule helps you plan your effort across the year.
Preparing for the exam
The exam is a major part of your English score. So prepare for it deliberately: work through past exams under timed conditions, and check your answers against the examiner reports.
So build exam practice into your routine well before the end of the year. Knowing the format and timing lets you prepare your technique as well as your content. See the best English resources.
From study design to ATAR
Once your English study score is set, VTAC scales it and adds it to your aggregate with your other subjects. So the course leads to a study score, which is one input into your ATAR.
So keep the end in view. Strong, steady work in English produces a strong study score, which scales into a strong contribution to your ATAR. See how English scaling works.
How Units 3 and 4 fit together
Units 3 and 4 of English run across Year 12 and together produce your study score. Unit 3 comes first, then Unit 4, each with its own SACs. The end-of-year exam covers both.
So plan for the whole year, not one unit at a time. Keeping up through Unit 3 makes Unit 4 and the exam far more manageable.
Keep checking VCAA
Study designs are reviewed and updated on a cycle, so details can change between years. The safest habit is to check VCAA’s current English study design and exam materials directly.
So treat any guide, including this one, as an overview. For the exact areas of study, assessment and weightings, VCAA is always the authority.
Common questions
What is in the VCE English study design?
VCE English (Units 3 and 4) covers reading and responding to texts, creating texts, and analysing argument and persuasive language. Each area of study has its own key knowledge and skills that define what can be assessed. Always confirm the current content with VCAA, since study designs are updated periodically.
What areas of study does VCE English cover?
VCE English Units 3 and 4 cover reading and responding to texts, creating texts, and analysing argument and persuasive language. Confirm the current areas of study with VCAA, since study designs are updated periodically.
How is VCE English assessed?
Your VCE English study score combines your School-Assessed Coursework (SACs), done during the year and moderated against the exam, with your end-of-year exam. Together these produce your study score out of 50.
What is the VCE English exam and SAC structure?
The VCE English exam is a single end-of-year exam with two tasks: an analytical response to a studied text, and an analysis of argument and persuasive language. Your SACs are school-set tasks across Units 3 and 4, moderated by VCAA. The exact format and weightings are set by VCAA, so confirm them from the current study design and past exams.