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Brown, Matthew; McKnight, Lucinda; Yager, Karen; O'Sullivan, Kerry-Ann – English in Australia, 2021
This article presents an account of a panel on English teacher agency in Australia at the 2020 IFTE conference, held virtually as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. The article introduces the way the panel chair set up the concerns of the panel, providing relevant background, theoretical framing, and introductions to the panellists and the key…
Descriptors: Teacher Empowerment, English Teachers, Professional Autonomy, Foreign Countries
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Frawley, Emily – English in Australia, 2020
This paper considers the work of James Gee as a methodological lens for conceiving of the teacher-writer identity. Gee's (2000) Four Ways to View Identity are employed to examine the way that teachers discuss their writing identity. The paper reports on findings from a broader qualitative study that examined the writer identity in subject English…
Descriptors: Authors, Self Concept, Teacher Attitudes, Professional Identity
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O'Sullivan, Kerry-Ann; Goodwyn, Andrew – English in Australia, 2021
This paper draws from an international case study of secondary English teachers in New South Wales, Australia and England, in which thirty-three in-depth interviews were conducted. The research investigated the impact of educational reform on teachers' professionalism, their pedagogies and their beliefs about the subject of English. It reports on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Educational Change
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Hastie, David – English in Australia, 2017
Australian Protestant schools have often been depicted as sites that restrict knowledge. This paper presents the findings of a 2010-2013 field study of 137 teachers, exploring the nature and extent of Protestant School English teacher self-censorship when excluding and selecting texts to teach. In both survey and interview data, I find that the…
Descriptors: English Teachers, Academic Freedom, Censorship, Protestants
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Wallis, Stephen – English in Australia, 2013
Although Garth Boomer spoke of "thresholds of explicitness" (1988, p. 169) beyond which teachers would not venture in the openness of their curriculum design or indeed the nature of the system in which they operate, Stephen Wallis writes in this article that he does believe in student-centred learning and encouraging students to be…
Descriptors: Self Evaluation (Individuals), Foreign Countries, Beginning Teachers, Public School Teachers
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Matthews, Brian – English in Australia, 1999
Accuses successive governments of Australia of deriding intellect and the intellectual. Claims the attitude that teaching is everyone's realm and does not require professional expertise rewards itself in forms of ignorance, prejudice and narrowness and has created a critically deprived and impoverished education culture. (NH)
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Foreign Countries, Literacy, Political Attitudes
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Wyatt-Smith, Clair – English in Australia, 1998
Discusses the formulation of the Australian Literacy Benchmarks for Year 3 and Year 5. Suggests they (1) lay claim to designating a minimum standard; (2) represent "fuzzy" standards; and (3) are a composite based on a number of underlying criteria. Claims teachers' knowledge of student literacy achievement is a richer source of valid…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Benchmarking, Diversity (Student), Elementary Education
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Johnston, Scott; McCausland, Mike – English in Australia, 1999
Follows the progress of "negotiation" (a force for democratizing the curriculum) in Tasmanian English classrooms, claiming it (1) allows a fluid space where teachers and students can work together; (2) provides an alternative to direct and indirect political influence over curriculum construction; and (3) has the potential to empower…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Educational Policy