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Showing 1 to 15 of 34 results Save | Export
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Natalie Bellis – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2024
The COVID-19 Pandemic dramatically impacted the classroom experiences of teachers and students across the globe. This reflexive autobiographical article critically examines the ramifications of this extraordinary event on the experiences of teaching and learning for the teacher-writer and her secondary English and literature students. Through a…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Foreign Countries, Professional Identity
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Amy Thomson – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2024
In light of the results of the 2023 referendum, truth-telling should inform how educators embed Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander perspectives across the curriculum. It is imperative that students' experiences of Indigenous content are understood, as this will inform the legitimisation of Indigenous futurity in classrooms and how teachers…
Descriptors: Ethics, Indigenous Populations, Pacific Islanders, Indigenous Knowledge
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Mazza, Donna; de Boer, Narrelle; Rhodes, David – English in Australia, 2021
Teaching Australian Gothic as a system of literary analysis can be challenging. Often linked to imprecise concepts that are difficult to identify, Australian Gothic is regularly reduced to 'something weird' or 'just a feeling'. However, the Gothic mode in Australia has established itself as an effective approach and developed some clear strategies…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Literary Genres, English Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Phillips, Sandra; McLean Davies, Larissa; Truman, Sarah E. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2022
As a curriculum area, English has been foundational to empire, invasion, and colonisation of Indigenous peoples the world over. It therefore requires considered scholarship to reimagine how to engage with and teach literature in English. In this article, we explore the enduring problem of English and its inheritances, as well as the ways in which…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Fiction, Indigenous Populations, Literature
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Yandell, John – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2023
The 'knowledge turn' in curriculum studies has proved highly influential in the past two decades. But what is meant by knowledge remains both unclear and subject to contestation, particularly in relation to English as a school subject. Two recent books address the knowledge question in very different ways.
Descriptors: English Instruction, English Curriculum, Teaching Methods, Secondary School Students
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Truman, Sarah E.; McLean Davies, Larissa; Buzacott, Lucy – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2022
This paper thinks with the concept of intertextuality to consider the multiple intersecting power structures inside and outside of literary education in secondary schools that continue to dominate text selection policies and teaching practices. We draw on our research with in-service teachers to reconsider how intertextual networks circulate on…
Descriptors: Power Structure, Secondary School Students, Literature, Teacher Attitudes
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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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Elliott, Victoria; Hodgson, John – English in Education, 2021
This note reports the results of a Delphi panel priority setting exercise for English education research. An initial item-generating survey of 75 English education academics and teachers worldwide was conducted; a thematic analysis of responses generated 31 potential priorities for future research. An adapted Delphi panel consisting of 44 English…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Research Needs, English Instruction, English Teachers
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Davies, Larissa McLean; Sawyer, Wayne – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2018
Australia has recently moved from having curricula developed within individual states to national curricula, including in English. This move in Australia has coincided with debate over Michael Young's call for 'bringing knowledge back in'. English has historically been epistemologically unstable with an ever-contestable knowledge base, and this is…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, National Curriculum, English Curriculum, Literature
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Reid, Ian – English in Australia, 2016
By the late 70s the "growth through English" slogan, derived from John Dixon's account of the Dartmouth conference, had become popular around Australia. In 1980 the Sydney IFTE conference featured several Dartmouth veterans; but during that conference, Dartmouth-linked ideas from overseas mingled with lines of local influence, especially…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Literature Appreciation, Instructional Innovation, Teaching Methods
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Amanda McGraw; Mary Mason – Australian Journal of Language and Literacy, 2020
We argue in this paper that the experience of reading is an intricate and dynamic weaving of connections much like the tentative construction of a spider's web. We also use the metaphor of the web to examine a professional learning experience for Australian secondary school English teachers who over the course of a year, and by working in…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Critical Reading, English Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Duck, Paul – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2019
This essay draws on the work of Raymond Williams in identifying a shift from the attempt to have students engage with literary texts in personal terms to a concern, founded on theoretical innovation, that they should read at a more sophisticated level in order to discern the ideology of a given text. It argues that what Williams calls an…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, English Instruction, Literature, Innovation
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Griffiths, Pauline – English in Australia, 2018
The ancient literary form of commonplace books offers rich possibilities to students and teachers of English in Australian schools in the 21st century. By briefly tracing early uses of commonplace books and examining contemporary approaches to the teaching of writing, this paper re-imagines the 15th century commonplace book as a personal learning…
Descriptors: Self Concept, English Instruction, Foreign Countries, Books
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Yates, Lyn; Davies, Larissa McLean; Buzacott, Lucy; Doecke, Brenton; Mead, Philip; Sawyer, Wayne – Curriculum Journal, 2019
This article takes up questions about knowledge and the school curriculum with respect to literary studies within subject English. Its intention is to focus on literary studies in English from the context of current waves of curriculum reform, rather than as part of the conversations primarily within the field of English, to raise questions about…
Descriptors: Literacy, English Instruction, English Curriculum, Knowledge Base for Teaching
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Ireland, Jill; O'Sullivan, Kerry-Ann; Duchesne, Susan – English in Australia, 2017
This paper examines the relationship between the literary theories underpinning an English syllabus and teachers' personal epistemologies and pedagogical beliefs. The study discussed here used semi-structured interviews and an online survey to investigate 50 New South Wales teachers' views of the theoretical basis of a senior English syllabus that…
Descriptors: English Instruction, English Teachers, Course Descriptions, Correlation
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