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Uusimaki, Liisa – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2013
Positive relationship building between the university and the schools that receive their pre-service teachers are crucial to developing quality educators fit for the teaching profession. This paper presents an overview of a mentor workshop that was introduced by the professional experience unit of a regional university in Australia. The aim of the…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Preservice Teacher Education, Mentors, Teacher Workshops
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Garvis, Susanne; Twigg, Danielle; Pendergast, Donna – Australasian Journal of Early Childhood, 2011
According to the National Education and the Arts Statement (Ministerial Council on Education, Employment, Training and Youth Affairs, 2007), all children and young people should have a high-quality arts education. To achieve this teachers require a high level of skill and training, and the belief that they are self-efficacious in the teaching of…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Preservice Teacher Education, Self Efficacy, Cooperating Teachers
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Ormond, Christine – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2011
This paper explores some aspects of effective professional mentoring practice for early career mathematics and science teachers, and discusses the Early Support Program (ESP), a research project conducted in 2009 and 2010 at a large Australian metropolitan university. It is argued that better outcomes may result from a more strategic…
Descriptors: Mentors, Focus Groups, Science Teachers, Beginning Teacher Induction
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Rorrison, Doreen – Educational Studies, 2010
This paper reports on research that suggests a new view of assessment of the practicum in teacher education. By transcending the stereotypes of "failing" student teachers who do not achieve traditional benchmarks, this new lens highlights the complexity, diversity and inequality of experiences through listening to the voices of the…
Descriptors: Student Teachers, Practicums, Mentors, Student Teacher Attitudes
Le Cornu, Rosie – Australian Teacher Education Association, 2009
One of the perennial challenges for academics working in the area of professional experiences (practicum) is how to negotiate the constantly moving and contradictory boundaries around their work. A number of questions arise. Firstly, how do they cope with the "shifting, changing landscape" (Clandinin, 2008) of the university and at the…
Descriptors: Practicums, Mentors, Foreign Countries, Professional Development
Gonczi, Andrew; Butterworth, Perce – The ITATE Journal, 1984
Two case studies of a nongraduate and a graduate teacher-in-training at a technical and further education (TAFE) college illustrate the problems of beginning teachers. Survey results also showed that 40 percent of beginning teachers found their preservice training irrelevant; 50 percent perceived inadequate support from senior staff; but 70…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Colleges, Postsecondary Education, Preservice Teacher Education
Gitlin, Andrew; Smyth, John – 1989
A systematic exploration of the nature of teacher evaluation is presented. After a critique of the widespread impositional (or "dominant") mode of teacher evaluation, two alternative forms of teacher evaluation, referred to as "educative," are proposed. These educative teacher evaluation approaches, "horizontal"…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational Policy, Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Methods
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Jones, A. W. – Journal of Educational Administration, 1973
The function and image of the Inspector must move in new directions, particularly in view of an increasing professionalism among teachers. His major function must become that of system's supervisor-coordinator, with both professional and public relations involved. (Author)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Inspection, Public Schools, School Districts
Queensland Board of Teacher Education, Toowong (Australia). – 1981
Procedures used in six Australian primary schools for the induction of beginning teachers to their profession are summarily described. Induction into the schools was in each case a cooperative process which was much more than an orientation period and normally involved one person being most closely associated with the new teacher, but in which the…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Beginning Teachers, Educational Practices, Faculty Development
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Rice, Alan – Urban Education, 1983
In the Australian state of Victoria, control of academic curriculum has shifted from the bureaucrats to locally based teacher networks and statewide associations which limit subject scope and teaching styles. However, curriculum has not changed significantly, indicating that institutional reforms do not necessarily result in radical alterations of…
Descriptors: Bureaucracy, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Curriculum, Foreign Countries
Smyth, W. John – The Australian Administrator, 1980
To what extent can school principals provide effective educational leadership? Research shows that, contrary to textbook images, principals react to their circumstances instead of controlling them and that they spend most of their time on administrative, not instructional, matters. Further entrenching principals in their administrative role is the…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries, Instructional Improvement
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Smyth, W. John – Educational Leadership, 1982
In Australia, outside inspectors no longer assess teachers for promotion and advancement, but public concern has stirred interest in new forms of teacher evaluation. More teachers now accept the desirability of being observed by fellow teachers. (Author/JM)
Descriptors: Classroom Observation Techniques, Elementary Secondary Education, Faculty Development, Foreign Countries
Bezzina, Michael – 1994
This paper describes the efforts of a private Australian school system to implement practices that facilitate system-wide school effectiveness. The Diocese of Parramatta, a system of 73 primary and secondary Catholic schools, implemented system-level practices that embody elements of Fullan's (1987) notions of support and pressure. The…
Descriptors: Administrator Evaluation, Catholic Schools, Effective Schools Research, Elementary Secondary Education
Strachan, Jillian L. – The Australian Administrator, 1981
Most Australian teachers do not hold traditional methods of supervision in very high regard. A more acceptable form of supervision, clinical supervision, utilizes the information gathered from classroom observations to allow the teacher to gain a wider perspective on his or her own performance under non-threatening conditions. A limited survey,…
Descriptors: Classroom Observation Techniques, Elementary Secondary Education, Faculty Development, Foreign Countries
Dinham, Steve – 1992
Despite the recognition of the problems faced by beginning teachers, the provision of effective induction programs both in Australia and other nations has been less than universal, with only approximately one-half of beginning Australian teachers involved in any substantive form of teacher induction program. This paper offers a review of…
Descriptors: Beginning Teacher Induction, Beginning Teachers, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
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