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Articles 1 - 19 of 19
Full-Text Articles in Education
Language Problems And Aboriginal Education, Ed Brumby (Ed.)
Language Problems And Aboriginal Education, Ed Brumby (Ed.)
Research outputs pre 2011
Effective communication must be an essential feature of any teaching/ .learning situation and it follows that considerable difficulties arise when teacher and learner speak different and mutually unintelligible languages or dialects. This, unfortunately, is the situation in which many, if not most, Aboriginal children and their teachers throughout Australia find themselves. This classroom situation reflects, of course, the difficulties and frustrations experienced on a wider scale by many Aboriginal parents and Aboriginal communities, and those outsiders who work with them. The problem is compounded further by the fact that few teachers or others who work in Aboriginal areas are given …
Features Of Serbo-Croatian For Language Teachers, Eric G. Vaszolyi
Features Of Serbo-Croatian For Language Teachers, Eric G. Vaszolyi
Research outputs pre 2011
Teachers of migrant children experience a great many difficulties in trying to understand and resolve their pupils' language problems. One basic problem is all too familiar: the teacher speaks English and the migrant child does not understand it or only understands it to some, rather limited, extent. Another problem area: the pupil picks up some English in the classroom, on the playground and out in the street but speaks it with a peculiar accent and peppers it with phonemic, grammatical and semantic errors. The child's deviations from the generally accepted patterns of English (i.e. the prevalent variety of English spoken …
The Magic Bow, Phyllis E. Wilkin
The Magic Bow, Phyllis E. Wilkin
Research outputs pre 2011
A music drama in three acts, for Junior Primary School children. The story is based on the Ramayana saga, as told by Joanna Troughton in her book The Story of Rama and Sita. The words of the drama have been drawn from discussions with the children, and wherever possible the children's own words have been used.
Students from Churchlands College of Advanced Education were involved in the development of the drama, and in planning and conducting preparatory experiences for and with the children.
Attitude Change In Response To An In-Service Teacher Education Programme, E. P. Otto, I. S. Gasson
Attitude Change In Response To An In-Service Teacher Education Programme, E. P. Otto, I. S. Gasson
Australian Journal of Teacher Education
"How can I tell how successful this course has been?" is becoming an increasingly common question in tertiary education. This interest in tertiary teaching and learning is reflected in the fact that one-half of all Australian universities now have tertiary teaching units. There are a number of reasons why evaluation is important. Firstly, discrepancies between the actual and the ideal situation can be detected, causes identified and corrective measures instituted at all stages of the evaluative model, to serve the interests of increased efficiency and improved staff and student satisfaction. Secondly, courses which are continually being evaluated are better able …
Educating Artistic Vision, By Eisner, Elliot W., Fred Stewart
Educating Artistic Vision, By Eisner, Elliot W., Fred Stewart
Australian Journal of Teacher Education
Educating Artistic Vision, is written for art educators, art curriculum developers and teachers responsible for conducting art programmes. This does not mean though, that it is without significance to all those who are concerned with the educational welfare of children.
Expectation Of Gifted Children In The Primary-Secondary Transition., M. E. Poole, A. J. Williams
Expectation Of Gifted Children In The Primary-Secondary Transition., M. E. Poole, A. J. Williams
Australian Journal of Teacher Education
Despite the comprehensiveness of the creativity literature, there are few studies that deal directly with the perceptions of creative children in their everyday concerns. Increasingly, however, educators are turning to ethnomethodology as providing wider and more appropriate knowledge for their purposes.
The Reorganisation Of Teacher Education In The U.K. And Ontario : Implications For Australia, E. Nowotny
The Reorganisation Of Teacher Education In The U.K. And Ontario : Implications For Australia, E. Nowotny
Australian Journal of Teacher Education
I visited the U.K. and Ontario in late September and October 1976 to study the reorganization of teacher education which was taking place as a response to a sharp decline in the demand for teachers consequent on a falling birth-rate and a deteriorating economic situation. The main advantage of the study was that it provided a perspective in which the current situation in Australia (and specifically in W.A.) in regard to an 'over-supply' of teacher education trainees could be more objectively evaluated in a context of common problems. The fact that the problems, particularly in England, are more urgent, complex, …
Suggestions For Phonic Lessons, Years 1, 2 And 3, Department Of Early Education, Mount Lawley College Of Advanced Education
Suggestions For Phonic Lessons, Years 1, 2 And 3, Department Of Early Education, Mount Lawley College Of Advanced Education
Research outputs pre 2011
No abstract provided.
Talking With Children, Brian Lever
Talking With Children, Brian Lever
Research outputs pre 2011
This book is a collection of interviews with children. It is intended to give the reader a glimpse of some of the ways in which children think about things. Some of the interviews are almost whimsical. Others are quite serious.
The interviews were conducted by a group of twenty student teachers during their last term of teacher training. This group of student teachers were but a small part of a much larger group of students all of whom had been given the task of interviewing a child. The purpose of the task was partly to give the students an opportunity …
Our Multicultural Future And The School, John Sherwood (Ed.)
Our Multicultural Future And The School, John Sherwood (Ed.)
Research outputs pre 2011
It is only in the last four or five years that an observable effort has been made to extend the growing awareness within the community that Australia's population is clearly multicultural in composition. Despite this, most of the political, economic and social structures and organisations in the community do not adequately reflect or cater for the variety of people of different ethnic origins and identities.
While this increasing awareness in individuals is encouraging, it has been evident that the focus of discussions, conferences and gatherings to date, in Western Australia at least, has been rather narrow. Some have concentrated on …
Preparing Teachers For Aboriginal Education : Report On The National Conference, Ed Brumby (Ed.)
Preparing Teachers For Aboriginal Education : Report On The National Conference, Ed Brumby (Ed.)
Research outputs pre 2011
The first National Conference of Teachers of Aboriginal Children was held in Adelaide between 29th August and 1st September, 1976. The conference delegates expressed their concern about the ineffectiveness of teachers in Aboriginal schools and while recognizing that the task was often a demanding one, they were generally critical of the lack of expertize of recent graduates and the high staff turn over in Aboriginal schools...
Work-Study Innovative Teaching Programme (Wsitp) : Evaluation Report, Rod Mcdonald
Work-Study Innovative Teaching Programme (Wsitp) : Evaluation Report, Rod Mcdonald
Research outputs pre 2011
The Work Study Innovative Teaching Programme (WSITP) was introduced in 1977. This followed the submission of a research proposal to the Assistant Vice Principal (Research Planning and Development) of Churchlands College by a group of interested staff, and the subsequent approval by the College that the programme be offered on a pilot basis for one year.
To quote from the original proposal: "WSITP will use a continuous practice-teaching experience as a means of helping students to become teachers rather than just lecturing about teaching. The WSITP will be designed to assist students in their exploration and discovery of personal meanings …
Moora: Aboriginal Children In A Wheatbelt Town, Lois Tilbrook
Moora: Aboriginal Children In A Wheatbelt Town, Lois Tilbrook
Research outputs pre 2011
Moora town was established in 1875, when the railway from Midland Junction to Walkaway was built. There had always been Aborigines in the surrounding districts, and as land was taken up for farming, a number of them were employed as farmhands and domestics.
The town is the regional centre for the North Midlands, a subdivision of the Northern Agricultural Statistical Division of Western Australia. As such, it was developed to service the agricultural hinterland. The Northern Agricultural Statistical Division has a total population of 42,804 people (23,044 males and 19,766 females) of whom 1,828 or 4.6% are Aboriginal (1,003 males …
Value Systems Of Prospective Teachers, M. W. Boyce
Value Systems Of Prospective Teachers, M. W. Boyce
Australian Journal of Teacher Education
The teacher in the primary school classroom provides for the children in her care a variety of experiences in number, in the language arts, and in all the other concomitants of the formal curriculum of the school. But she also provides other experiences: a set of socializing experiences arising from her behaviour in the classroom. This includes the types of interpersonal relationships she has with the children, the demands she makes, the expectations she has of individuals and groups and the priorities she sets. In this context an examination of factors lying behind the behaviours the teacher exhibits in the …
English Literature As A Liberal Study In Primary Teachers' Colleges., D. M. Murison
English Literature As A Liberal Study In Primary Teachers' Colleges., D. M. Murison
Australian Journal of Teacher Education
In 1972, in a survey of literature teaching in Victorian primary teachers' colleges, all but one had a year of compulsory adult literature. At the time, most English lecturers considered this to be essential. However, now much has changed, and literature lecturers, faced with offering courses which are no longer compulsory, have thought again.
Is Curriculum Integration Like Miscegenation?, John H. Chambers
Is Curriculum Integration Like Miscegenation?, John H. Chambers
Australian Journal of Teacher Education
In this article I want to ask and to try to answer the question, 'In the organization of the school curriculum, what do the words 'integration' and 'inter-disciplinary' mean?' and to examine certain fundamental epistemological issues in doing so.
Two Studies On The Effect Of Audio-Tape Structure On The Immediate Recall Of Factual Information, A. J. Palumbo, N. Bozzer
Two Studies On The Effect Of Audio-Tape Structure On The Immediate Recall Of Factual Information, A. J. Palumbo, N. Bozzer
Australian Journal of Teacher Education
The last decade of educational research has witnessed an expansion of interest in the technology of education (Gage, 1963; Travers, 1973). This proliferation of research, however, was bothered by a continued confusion between the mechanics of the technology and the design rules for the process of education. The needed distinction between the instruments of instruction and the application of instructional processes was made clear recently by Armsey and Dahl (1974). Nevertheless, the confusion continues, particularly in the kind of research that is being conducted.
Education For A Multi-Cultural Society, Millicent E. Poole
Education For A Multi-Cultural Society, Millicent E. Poole
Australian Journal of Teacher Education
I explore three avenues in this paper. The fIrst relates to Australian society generally. Is Australia a multi-cultural society and do Australians subscribe to education for a multi-cultural society as a priority goal in education? Secondly, if this goal is accepted, what are the educational Implications for a multi-cultural society? Thirdly, what strategies might educators use to bring about this goal?
The Education Power In Canada, Harry C. Phillips
The Education Power In Canada, Harry C. Phillips
Australian Journal of Teacher Education
In an influential book entitled Federal Government, Professor K.C. Wheare observed that in countries satisfying in practice his understanding of the federal principle, namely the United States of America, Switzerland, Canada and Australia, education was a matter substantially in the hands of regional (state, canton, provincial) governments. The federal principle was defined (Wheare, 1967[ p.10) as "the method of dividing powers so that the general and regional governments are each within a sphere co-ordinate and independent". After the federal bargain (Riker, 1964, P.11) has been negotiated, powers are sacrificed to the central organ but the contract.ing political entities are granted …