Secondary Curriculum Literacy and Teacher Word-Knowledge: Further Findings from a Western Australian ITE Cohort Study

IF 0.9 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Australian Journal of Teacher Education Pub Date : 2021-11-01 DOI:10.14221/ajte.2021v46n11.6
Brian Moon, Barbara Harris, A. Hays
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The Australian Government, in its Professional Standards for Teachers and Australian Curriculum framework, requires that all secondary teachers actively teach the specific literacy of their learning area. Yet achievement of that goal hinges on teachers having first acquired the pre-requisite literate competencies during their own schooling. There are reasons to doubt that this is the case for some graduate teachers, which means attempts to raise standards in schools are beset by a troubling circularity. Here we illustrate the problem with further findings from a Western Australian ITE Cohort Study (n=393), focussing this time on the word knowledge of secondary teaching graduates. Our analysis suggests that some secondary ITE students carry shortcomings from their own schooling that may hamper their ability to teach word knowledge or to self-correct. Current training and resources may thus have limited efficacy for some graduating teachers, placing limits on what can be achieved in schools. We consider the implications for literacy policies and for initial teacher education at secondary level.
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中学课程素养和教师词汇知识:来自西澳大利亚ITE队列研究的进一步发现
澳大利亚政府在其教师专业标准和澳大利亚课程框架中要求所有中学教师积极教授其学习领域的特定素养。然而,这一目标的实现取决于教师在自己的学校教育中首先获得必要的识字能力。我们有理由怀疑一些研究生教师的情况是否如此,这意味着提高学校标准的努力受到了令人不安的循环的困扰。在这里,我们用西澳大利亚ITE队列研究(n=393)的进一步发现来说明这个问题,这次重点关注中学教学毕业生的词汇知识。我们的分析表明,一些中学英语教学的学生从他们自己的学校教育中携带了一些缺点,这些缺点可能会妨碍他们教授单词知识或自我纠正的能力。因此,目前的培训和资源对一些即将毕业的教师可能效果有限,从而限制了学校所能取得的成就。我们考虑了对扫盲政策和中学初级教师教育的影响。
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来源期刊
Australian Journal of Teacher Education
Australian Journal of Teacher Education EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: The purpose of the Australian Journal of Teacher Education is to enhance the quality of teacher education through the publication of research reports, learned points of view and commentaries. Contributions may address proposals for, or descriptions of, development in the purpose, structure and methodology of teacher education; curriculum issues; changes in schools; or general social, ideological or political issues relating to teacher education. Papers must make an explicit connection with teacher education. The Australian Journal of Teacher Education, which is blind peer reviewed by a minimum of two members of the Editorial panel, is access free, electronic and published by Edith Cowan University. The Journal is indexed by the Australian Education Index and ERIC. It was rated ‘A’ by Australian Research Council in 2010 (www.arc.gov.au/era/era_journal_list/htm ) and is ranked .496 on SCImago. It is pleased to offer authors an efficient publication service. Manuscripts that have been through the review and revision cycle and have been accepted for publication will typically be published within two months. The time to first review can take up to six months, due to the large number of papers being submitted for review. Intending authors should be aware that the Journal has a rejection rate in excess of 50%.
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