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O'Sullivan, Kerry-Ann – English in Australia, 2020
Literature is an enduring and distinctive component in English education and reading is central to teachers' conception of the subject. What continues to be contentious are the ways literature is defined and how teachers' values influence what their students will read. This paper is drawn from a larger research study and reports 18 New South Wales…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Professional Identity, Teacher Attitudes, Literature
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Walsh, Chris; Townsin, Louise – English in Australia, 2018
Many primary, secondary and tertiary educators need support to engage in inclusive pedagogical practices that challenge homophobia, transphobia and heteronormativity. We present a border-crossing pedagogy (BCP) designed to assist English language arts educators in translating knowledge into action to demolish deeply engrained anti-lesbian, gay,…
Descriptors: Bullying, Homosexuality, Sexual Orientation, Sexual Identity
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Loyden, Grace – English in Australia, 2015
The role of the English teacher in Australia is constantly being negotiated and with every ideological development teachers are positioned to question their professional values and practices. Much attention has been afforded to this discussion. The purpose of this paper is to (a) provide an analysis of the evolution of the art of being an English…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Writing Teachers, Writing Instruction, Teacher Role
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Pasqua, Lena – English in Australia, 2017
Many English teachers identify as readers, drawing on broad literary knowledge to shape their pedagogy and to meet ever-increasing curriculum demands. Teachers identifying as writers, however, face the paradox of enabling authorial agency while adhering to time constraints and rigid assessment criteria. This article examines the role of the…
Descriptors: English Teachers, English Instruction, Creative Writing, Teaching Methods
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Reeves, Sam Simpson; Exley, Beryl; Dillon-Wallace, Julie – English in Australia, 2018
Since 2008, secondary school English teachers have been at the receiving end of contradictory advice on how to best prepare their students for the literacy component of the National Assessment Program--Literacy and Numeracy (NAPLAN). On the one hand, Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority (ACARA) asserts that the 'best…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Teachers, English Teachers, National Competency Tests
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Hogarth, Melitta – English in Australia, 2019
It came as a surprise to me, after an extensive Google search and reading of numerous policies, that English, and more specifically Standard Australian English, is not the official language of Australia (ACARA, 2016c; Lo Bianco, 1987). There are examples cited by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) (1999) that state, 'English is regarded as…
Descriptors: Standard Spoken Usage, English, Language Variation, Foreign Countries
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Mayher, John – English in Australia, 2013
John Mayer, Adjunct Professor of English Education at Lehman College, City University of New York, and Professor Emeritus of English Education at New York University, begins by saying that he still Misses Garth Boomer, and has known no other friend or colleague with whom he has had more stimulating professional and personal conversations. Garth…
Descriptors: College Faculty, English Instruction, Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods
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Humphrey, Sally – English in Australia, 2013
While teachers of English have long recognised the vital role they play in developing students' knowledge and effective use of language, the emergence of the Australian Curriculum: English has led to a great deal of discussion concerning the representation of language and the type of meta-language needed to share understandings of literacy and…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Secondary School Students, English Teachers, Teacher Role
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Poland, Molly – English in Australia, 2013
Molly Poland is a first year English and Home Economics teacher who began her career in a small Far North Queensland town. In this article, she writes about her first year teaching and the last year of her degree and the challenges she faced as both teacher and student. Reading Boomer's "Negotiating the Curriculum" forced her to think a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Beginning Teachers, Teacher Role, Curriculum
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Doecke, Brenton – English in Australia, 2013
This essay explores the role that storytelling might play in the professional learning of English teachers. It begins by reflecting on the ways that stories shape our everyday lives, and then considers how the meaning-making potential of storytelling might enable us to gain insights into our work as educators. This is in contradistinction to the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Faculty Development, Story Telling, Standards
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Wilkinson, Lyn; Reid, Annmarie – English in Australia, 2013
In Years 8 and 9 of secondary school Josh was a self-confessed troublemaker who hated school, frequently truanted and was at risk of early leaving. In year 9, a teacher invited him to join the "Scaly Survivors" program operating at his school. By year 11 Josh was the student leader in that program and a mentor to younger students. In…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Student Behavior, Student Attitudes, Attitude Change
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Mayes, Eve – English in Australia, 2013
Garth Boomer's ideas in "Negotiating the Curriculum" (1992a) resonate with discussions of shifting teacher and student roles and relationships in the "student voice" movement. Boomer (1988) critiqued his earlier conception of power in "Negotiating the Curriculum," asserting that he would "now like to write a book…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Hidden Curriculum, Power Structure, Ethnography
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Wilkinson, Lyn – English in Australia, 2011
I have been an English teacher for 38 (gulp!) years. For over 20 of those I have taught "English methods" courses in initial teacher education programs. As the retirement light glows increasingly brighter at the end of my career pathway, I reflect on three aspects of teaching English that have been--and remain--the cornerstones of my…
Descriptors: Teacher Education Programs, English Teachers, Beginning Teachers, English Instruction
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Sharplin, Elaine – English in Australia, 2011
While perceptions that the roles of teacher and teacher educator as an oppositional binary are being challenged, sustaining and incorporating both professional identities has presented challenges. This paper presents a narrative account of my professional identity journey, including a description of a partnership that enabled boundaries to be…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English Teachers, Teacher Educators, English Curriculum
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Sawyer, Wayne – English in Australia, 2007
In this article, the author reflects on a "powerfully literate citizen" in Statement Four of the Australian Association for the Teaching of English (AATE) "Statements of Belief". He discusses the definition of "literacy" and the creation of the powerfully literate citizen. He stresses that a powerfully literate…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English (Second Language), Second Language Instruction, Teacher Role
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