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    • Journal Issue
    • For your Classroom
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Journal Category: For your Staffroom

Marvellous Things! Visual Arts Teaching

Alexandra Johnson celebrates success in her Visual Arts classrooms and you can too…

Remember your first year of teaching? I do.

For me, Visual Arts has always been about more than the HSC. It is the subject where students can communicate without words, and where their background can have less influence on their creative success or failure.

Like many, my first year as a Visual Arts teacher was filled with high expectations, nervous energy and a determination which allowed me to believe I could almost will my class towards HSC success. Naively, I expected ‘Band 6’s’ were being given out as freely as Oprah gives away free cars.

However, when it came to that first HSC class, sadly, hopes for great results were frustrated by outcomes which were so close, yet so far away, from what I was sure was possible for my students.

What to do?

How could I change my pedagogy to ensure the success of those students whose education I had been entrusted with? And how could I make sure my students held onto their love of art in the process?

engaged in numerous professional development opportunities, chatted with colleagues and reflected on my practice. I know it is what all good teachers are supposed to do, but for me, the key was to actually make improvement a priority.

Eventually, it hit me. The syllabus, our central text, and The Conceptual Framework had the answers.

Artist, Artwork, Audience and World are the necessary teaching components of our syllabus, and along with mentoring resilience, knowing our students, building rapport and maintaining high expectations, momentum began to build.

Artist, Artwork, Audience and World

Artist – us, the teachers

We are the masters of our Visual Arts classroom. How we continually develop our own practice defines the way we enhance the learning experiences of our students. My most important resources have been my colleagues, in particular one amazing and inspiring teacher who took me under her wing when I was new. Bouncing my ideas off her and building my own resilience enabled me to recognise that some of my initial and seemingly crazy ideas for building student engagement and rapport through programming could actually be possible.

I also met with colleagues from other schools, as well as in different subject areas. The advice I gained here around time-keeping and making students constantly accountable by upholding promises to contact parents became invaluable.

I engaged in professional development opportunities through ArtExpress teacher-directed courses, made contact with colleagues at local schools to peer mark senior student work and constantly referred back to the syllabus, asking: What skills do I want my students to be able to achieve?

Throughout, focus was on lessons with explicit learning objectives linked to teaching students to construct focused responses and engage in higher-order critiquing of artworks and critical thinking. I came to fully realise that young student artists need to be taught to write and critique artworks in a sophisticated way; that nourishing both their creativity and literacy is necessary for success.

I also learnt that, sometimes, our skill is to embrace our students’ outstanding ability to procrastinate, and to develop a way to cut through the waffle and make more meaningful responses.

Artwork – our students

Where major projects are involved, maintaining a firm and fair approach has helped to get my students over the line. There is a fine line between developing rapport and letting students get away with things that are only going to lead to disappointment in the future. Parent contact and fortnightly progress meetings with students have proved to be beneficial when it comes to producing a successful Body of Work.

Time management and routine is crucial and developing a fortnightly progress interview which can be formal or informal discussions during class time has proven to be successful for students who often leave things to the last minute.

The ability to think creatively and in a different way is an asset in our subject. This can be nurtured by encouraging students to challenge themselves and their teacher. Often we are ‘blown away’ by how crazily smart our kids actually are – as artists, they can be more willing to take calculated risks than we are and it can be our role to mentor this ability.

Some questions to encourage creativity include:

  • What artists have you considered as inspiration for this piece?
  • How have you analysed your own practice?
  • Does your medium and concept match? Is there a better way to display your concept?

The idea of such questioning is to generate ideas, prepare for action and encourage students to predict and understand potential challenges.

Honesty and mentoring resilience can also be the most important traits to develop in Visual Arts students, beginning in the junior years in preparation for senior study. In reality, Visual Arts is not the stereotypical ‘fluffy and lovey’ discussions some assume. Whilst the fear of hurting the feelings of sensitive, creative students is high and, at times, real, some approaches to offering encouraging and constructive feedback include asking “Do you want me to be nice, or honest?” I know this sounds harsh initially, but students know honesty is what is going to help them. It is about how you structure this conversation and prepare your feedback to include and offer other options that is essential.

Showing rather than telling is also a helpful approach. Try preparing some examples, finding similar images on Pinterest, art gallery websites, in journals or in art magazines. If all else fails, share some of your work or experimentation if you have some. Students love hearing that you are a practising artist yourself.

I also utilise other members of staff and their experience to support my conversations. More often than not you have mentioned the same thing to your student several times but until they hear it from someone else they also respect it may not stick.

Audience – the examiners and the examination

The importance of developing the writing skills of Visual Arts students cannot be overstated. Writing about art needs to be analytical, concise and sophisticated. Whilst writing scaffolds (such as ALARM and PEEL) are popular and often useful for coaxing students to move to analysis, interpretation and appreciation, it is essential for such scaffolds to be adapted to your students’ needs, and to understand that this is just a starting point.

Using the language and structures of effective writing in junior years and continuing to utilise this in some form through to senior years can have positive results. At the same time, students add their own ‘flavour’ to their writing, and students who are already talented writers may find such uniform structures restrictive. In my experience, working to know and enhance students’ existing abilities is the best way forward.

The official  NESA site has a useful selection of past papers. However, as images are often subject to copyright, I take the questions from the pages and add my own images to analyse. A fun activity to do closer to examinations is to take photographs of the student’s own art and choose short answer questions from HSC papers for students to analyse their own practice against. Not only do they understand artist’s practice better but they understand how to answer the question based on their own knowledge of their practice.

World – art is so much more than the HSC

Students who choose Visual Arts often come to the subject thinking it is relaxed and a bit of a ‘bludge’. You can teach them right from the get-go that this subject will make them think critically, challenge them to question everyday assumptions and most importantly, and inspire them.

Visual Arts inspires students to be lifelong learners, to engage in a world beyond their front doorstep and to find a passion to adore a subject that says: “It is okay to think differently, to not always agree and to take calculated risks”. I adore the possibilities of this subject and how it allows me to connect with students; I appreciate the opportunities it provides to inspire and make change and how it challenges me. And isn’t that what we are all here for anyway?

Alexandra Johnson currently teaches Visual Arts and English at Castle Hill High School and completed a Masters of Teaching in 2011. Alexandra has been a Year Advisor at Castle Hill High School, and this has driven her passion for student welfare and building rapport with students to manage behaviour and well-being matters. Her focus on improving achievement in Visual Arts has resulted in students regularly being admitted to ARTEXPRESS, recognition for excellent results in the HSC for Visual Arts and student artwork being purchased by the Wilkins collection and exhibited in the Department of Education building.

Technology You Can Look Forward To

Steve Delaney sees much to be excited about in the new Technology syllabus which is mandatory for Year 7 in 2019 and Year 8 in 2020…

Whenever teachers are presented with a new syllabus there are always mixed feelings of fear and excitement. The inevitable, “Oh, we’re going to have to make new programs!” and, “When are we going to have time to do it all?” statements are usually two of the first concerns that arise in faculty meetings.

There is good news.

Not much necessarily has to change. The current Technology Mandatory syllabus has allowed us scope to explore some innovative and engaging units of work, such as Bottle Rockets, Battlebots, Coding and Fantastic Foods, and these units map nicely to the new syllabus content requirements.

Hands-on

The increased focus on Engineered Systems and Digital Technologies may sound scary at first, but it really does set the pathway for including interesting units of work in your curriculum, and can act as an ideal pathway into Stage 5 subjects, such as iSTEM, IT Engineering, Design and Technology, IST and IT Multimedia.

The picture becomes even clearer if you complement these pathways with the flexibility in focus areas associated with the Materials Technologies context focus, and shape your curriculum to suit the needs of your students and the strengths of your faculty. In this way, the Materials Technologies context focus makes it possible to focus on particular ‘traditional’ hands-on subjects like woodwork, metalwork, polymers, graphics, electronics, textiles and more.

Things are getting exciting, right?

What else is cooking?

The addition of agriculture to the food focus certainly adds a twist to the traditional focus. However, ingraining that link and producing food and fibres as a part of the learning experience can really add some awesome experiences to how we deliver this aspect of the curriculum. My great hope is that this change assists us to improve students’ (and parents’) views on Food Technology as a viable, academic, Stage 5 subject option, as some tend to believe that this subject is just about ‘cooking’. So whilst we may only be talking about a change in Year 7 and Year 8 at the moment, there may be positive follow-on developments in this subject area which encourage more students to learn about the science of food and agriculture.

Keeping it real with coding

I guess the scariest part of the syllabus change for most is going to be coding. You can understand why.  In a number of schools, computing subjects may not be taught in TAS and this is generally an area where our more experienced teachers may not be as experienced. However, there are cool coding options such as The Starlab Mars Rover and Lego ev3 Mindstorms. Scratch is also very easy to learn. It is free and students can create quite complex games using a range of ‘drop and drag’ style tools. There are also plenty of code-able robotic options starting to emerge too!

With each new syllabus we take the familiar and the new, and, together, we find a way to make the best choices for our students. I’m excited! ​

​Steve Delaney is Head Teacher TAS at Bulli High School. He is the TAS Curriculum Network Illawarra Coordinating Teacher and Australian Aeronautical Velocity Challenge Coordinating Teacher.

Additional NESA support materials are also available here.  

An Introduction to the New Stage 6 Mathematics Advanced and Extension Syllabuses

Terry Moriarty introduces the new calculus-based courses to be implemented from 2019…

The new NSW Stage 6 Mathematics Advance and Extension Syllabuses were endorsed in 2017. 2018 is a planning year with implementation for Year 11 in 2019 and Year 12 in 2020. There are support materials, such as sample scope and sequence and assessment tasks, available through the NSW Education Standards Authority (NESA) website.

Due to the online nature of the syllabus documents, teachers are encouraged to download and review each section, including the aim and rationale before moving to the course content. New features of the Stage 6 syllabuses and common material include:

  • Australian curriculum content identified by codes;
  • Learning across the curriculum content, including cross-curriculum priorities, general capabilities and other learning across curriculum areas, are incorporated and identified by icons;
  • An interactive glossary.

Additionally, the Mathematics syllabuses include coding of applications and modelling as integral parts of each strand. Some strands are now merged together and the Mathematics Advanced and Mathematics Standard syllabuses contain common material which is identified by a ‘paperclip’ icon.

Mathematics Advanced

Mathematics Advanced replaces the previous Mathematics 2 Unit syllabus. There is a new organisational structure as well as updates to content.

The Year 11 organisational structure

The Advanced course is organised into Strands, with the strands divided into Topics and Sub-topics. Topics within the strands have been updated, including some content from different topics in the current course, such as Functions, which includes Linear and Trigonometric Functions, as well as new topics.

What to look out for

Some of the topics below have not been included in the new courses:

  • Plane Geometry;
  • Coordinate Methods in Geometry;
  • Harder Applications as a topic;
  • Conics.

Some of the topics below have been updated, including some units from different topics:

  • Working with Functions includes Linear, Quadratic and Cubic Functions;
  • Trigonometry and Measure of Angles, includes the use of two and three dimensions as well as new topics;
  • Velocity and acceleration are included in Introduction to Differentiation;
  • Financial Mathematics involves sequences and series and their application to financial situations.

Mathematics Advanced: Content

The table below demonstrates the changes between the previous and new syllabus.

2 Unit Preliminary

(current in 2018)

New Mathematics Advanced Year 11 Course – Topics and Sub-topics (to be implemented in 2019)
  • Basic Arithmetic and Algebra
     
  • Real functions
     
  • Trigonometric ratios
     
  • Linear functions
     
  • The quadratic polynomial and the parabola
     
  • Plane geometry – geometrical properties
     
  • Tangent to a curve and derivative of a function

Functions

MA-F1 Working with Functions

Trigonometric Functions

MA-T1 Trigonometry and Measure of Angles

MA-T2 Trigonometric Functions and Identities

Calculus

MA-C1 Introduction to Differentiation

Exponential and Logarithmic Functions

MA-E1 Logarithms and Exponentials

Statistical Analysis

MA-S1 Probability and Discrete Probability Distributions

2 Unit HSC Course

(Current until 2019)

New Mathematics Advanced Year 12 Course – Topics and Sub-topics (to be implemented in 2020)
  • Coordinate methods in geometry
  • Applications of geometrical properties
  • Geometrical applications of differentiation
  • Integration
  • Trigonometric functions
  • Logarithmic and exponential functions
  • Applications of calculus to the physical world
  • Probability
  • Series and series applications

Functions

MA-F2 Graphing Techniques

Trigonometric Functions

MA-T3 Trigonometric Functions and Graphs

Calculus

MA-C2 Differential Calculus

MA-C3 The Second Derivative

MA-C4 Integral Calculus

Financial Mathematics

MA-M1 Modelling Financial Situations

Statistical Analysis

MA-S2 Descriptive Statistics and Bivariate Data Analysis

MA-S3 Random Variables

Mathematics Extension 1: Content

The table below demonstrates the changes between the previous and new syllabus.

3 Unit Preliminary Course

(current in 2018)

New Mathematics Extension 1 Year 11 Course – Topics and Sub-topics (to be implemented in 2019)
  • Other inequalities
  • Circle geometry
  • Further trigonometry
  • Angles between two lines
  • Internal & external division of lines into given ratios
  • Parametric representation
  • Permutations combinations
  • Polynomials

Functions

ME-F1 Further Work with Functions

ME-F2 Polynomials

Trigonometric Functions

ME-T1 Inverse Trigonometric Functions

ME-T2 further Trigonometric Identities

Calculus

ME-C2 Rates of Change

Combinatorics

ME-A1 Working with Combinatorics

3 Unit HSC Course

(current in 2019)

New Mathematics Extension 1 Year 12 Course – Topics and Sub-topics (to be implemented in 2020)
  • Methods of integration
  • Primitive of sin2x and cos2x
  • Equation dN/dt= k(N-P)
  • Velocity and acceleration as a function of x
  • Projectile motion
  • Simple harmonic motion
  • Inverse functions & inverse trigonometric functions
  • Induction
  • Binomial theorem
  • Further probability
  • Iterative methods for numerical estimation of the roots of a polynomial equation
  • Harder applications of HSC 2 Unit topics

Functions

ME-F1 Further Work with Functions

ME-F2 Polynomials

Trigonometric Functions

ME-T1 Inverse Trigonometric Functions

ME-T2 Further Trigonometric Identities

Calculus

ME-C2 Rates of Change

Combinatorics

ME-A1 Working with Combinatorics

Mathematics Extension 2: Content

The table below demonstrates the changes between the previous and new syllabus.

4 Unit Course

(current until 2019)

New Mathematics Extension 2 Course – Topics and Sub-topics (to be implemented in 2020)
  • Graphs
  • Complex numbers
  • Conics
  • Integration
  • Volumes
  • Mechanics
  • Polynomials
  • Harder 3 Unit topics

Proof

MEX-P1 The Nature of Proof

MEX-P2 Further Proof by Mathematical Induction

Vectors

MEX-V1 Further Work with Vectors

Complex Numbers

MEX-N1 Introduction to Complex Numbers

MEX-N2 Using Complex Numbers

Calculus

MEX-C1 Further Integration

Mechanics

MEX-M1 Applications of Calculus to Mechanics

Assessment and examination

Advice regarding assessment and examination has been published on the  NESA website  and teachers should refer to the site regularly for updates. The most significant change is the approach to the formal school-based assessment program for Year 11 and Year 12.

School-based assessment requirements

Teachers should refer to the NESA Assessment and Reporting in Mathematics Stage 6 document. Some features of the new syllabuses include:

The Year 11 formal school-based assessment program is to reflect the following requirements:

  • three assessment tasks
  • the minimum weighting for an individual task is 20%
  • the maximum weighting for an individual task is 40%
  • one task must be an assignment or investigation-style with a weighting of 20–30%.

The Year 12 formal school-based assessment program is to reflect the following requirements:

  • a maximum of four assessment tasks
  • the minimum weighting for an individual task is 10%
  • the maximum weighting for an individual task is 40%
  • only one task may be a formal written examination with a maximum weighting of 30%
  • one task must be an assignment or investigation-style with a weighting of 15–30%.

NESA has provided the following examples of some approaches to task types for the assignment or investigation-style task:

  • an investigative project or assignment involving presentation of work in class;
  • an independently chosen project or investigation;
  • scaffolded learning tasks culminating in an open-ended or modelling style problem;
  • a guided investigation or research task involving collection of data and analysis.

Teachers can benefit from working collaboratively to plan for these new syllabuses. Access to professional learning time and resources will be essential and courses offered by the Centre for Professional Leaning are an ideal place to begin.

Terry Moriarty has been a Mathematics teacher and Head Teacher in South and South Western Sydney for forty years. He has been involved in curriculum development processes throughout his career.

 

 

 

 

Considering the Advanced and Standard Courses in the New Stage 6 English Syllabus: Part II: Year 11

Deb McPherson, Jane Sherlock, Jowen Hillyer and Rosemary Henzell suggest some approaches to planning for the new Standard and Advanced Stage 6 English courses …

 

…Come, my friends,

‘Tis not too late to seek a newer world…

To sail beyond the sunset, …

Ulysses, by Alfred, Lord Tennyson

PART 2: Year 11

This report is based on the 2017 Centre for Professional Learning English Conferences, presented by Associate Professor Jackie Manuel, Jane Sherlock and Deb McPherson with teaching strategies and texts from Rosemary Henzell and Jowen Hillyer. It provides an orientation to the new Standard and Advanced Year 11 courses. It discusses the planning required for implementing the new Year 11 courses, including unpacking the Modules for Standard and Advanced, commentary on new texts and suggestions for Year 11 pathways. Click on the image to download

What’s new

The Year 11 course has new elements, with set electives and assumptions. There is a change from broad Electives to specific Modules. Now there are three prescribed modules with Area of Study removed and replaced by the Common Module – Reading to Write. It is mandatory to program the Reading to Write module first to further develop students’ skills to respond to texts and refine their writing.

There is a stronger focus on individual reading to inform, inspire and encourage writing. The Standard course has become more prescriptive; there is a requirement for Standard only that in Module A one complex multimodal or digital text must be studied. In Module B one substantial literary print text is required. In the Advanced course, teachers could consider a complex multimodal text for Year 11 as there are few opportunities in Year 12. Teachers should note that one assessment task for Year 12 must be a multimodal presentation. Click on the image to download

Teachers will need to consider the strengthening of a wide and independent reading/viewing culture to create a community of readers and viewers. Of crucial importance will be the planning of text choices, Cross Curriculum Priorities (CCP), past and contemporary texts, integration, wide reading and backward mapping.

Text requirements

Apart from the requirements listed above, teachers have other text requirements to consider for Year 11. The Stage 6 syllabus text requirements have similarities to the 2012 K-10 English Syllabus. Again, the selection of texts across the stage MUST give students experience of:

  • Quality literature
  • Intercultural experiences and cultures of Asia
  • Australian texts, including texts by Aboriginal authors
  • Cultural, social and gender perspectives and texts which integrate the modes

Students must explore a range of texts drawn from prose fiction, drama, poetry, nonfiction, film, media and digital texts. The Cross-Curriculum Priorities (CCPs) are also in Stage 6, and teachers need to be aware that the Stage 6 descriptions have clear distinctions from Stage 5. For example:

  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander histories and cultures …recognise the histories, cultures, traditions and languages of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples for their foundational and central presence among contemporary Australian societies and cultures …read the Principles and Protocols….
  • Asia and Australia’s engagement with Asia …studying texts from Asia, about Asia and by Asian authors is one way to ensure that a creative and forward-looking Australia can engage with our place in the region.
  • Sustainability …research and discuss this global issue and learn the importance of respecting and valuing a wide range of world views.

(Stage 6 English Syllabus)

The CPP are ‘lenses’ which teachers can use to plan to ensure that content is linked meaningfully to the real world, and many teachers may choose to explore these areas in Year 11 rather than in Year 12.

Challenges for Year 11 2018

Faculties will need to consider how to build on Stage 5, the introduction of new and more complex texts and ways to build readiness to cross the bridge to Year 12. Preparation for Year 11 begins with analysis of the new module descriptions and shortlisting of texts and resources to deliver the content. A bookroom audit should look at what already exists and may suit Year 11 (including previous HSC texts), what texts need to be increased in quantity and what should be discarded as well as identifying funding for new texts to implement the new syllabus demands from school and P&C sources. Teachers will need to consider a different way of thinking about class texts, especially in the Reading to Write module, where student voice and choice should be considered.

Putting in place pathways and texts that will build to and support the HSC study will lead to a more coherent and interconnected Stage 6 program. Consider a common thread in the pathway if the arrangement of texts allows and any links to the texts you will consider for Year 12 and the concepts you might explore.

Year 11 Common Module: Reading to Write

This module must be programed first in 2018. It provides an excellent opportunity to explore a range of types of texts drawn from prose fiction, drama, poetry, nonfiction, film, media and digital texts. Reading and viewing widely is what it is all about. Central to this module is developing student capacity to respond perceptively to texts through their own considered and thoughtful writing and judicious reflection on their skills and knowledge as writers. This module is a great place for exploring CCPs.

The Common Module: the key questions

  • How to structure a wide reading and viewing program using a range of modes and media? (thematically, aesthetically, stylistically and/or conceptually)
  • How will these texts broaden your students’ understanding of themselves and their world?
  • What reasons and opportunities to write will you give your students?
  • What creative and critical texts which meet their needs and interests can be offered for their choice?
  • How will you develop the skills that students need to extend their own writing? (For example, connections, reflection, comprehension, analysis, interpretation and evaluation?)
  • How will you model ways to explore ideas/relationships/endeavours/scenarios in texts?
  • How will you model the ways tone, structure, imagery, syntax, voice and image can shape meaning?

The module requires students to read a number and range of texts linked either:

  • Thematically e.g. speculative, crime
  • Aesthetically e.g. the nature of beauty and art over time as revealed in the books we read
  • Stylistically e.g. verse novels, voice
  • Conceptually e.g. perspective, authority, argument, character, codes and conventions, context, genre, intertextuality

Students need to read widely to find models of different styles and voices which can be used for their own writing e.g. 99 Ways to Tell a Story: Exercises in Style by Matt Madden is a series of engrossing one-page comics that tell the same story 99 different ways.

Writing is prompted by what is being read. Writers are readers – reading and writing are inseparable.

Some ideas for structuring the reading and viewing include:

  • Regularly read and write with your students in the classroom
  • Enjoy the experience as you read and view with your students
  • Legitimise and normalise reading within the school day as a critical component of what we do in teaching English
  • Make better readers by giving students what they want to read. Find their passion and their spark, their curiosity about a topic to build confidence and fluency
  • Establish reading and viewing groups with clear roles and scaffolds for what is required
  • Propose a quest/search/pursuit over time, concepts, genre
  • Provide and invite a selection of texts e.g. fiction, film, nonfiction poetry, drama, cartoons, essays, feature articles, to suit student needs and interests and diversity and allow choice by students

The first task is engaging students – getting them reading. It is essential that students be given some choice about the texts they can read and view.

The essential conditions for developing writing accomplishment and confidence are:

  • Time
  • Choice
  • Real purposes and audience
  • Craft knowledge and skills
  • Understanding writing as process (growing repertoire of skills, strategies, routine, reflective abilities. How does someone get started? What do they do when they get stuck?)
  • Response feedback
  • Community – writing is a social act; it requires the establishment of a community of learners

When planning a unit of work for the Year 11 Common Module the following template may be useful.

Planning Template for Year 11 Common Module: Reading to Write
What is your focus for this module? Big ideas? Consider a Project Based Learning style question.
Resources? Collect novels, short stories, films, poetry anthologies, plays, cartoons, trailers or visuals and make available in book boxes, devices or through the library.
Required reading and viewing? Consider at least six texts e.g. fiction + film/play script + poems + non-fiction texts.
Reading and viewing groups? What roles and expectations will you set up?
Ways into the unit to provide the initial hook? Consider 3-4 short and varied texts e.g. cartoon, poem, song, short story, film or book trailers, visuals to introduce some of the big ideas and how the reader/viewer’s response is positioned by the composer.
Timeline for unit? Structure unit with skills lessons/“masterclasses” on how to explore a text, mid-point tasks, reflection points, and progress reports and how these will be presented and reported.
Variety of writing tasks? Use a small, everyday notebook for reflections and trigger words.
Syllabus requirements? Make a checklist for Standard and Advanced for outcomes and content that match unit knowledge, skills and understandings. Assign numbers to the content points e.g. Outcome 1. Content point 4=1.4 so that you can pinpoint the content reflected in the unit and reduce the amount of syllabus text in your program.
Assessment tasks? Decide which of the Year 11 English School-based Assessment Requirements suits this Module.

The following four examples feature ideas and texts for units to engage students in Reading to Write:

1. Thematically: Dystopias

2. Stylistically: Connections in a Crowded World

3. Conceptually: First Voices

4. Aesthetically: World Literature.

Early lessons need to provide a foundation of how composers use their texts to explore the selected focus e.g. the future or relationships. Students need to be positioned for their investigation. Consider a selection of short texts in a variety of media which illuminates your focus and the conventions used by those texts and what students need to look for. Use an article which explores the focus to provide some background.

You will find elaborations of resources, texts and assessments for each example in Attachment 1 at the end of this article.

Year 11 Module A Standard Contemporary Possibilities

A reminder that there is a requirement for Standard only that in Module A one complex multimodal or digital text must be studied.

Year 11 Module A Standard: the key questions

  • What are the different communication technologies with which we interact in our world?
  • What are the features of digital, multimedia, multimodal and nonlinear texts?
  • In what ways do these different communication technologies shape the ways that we read, navigate, understand and respond to digital, multimedia, multimodal and nonlinear texts?
  • What are further creative possibilities of such technology?
  • What text will you use for your detailed study of one complex multimodal or digital text for example film, media or interactive narratives?
  • How will you develop students’ understanding of the nature, scope and ethical use of digital technology in their own responding and composing?
  • In what ways and with what texts will you develop your students’ deeper appreciation and understanding of the power of communication technologies to reach a broad audience for a range of purposes?
  • Using the selected texts, what strategies can help students appreciate the active roles of both composer and responder in controlling and choosing the reading pathways through texts?
  • How can students analyse and interpret the ways composers use and manipulate a variety of aural, language and visual devices to shape our understanding of what we listen to, read or view? Students may explore notions of hybridity and intertextuality.
  • How will your students individually or collaboratively design and create their own multimodal or digital texts to communicate and represent their ideas; understanding the importance of creating a responsible digital footprint?
  • What types of viewing, listening or reading experiences will you give your students to enable them to analyse and assess the text’s specific features and form?

Suggested multimodal texts for this module include Snow Fall: the Avalanche at Tunnel Creek, a digital essay by the New York Times; What they Took with Them, a film based on a rhythmic poem by Jenifer Toksvig; My Year 12 Life; The Dressmaker; and several SBS interactives including the Cronulla Riots, Exit Australia, The Boat and K’gari.

Jowen Hillyer’s work has explored how to deliver Contemporary Possibilities in a low SES school or context with limited technology. Details of this approach to teaching the unit can be found in Attachment 2 at the end of this article. Rosemary Henzell’s work explored a range of digital texts to be used in the classroom and how to set up a basic project in which students collaborate to build a website or interactive online experience. Students have choice and can consider a local event, place, person or history, or a social issue of importance to them. Rosemary’s article ‘Contemporary (Im)possibilities’ is also in this edition of the Journal of Professional Learning.

Year 11 Module B Standard: Close Study of Literature

The key difference in this module is that a substantial PRINT text is mandatory.

Year 11 Module B Standard: the key questions

  • What substantial literary print text have you chosen?
  • What strategies will you develop for students to study and respond to the text in its entirety?
  • How can you develop your students’ understanding of the ways that language features, text structures and stylistic choices have been used in their text?
  • What strategies will you use to help students identify, analyse and respond to the ideas in the text and the ways in which meaning is shaped?
  • In what ways will students examine the conventions that are particular to their chosen literary form, and the ways that authors use, manipulate and/or challenge those conventions?
  • What types of critical and creative responses to the text will students experience to develop their understanding of the use and effects of elements such as style, tone and mood?
  • How can students further develop their critical skills to analyse and assess the ways meaning is shaped and conveyed?
  • How will you enable students to engage with the text to further develop their personal connections with, and enjoyment of the text, enabling them to express their personal interpretation of its meaning and importance?

Classroom considerations and texts for Year 11 Standard Module B

It is important to choose an engaging text as students will be spending considerable time on it. Consider texts that will enrich students’ experiences and take them somewhere they may not have been or may not go to without support. While it is tempting to go to previous HSC Module B texts it may be useful to consider some better choices from recently published texts or previous Area of Study or Modules A or C.

Some suggested Year 11 Standard pathways are included in Attachment 3 at the end of this article. They include suggested texts for the Common Module, Module A and Module B.

Year 11 Advanced Module A: Narratives that Shape our World

There are distinct differences in this module from the previous syllabus. Students are required to study a range of narratives with a focus on story-telling and the diverse ways it can be explored in texts.

Year 11 Advanced Module A: the key questions

  • What narrative will frame your study?
  • What texts will you choose which will be a range of narratives from the past and the contemporary era that illuminate and convey ideas, attitudes and values?
  • What strategies will you employ to help students consider the powerful role of stories and storytelling as a feature of narrative in past and present societies?
  • Which of these are explored in your chosen texts: connecting people within and across cultures, communities and historical eras; inspiring change or consolidating stability; revealing, affirming or questioning cultural practices; sharing collective or individual experiences; or celebrating aesthetic achievement.
  • How will you help students deepen their understanding of how narrative shapes meaning in a range of modes, media and forms, and how it influences the way that individuals and communities understand and represent themselves?
  • What strategies will you develop to enable students to analyse and evaluate one or more print, digital and/or multimodal texts to explore how narratives are shaped by the context and values of composers (authors, poets, playwrights, directors, designers and so on) and responders alike?
  • How can your students investigate how narratives can be appropriated, reimagined or reconceptualised for new audiences?

Year 11 Advanced Module B: Critical Study of Literature

This module is more familiar to teachers and requires students to engage with the literary text in its entirety and to consider its textual integrity.

Year 11 Advanced Module B: the key questions

  • What literary text has been selected to suit the needs and interest of your specific students?
  • How will you help students develop analytical and critical knowledge, understanding and appreciation of their literary text?
  • How will you enable your students through increasingly informed personal responses to the text in its entirety, to develop understanding of the distinctive qualities of the text and notions of textual integrity?
  • How will you assist your students to explore how the author’s ideas are expressed in the text through an analysis of its construction, content and language?
  • How can students develop their own interpretation of the text, basing their judgements on evidence drawn from their research and reading, enabling the development of a deeper and richer understanding of the text?
  • In what ways can students consider notions of contexts with regard to the text’s composition and reception, investigate the perspectives of others, and explore the ideas in the text, further strengthening their personal perspective on the text?
  • What opportunities will you provide to enable students to appreciate and express views about the aesthetic and imaginative aspects of a text by composing creative and critical texts of their own?
  • Through what kinds of reading, viewing or listening opportunities will your students analyse, evaluate and comment on the text’s specific language features and form?
  • How will you provide opportunities for your students to engage deeply with the text as a responder and composer to further develop their personal and intellectual connections with this text, to enable students to express their informed personal view of its meaning and value?

Classroom considerations and texts for Year 11 Advanced Module B

Teachers can revisit previous Module B texts or texts from the Area of Study, Modules A and C. The time available gives you opportunities to vary the writing/ responding activities e.g. review, for a specific publication, imaginative re-creation or digital essay. There are opportunities here to explore Shakespeare and look at different interpretations and readings. You could include research into different productions on stage and on screen or look at different interpretations of characters, setting, and re-contextualisations.

Some suggested Year 11 Advanced pathways are included in Attachment 4 at the end of this article. They include suggested texts for the Common Module, Module A and Module B.

Some of the new aspects of the Standard and Advanced courses in Year 11 are challenging and also exhilarating. The Common Module Reading to Write will provide an opportunity to reset the way we do English in Year 11 and open students up to the excitement of reading widely and choosing what to read and view. The multimodal requirement for Standard (why not Advanced as well?) will encourage and validate the exploration of digital texts, websites and films in the classroom.

Deb McPherson taught English in NSW government secondary schools for 28 years as a classroom teacher, Head Teacher and Deputy Principal. She was a member of the committee selecting texts for the Higher School Certificate English courses for over 15 years. She worked as a Senior Curriculum Officer, English, at the Board of Studies and as the Manager of English for the NSW Department of Education and Training. She has been a lecturer and tutor at the University of Newcastle and at the University of Wollongong. She is an author of four anthologies for schools for OUP and co-authored Choices for English, a collection of recommended texts for the 7-12 English classroom with Helen Sykes and Ernie Tucker. Her review column, ‘Reading and Viewing with Deb McPherson’, appears in the AATE journal, English in Australia.

Jane Sherlock is an experienced, enthusiastic and passionate public education teacher of English for 40 years having retired from teaching as Head Teacher English at Kiama High. Currently, Jane is the NSW English Teachers’ Association project officer for HSC student days which are run throughout the year. Jane is also an author of a number of English textbooks, including the national award-winning Oxford HSC English. Jane is a presenter for the NSW Teachers Federation’s Centre for Professional Learning and with Deb McPherson has now presented at four English conferences for the CPL. In 2009, Jane received the Australian College of Educators award for her contribution to education.

Jowen Hillyer is currently Head Teacher of English at Taree High School (a Connected Communities school) in rural NSW. She has been a teacher, head teacher and teacher educator for 19 years, with experience in both rural and disadvantaged public schools, as well as 3 years as an Associate Lecturer at The University of Sydney. In her current role, Jowen leads a large, diverse faculty in new approaches, innovation and student engagement. Her research interests are centred on project based learning, boys’ writing in the middle years and mentoring programs for beginning English teachers.

Rosemary Henzell currently teaches English at Willoughby Girls High School. She completed her Master of Teaching in 2013, having spent seven years as an adult ESL teacher and TESOL trainer in Australia and Japan. Her MTeach Action Research Project investigated how to raise student confidence and agency in essay writing. Rosemary is part of her school’s Professional Learning Team, and is currently investigating how Project Based Learning and Teaching For Understanding frameworks can be utilised in the English classroom.

Attracting More Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders to our Profession

Peter Johnson makes the case for more Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander teachers in your school…

 

The under-representation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in the professions has been the subject of many discussions; teaching is no exception.

At the 2016 census, it was estimated that 649,171 people or 2.8 percent (ABS 2017) of the Australian population identified as Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander. This compares with 5.5 percent of Australian school students identifying as of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander descent (ABS 2016).

How does this compare?

The National Aboriginal Education Committee commissioned research in 1979 into the representation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander teachers in Australian schools. At the time, it was reported that 72 teachers across Australian schools identified. Hughes and Willmot (1982) projected through their research that there should have been 2,001 if proportional to the Australian population of the time.

One of those 72 teachers, Kerry Ella Fraser reflects,

Aunty Joyce Woodberry was one of the state’s first Aboriginal Education Workers. She was a great advocate for the need for more Aboriginal workers, and more importantly Aboriginal teachers, in schools. Her passion inspired me to want to teach and dedicate my years of service to Aboriginal Education in schools.

There were enormous pressures, especially in my early years. The expectation was that Aboriginal Education in the schools in which I taught was not everyone’s business, it was my business. I was expected to be the expert, and have all the answers. I had to organise all Aboriginal cultural activities, celebrations, homework centres, tuition groups, often with little support. There was no support network. I felt isolated.

Numerous committees, working parties, conferences and governments, state, territory and federal, have flagged the need to increase the number of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander teachers since Hughes and Willmot set their target of 1,000 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander teachers by 1990.

The National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Education Policy of the 1980s (DEET 1989) included a long-term goal “to increase the number of Aboriginal people employed as … teachers …” (DEET 1989 p14). This was recognition of the view that “Aboriginal people generally seek education that is more responsive to the diversity of Aboriginal circumstances and needs, and which recognises and values the cultural background of students” (DEET 1989 p9).

This was reaffirmed by the Ministerial Council on Education, Employment, Training and Youth Affairs in 2000 (MCEETYA 2000) and acknowledged in a report to the Commonwealth Parliament in 2001 (DEST 2001).

The parliamentary report of 2001 indicated that the number of teachers of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander descent had exceeded the target set by Hughes and Willmot, with 1,338 employed across Australian government schools and 52 across Catholic schools (DEST 2001 p31). This was still well below the proportion in the broader population.

The Melbourne Declaration on Educational Goals for Young Australians acknowledged that,

Australian schooling needs to engage Indigenous students, their families and communities in all aspects of schooling; increase Indigenous participation in the education workforce at all levels; and support coordinated community service for students and their families that can increase constructive participation in schooling.

(MCEETYA 2008).

This was consistent with the broader agenda of the Council of Australian Governments and its emerging desire to Close the Gap (COAG 2008) on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander disadvantage across all aspects of life.

Recent movements

However, progress appeared to languish until 2011 when the then Minister for School Education, Early Childhood and Youth, Peter Garrett, funded the More Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Teachers Initiative (MATSITI). The project was established with four years of funding provided up front, and drew together an experienced team of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander educators under the leadership of Professor Peter Buckskin of the University of South Australia. Emeritus Professor Paul Hughes and Dr Kaye Price were integral to the project.

The brief of MATSITI was to coordinate a response to the issue across all Australian school education jurisdictions and universities to find “practical ways to encourage more Aboriginal (and Torres Strait Islander) people to pursue a career in teaching” (Garrett 2011). The initiative also recognised the critical role which Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people had to play in achieving MATSITI’s aims.

A MATSITI commissioned study identified that there were 2,661 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander teachers in Australian schools in 2012, comprising 1.2 percent of the teacher population (MATSITI, 2014). Allowing for the constraints of the data collection, this was projected to be 3,700 teachers or just under 1.7 percent, still well below the 4.9 percent of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students estimated to be in Australian schools at the time.

A subsequent workforce collection in 2015 revealed a net increase of 439 teachers since 2012. Whether this can be attributed to MATSITI is arguable. There are certainly indications in the analysis of the data that MATSITI provided the impetus for more culturally sensitive workplaces where teachers are more likely to identify. There was also a significantly renewed focus on strategies to contribute to the MATSITI objectives.

It appeared that the education community had risen to the challenge; a challenge that predated the work of Hughes and Willmot; a challenge that will need to continue to be met to achieve parity between the proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander teachers and students in Australian schools.

The successes of recent years have been varied across the school education jurisdictions. Without a doubt, New South Wales has led the way in implementing strategies to increase the number of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander teachers and build the capacity of those teachers to aspire to leadership positions.

In 2005, there were 283 teachers in New South Wales public schools who identified as Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander. This equated to 0.6 percent of teachers in public schools. By 2015, this had increased to 1,110 teachers or 2.23 percent. The advice of the NSW Department of Education is that this had increased to around 1,280 teachers in mid 2017.

How was this achieved?

Public Education in New South Wales is the only school education jurisdiction in Australia which provides ultimate preference for the employment of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander teachers. This is embedded in the Teaching Service Act 1980, the act which overarches the employment of all teachers in New South Wales public schools.

Since 2008, each staffing agreement between the NSW Teachers Federation and the Department of Education has ensured that the employment of Aboriginal teachers, along with incentive transfer applicants, is considered first when filling vacant teaching positions.

This has been accompanied by the successful Join Our Mob (NSW DoE) promotional recruitment campaign and strategies, including scholarships, mentoring and tailored career and leadership development programs.

The successes of New South Wales also hinged on the positive relationships developed between the Department of Education’s human resources team, officers of the NSW Teachers Federation and the leadership of the NSW Aboriginal Education Consultative Group.

Maintaining momentum

Why is parity between the proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander teachers and students a desired objective?

A great strength of public schools is that they can be considered to be a microcosm of society, open to students from the breadth of ethnic, cultural and religious backgrounds. They also provide education to students across the diverse geography of Australia. It is therefore arguable that teachers and other staff in those schools should be similarly representative. While non-government schools tend to be much more narrowly focused, particularly in terms of religious background and their presence in rural and remote communities, they should not be precluded from more closely reflecting the society beyond their school gate.

Aboriginal sportspeople have long been held up as role models for young Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. They are often portrayed in the media and public life as successful and can readily command attention from all levels of society.

Less readily portrayed by the media as aspirational role models are Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people across the professions, including those who have the greatest contact with young people, teachers. This is not due to any perceived lack of capacity to influence the futures of young Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, but more likely a reflection of media attraction.

In addressing the issue of the “completion gap” for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander youth, Helme and Lamb (2011) conclude that a “school culture and leadership that acknowledges and supports Indigenous students and families is most important” in the engagement of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students in schooling. “Involvement of the Indigenous community in education planning and provision” are among the factors which Helme and Lamb regard as essential.

Santoro, Reid, Crawford and Simpson (2011) suggest that “teachers who have grown up and completed their schooling as Indigenous learners have a wealth of experience and knowledge about the pedagogies that are likely to be successful for Indigenous students”. They explore the holistic approach to the education of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students, within and outside the school, presenting a view that only teachers who have experienced life as an Indigenous child and learner can fully understand the cultural, social and cognitive needs of Indigenous students. They do, however, acknowledge that “Indigenous people are not a culturally homogenous group”.

There is a wealth of literature to support the view that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students benefit from being taught by teachers who are also of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander descent.

Over to the next generation

Kerry Ella Fraser recalled,

It was always a proud moment when ex-students said it was due to my influence that they chose Aboriginal Studies in high school to learn more about Aboriginal people, culture and history.

Developing and implementing a writing program for small groups of kindergarten children and seeing the data showing that all children had progressed significantly.

My advice to young Aboriginal people thinking of teaching is to find out what the job is like, visit classrooms, volunteer and experience what really happens in a classroom. Watch how teachers interact with students and witness those many hats a teacher wears.

Ongoing success will only be achieved when the critical mass of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander teachers across all school education jurisdictions reaches the point of parity, when targets are no longer needed and when the training, recruitment and development of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander teachers and school leaders is viewed as a mainstream outcome.

MATSITI has been a significant catalyst for this to occur. Governments, teacher educators and school education jurisdictions now need to take up the running.

References:

 

Australian Bureau of Statistics (2017), 2075.0 Census of Population and Housing – Counts of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians 2016, Canberra

 

Australian Bureau of Statistics (2016), 4221.0 Schools Australia 2016, Canberra

 

Council of Australian Governments (29 November 2008), Communique, COAG, Melbourne

 

Department of Education and Training Victoria (2016), Marrung Aboriginal Education Plan 2016-2026, Melbourne

 

Department of Employment, Education and Training (1989), National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Education Policy: joint policy statement, AGPS, Canberra

 

Department of Education, Science and Training (2001), National Report to Parliament on Indigenous Education and Training, 2001, Commonwealth Government, Canberra

 

Garrett, The Hon Peter MP (2011), Media Release – $7.5 Million to Help Increase Indigenous Teacher Numbers, Canberra

 

Helme S and Lamb S (2011), Closing the School Completion Gap for Indigenous Students, Produced for the Closing the Gap Clearinghouse. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, Canberra and Australian Institute of Family Studies, Melbourne.

 

Hughes, P. and Willmot, E. (1982), ‘A Thousand Aboriginal Teachers By 1990’. In J. Sherwood (ed.) Aboriginal Education. Issues and Innovations. Creative Research, Perth, 45-49

 

More Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Teachers Initiative (MATSITI) website, http://matsiti.edu.au/

 

More Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Teachers Initiative (2014), Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Teacher Workforce Analysis, Adelaide

 

MCEETYA Taskforce on Indigenous Education (2000), Discussion Paper – Achieving Educational Equality for Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples, MCEETYA, Canberra

 

MCEETYA (2008), Melbourne Declaration on Educational Goals for Young Australians, MCEETYA, Canberra

 

NSW Department of Education, Join Our Mob website,

https://teach.nsw.edu.au/becomeateacher/aboriginal-people

 

Santoro N, Reid J, Crawford L and Simpson L (2011), ‘Teaching Indigenous Children: Listening to and Learning from Indigenous Teachers’. In Australian Journal of Teacher Education Volume 36 Issue 10 pp64-76

 

Peter Johnson is a former executive director with the NSW Department of Education and chair of the evaluation panel for the More Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Initiative.

 

This is an updated version of an article first published in Professional Voice, Vol. 12, Issue 1 Spring 2017 https://www.aeuvic.asn.au/news-media/professional-voice

A Yarn to Begin Aboriginal Education at Your School

Kristy Pugliano reflects upon her own experiences leading Aboriginal Education and shares her story and some resources and key relationships teachers can begin with…

My name is Kristy Pugliano and I am an Aboriginal teacher in South West Sydney from Kamilaroi Country (around Singleton and the Hunter Valley area). My grandmother and mother are of Aboriginal heritage from the Quirrindi area and my father was born in Calabria, Italy. I am proud of where I come from and my heritage and ancestry drives my teaching practice every day.

Teaching Aboriginal students is one of the most rewarding opportunities for teachers in our public school system. Leading Aboriginal Education in your school is amongst the most significant and important responsibilities or portfolios you can take on in your teaching career.

To begin, I would like to acknowledge and pay my respects to the Elders both past, present and future for they hold the memories, the traditions, the culture and hope of Aboriginal Australia. We must always remember that under the concrete and asphalt of our schools this land is and always will be traditional Aboriginal land.

Teachers in Public Education seek to work in a school which values Aboriginal culture and celebrates and supports Aboriginal students, families and communities. A challenge that can arise, especially if you initially have little knowledge, understanding or experience of Aboriginal culture and matters, is how to get started and how to make a difference in the lives of the Aboriginal students in your school. Some common questions include:

  • How do we build community partnerships?
  • How do we instil ideas of equality and aspirational goals for Aboriginal students in our school?
  • How do we avoid a shallow ‘tick-a-box’ approach and instead, actually do real and meaningful work?
  • And importantly, how do we educate non-Aboriginal students about Aboriginal peoples and issues?

Family and relationships

It is important to understand that Aboriginal culture is strongly unified by family and relationships. Before embarking on your Aboriginal Education journey you must consider relationships, as this is the key to success.

The importance of making a connection and valuing culture and relationships cannot be understated. To gain a better understanding of how Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander families’ kinship and connections work, it is strongly advised you have a look at Sydney University’s Kinship Module Teaching and Learning Framework.  This framework can better inform your relationships with Aboriginal students and families, as it aims to improve cultural awareness and interactions. In relation to the modules, Lynette Riley, a project leader, explains,

In a school situation where a teacher is talking to the parents, they want a decision straight away; it’s not going to work for Aboriginal people. They actually need time to go back and talk to [extended family with Kinship connections and obligations] and explain what the issues are and then come to a group consensus as to the best way forward. If you don’t build into the consultation process strategies that allow Aboriginal people to take stock of the Kinship issues then it means that you’re putting them in jeopardy of breaking ties and creating barriers within their wider family network.

Sharing quality resources and insights such as the Kinship Module Teaching and Learning Framework with colleagues can provide a valuable starting point for real cultural change in your school.

Getting organised

The first thing teachers should do is either join their school’s Aboriginal Education Team or establish one. First steps include finding out about the skills and strengths of people in the school and creating a team of like-minded and passionate teachers and support staff.

From there, the team can have regular meetings and develop a school policy and may also consider preparing an Aboriginal Education three-year plan, supporting the needs of the school’s Aboriginal students and families.

Including Aboriginal people, students and families in your planning is a key to success. In the early days, it is crucial to seek and listen to feedback about what students want and need.

I found that when starting out, most students knew they had Aboriginal heritage but some students did not know where it came from or anything about their mob. Some good ways to make connections include holding an ‘Eat and Greet’, and inviting the parents, grandparents and students into your school to test the waters and see how many families attend.

Food is key! Engaging some Aboriginal families with the school setting can be challenging, and a BBQ or a breakfast club can be an effective way to create a welcoming space that is family friendly and where families feel comfortable to have a yarn.

Be selective with opportunities and events

Some good starting points for all schools include flying the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander flags alongside the Australian flag and including Welcome to Country or Acknowledgement of Country in school ceremonies and events.

Beyond these initial steps, it is imperative that when leading Aboriginal Education you do not attempt to conquer every opportunity and every event and excursion that comes your way. There are copious events and excursions available to young Aboriginal students and it can be best to start small, perhaps with a small community event, and prioritise getting to know your students and developing a good rapport and strong relationships with the community.

Local networks and the Aboriginal Education Consultative Group (AECG)

Accessing help and seeing what other schools in your local area do, as well as establishing local networks, are imperative to your success. You should contact your local Aboriginal Education Consultative Group  (AECG) for support and to meet people who have positive goals and aspirations just like you. You can pick up lots of tips and tricks from these meetings that happen all over New South Wales. The AECG’s website outlines its purpose and some key features are included below:

The NSW Aboriginal Education Consultative Group Inc. is a non for profit Aboriginal organisation that provides advice on all matters relevant to education and training with the mandate that this advice represents the Aboriginal community viewpoint.

The NSW Aboriginal Education Consultative Group Inc. promotes respect, empowerment and self-determination and believes the process of collaborative consultation is integral to equal partnership and is fundamental to the achievement of equality.

The NSW Aboriginal Education Consultative Group Inc. advocates cultural affirmation, integrity and the pursuit of equality to ensure that the unique and diverse identity of Aboriginal students is recognised and valued.

School policies, plans and goals

When establishing your goals and three-year plan as a committee, you should embed everything you do into the School Plan with a view to ensuring that this work, over the course of the three years, becomes part of the whole school’s priorities.

You will also need to consider the school budget allocation, and ensuring all funding is being spent correctly and equitably towards opportunities to support student learning and well-being for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students.

Personalised Learning Plans (PLP) for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students are a highly valued and beneficial aspect of Aboriginal Education. Personalised Learning Pathways are an active process developed in consultation with the student, parents/carers and teachers, to identify, organise and apply personal approaches to learning and engagement. It is this personal connection and interaction with families that allows the school and teachers to gain insight into factors that may be hindering or impacting Aboriginal student success.

It is recommended that all Aboriginal students have a PLP that is tailored to the student and is regularly reviewed and updated. There is no statewide Personalised Learning Pathway template, and it is recommended that schools and communities develop a PLP template together to suit their local needs.

A great idea is to get to know your local AECG and when it is your first time working with PLPs it is nice to have some guidance. If you have already established a relationship with families via community events, BBQ’s, morning teas and ‘Eat & Greets’ you will find these planning meetings easier to establish, as families will be more comfortable in the school environment.

If families don’t want to come into the school, then try meeting them at a local café or park, and hold the meeting for the Personalised Learning Pathways away from school grounds. It is important for schools to be flexible and accommodating. More information from the Department can be found in their Personalised Learning Pathways Guidelines.

Additional support and resources

A very exciting opportunity which aims at engaging Aboriginal communities and, in particular, celebrating student success is the MGoals website.

The MGoals program fosters partnership, builds connections and promotes the brilliant work being done by community and schools in support of Aboriginal culture and Education.

This website has two functions: firstly, it is a website-building project to encourage schools to collaborate with their local Aboriginal community in building a local community website resource; secondly, it also performs as an online goal-setting program. It is a place for students to interact with teachers, parents and mentors to set goals for living and learning.

The goal-setting program helps students to build their knowledge through aspiring towards and achieving their goals. This site can greatly help students, teachers and parents to develop Personalised Learning Pathways if they choose to access this platform.

If you also have stories to tell within your community, a great way to document them is through this website.

Below are some further helpful resources and links to support you in your journey.

  • NSWTF, Aboriginal Education: A 25 Year Approach, https://www.www.stagingnswtf.com.au/pages/aboriginal-education-25-year-approach-way-forward.html
  • One Stop Shop for Aboriginal Education, https://education.nsw.gov.au/aec 
  • NSW Department’s Policy, https://education.nsw.gov.au/policy-library/policies/aboriginal-education-and-training-policy 
  • Personalised Learning Pathways, https://education.nsw.gov.au/aec/media/documents/PersonalisedLearningPathways16.pdf
  • Aboriginal Education in Public Schools, https://education.nsw.gov.au/aec/aboriginal-education-in-nsw-public-schools#Key0
  • NAIDOC, http://www.naidoc.org.au/2017-national-naidoc-theme
  • Aboriginal dancers and performers, https://koomurri.com.au/

 

Whether you want to change the whole school culture in terms of Aboriginal Education or want to engage Aboriginal students in your classroom, all of it counts and it all makes a difference.

 

Kristy Pugliano is Head Teacher of Creative and Performing Arts at Elizabeth Macarthur High School in South Western Sydney and also leads Aboriginal Education there. She received a TeachNSW scholarship whilst studying at Western Sydney University. In her current role, Kristy leads a large, diverse faculty in new approaches, innovation and student engagement whilst also leading Aboriginal Education. She is President of the Local Narellan Aboriginal Education Consultative Group. In 2016, Kristy received the Aboriginal Staff Member award at the Aboriginal Student Awards for her significant contribution to Aboriginal Education and for working successfully in partnership with schools, AECG, community and students. Her research interests are centred on Aboriginal Education, project based learning and supporting teachers through accreditation processes.

 

 

 

A Guide to the New Stage 6 Science Syllabus

Ken Silburn and Cherine Spirou introduce the new Science courses to be implemented for Year 11 in 2018 and Year 12 in 2019…

Considering the last major syllabus changes were in 2010, the current revisions of the Stage 6 Science courses are well overdue, and present new opportunities for teachers to review their programs and teaching.

In March 2017, the NSW Education Standards Authority – NESA (formerly BOSTES), announced the implementation dates for the new HSC Science syllabuses, after nearly two years of consultation with schools from all educational sectors.

In 2018, the implementation of the Year 11 courses in Science will begin. It is, therefore, crucial for teachers to begin familiarising themselves with the new syllabuses and to begin programming.

Structure and organisation

While the current syllabuses are organised in core and option topics, the new syllabuses have removed the option topics and included the most popular content and options into the modules. The new syllabuses are organised into Modules and the content descriptors are focussed primarily on Working Scientifically outcomes and inquiry questions.

The patterns of study for Science are also changed. Students can now study up to 7 units of Science in Year 12, as there is a Science Extension course in development, which should be finalised for implementation in 2019.

The HSC lineup maintains the traditional courses of Physics, Chemistry, Biology, Earth and Environmental Science, and Life Skills. There is also a new course, Investigating Science, and there is no longer a Senior Science course. Investigating Science can be studied as a standalone course or in conjunction with any other Science course in Year 11 (whereas this was not possible with Senior Science). Further, any of the Science courses can be studied in combination to make up 6 units of Science, as there are no exceptions with the new syllabus.

New assessment guidelines

Also, with the Stronger HSC Standards, come new assessment guidelines. The mandated assessment guidelines are available through  NESA, and teachers are advised to refer to these guidelines to keep up to date with requirements.

At this stage, Year 11 must have three (3) assessment tasks and Year 12 may have up to a maximum of four (4) assessment tasks. Only one of those tasks may be a formal examination.

The mandatory component weighting for both the Year 11 and Year 12 assessment is 60% for skills in Working Scientifically and 40% for Knowledge and Understanding of course content.

In Year 11, the guidelines are that schools must ensure the formal school-based assessment, as well as restricted to three tasks, includes a focus on a depth study or an aspect of a depth study with a weighting of 20–40%. Only one task may take the form of a written examination. Each assessment task is required to have a weighting between 20–40%.

Year 12 assessment guidelines are similar with the additional assessment tasks to include a maximum of four tasks with the range weighting to be between 10–40%.

Investigating Science

Investigating Science is a new course with a focus on the applications of science. It is important to stress that it a new course and not a replacement for the Senior Science course. Investigating Science is a two-year course. As with the other new science courses, it is a ‘Category A’ course and can be taken as a standalone subject or as a complement to other Science courses.

Students will have the opportunity to focus on the methodology of science and the place of science in society.

Course modules:

Year 11 Year 12
Observing Scientific Investigations
Inferences and Generalisations Technologies
Scientific Models Fact or Fallacy
Theories and Laws Science and Society

Investigating Science will provide students with opportunities to:

  • Build on the knowledge, understanding and skills of Stage 5 Science;
  • Apply Working Scientifically outcomes in an integrated way;
  • Design and conduct practical investigations;
  • Participate in fieldwork in Year 11 and Year 12.

Students may also be able to learn about:

  • Observations of Archimedes, Alexander Fleming and Galileo;
  • Practices of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples in relation to their application of scientific principles;
  • Use of models in science;
  • Distinction between scientific theories and laws;
  • Using Science to test claims;
  • How science affects the development of new technologies.

Science Extension

Updates and implementation advice for the new Science Extension syllabus, which is still in development, can be found at NESA’s website.

The course is intended to be designed for students who have attained a high level of achievement in one or more of the Science disciplines in Year 11 and are planning to pursue further study in Science, Technology, Engineering or Mathematics (STEM) based courses offered at the tertiary level.

Students are likely to be challenged to examine a scientific research question drawn from one or more of the scientific disciplines of Biology, Chemistry, Earth and Environmental Science and Physics. In doing this students extend their knowledge of the discipline(s), conduct further analysis and authentic investigations and, uniquely for this course, produce a detailed scientific research report that reflects the standards generally required for publication in a scientific journal.

What to lookout for…

Teachers need to realise that although there is some content that is overlapping from the current syllabus into the new Science syllabus, it is imperative that they are aware of the new content and program accordingly.

With the Stronger HSC Standards being implemented, this has translated into more academically rigorous courses in both Chemistry and Physics, which will provide opportunities for students to work at a higher mathematical level than in previous years.

Depth studies

The introduction of depth studies in Year 11 and in Year 12 provides opportunities to investigate areas of interest in more depth. Contexts have been removed to provide flexibility for teaching content.

There is some guidance for each course provided though NESA Support Materials  and more assistance and direction will be necessary to support teachers in both the delivery and assessment of the depth studies.

These studies are mandatory and need to be assessed with a weighting of between 20–40% of the school-based assessment. While the depth study may be undertaken either within a single module of the course or across modules, the formal assessment of a depth study, or aspect of the study, must only occur once. This may include written reports, oral presentations, digital or multimedia products, data analysis, practical investigations or fieldwork.

Each of the HSC Science courses requires that 15 hours of school time is used to complete the depth study per year, with the exception of Investigating Science which requires 30 hours.

NESA outlines the depth study may be a single investigation/activity or series of investigations/activities and may be designed for the course cohort or a single class or be specific to the needs of an individual student.

Changes to individual courses

Biology

New content includes:

  • Cell requirements relating to light energy and chemical energy;
  • Investigating extinction events;
  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples, paleontological and geological evidence of past changes in ecosystems;
  • Single Nucleotide Polymorphism;
  • Gene flow and genetic drift;
  • Disease as a disruption of homeostasis;
  • Pharmaceuticals and the control of infectious diseases;
  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples’ protocols for medicines.

Physics

New content includes:

  • Analysis of forces and motion in two dimensions using vectors;
  • Standing waves;
  • The Doppler effect;
  • Elementary thermodynamics;
  • Wave and quantum models of light;
  • Standard Model of matter.

Chemistry

New content includes:

  • Electronic configuration and spdf notation;
  • The Bohr and Schrodinger models;
  • The Ideal Gas Law;
  • Enthalpy and Hess’s Law;
  • Entropy and Gibbs Free Energy;
  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples’ applications of chemical practices;
  • Calculating the Equilibrium Constant;
  • Analysis of organic compounds.

Earth and Environmental Science

New content includes:

  • Strengthened links to geological exploration and mining;
  • Climate science;
  • Mitigation and adaptation strategies for a changing environment;
  • An increased focus on sustainability.

With any new syllabus comes an opportunity to rethink and refine teaching practices, resources and programs. Teachers are encouraged to engage in professional learning and collaboration with colleagues within and across schools to prepare for these new courses and the possibilities they might bring for our students.

Ken Silburn is President of LAZSTA (Met South West Science Teachers Association) and Head Teacher Science at Casula High School. He is a Global Teacher Ambassador and 2015 Recipient of the Prime Minister’s Prize for Excellence in Science Teaching in Secondary Schools. In 2017, Ken was amongst the Top 10 teachers for the Global Teacher Prize.

Cherine Spirou is Head Teacher Science at Fairvale High School.

 

 

 

An Introduction to the New Mathematics Standard and Life Skills Syllabuses

Terry Moriarty introduces the new Stage 6 Mathematics syllabuses which are implemented for Year 11 in 2018…

The new NSW Stage 6 Mathematics Standard and Life Skills Syllabuses were endorsed in 2016. 2017 is a planning year with implementation for Year 11 in 2018 and Year 12 in 2019. The new Mathematics Advanced, Extension 1 and Extension 2 syllabuses will be released following an additional period of consultation and the JPL will provide a guide in the Semester 2, 2017 edition.

Due to the online nature of the syllabus documents, teachers are encouraged to download and review each section, including the aim and rationale before moving to the course content.

New features of Stage 6 syllabuses include:

  • Australian Curriculum content identified by codes;
  • Learning Across the Curriculum content, including cross-curriculum priorities and general capabilities;
  • publication in an interactive online format;
  • an interactive glossary.

Initial information regarding assessment has been published by the NSW Education Standards Authority (NESA). The most significant change is the approach to the formal school-based assessment program for Year 11 and Year 12. Examination specifications are expected to be available in Term 3, 2017.

Mathematics Standard

The Year 11 courses

Organisational structure

Mathematics Standard replaces the previous General Mathematics syllabus. There is a new organisational structure as well as updates to content.

The course is organised into topics with the topics divided into subtopics. Students can complete common content in Year 11 and then move into either Year 12 Mathematics Standard 1 or Year 12 Mathematics Standard 2.

Alternatively, teachers have flexibility within the common Year 11 content to address material that is essential for Mathematics Standard 1 in Year 12. This content is clearly indicated with a diamond symbol throughout the Year 11 syllabus content.

 

The content

The Year 11 content is common and there are no longer focus studies. Some of the topics from the previous focus studies have been retained within the topics, such as Plan for the Running and Maintenance of a Car within the subtopic Money Matters and so existing resources may still be of use.

Modelling and applications are now an integral part of each strand and also merge strands together. The table below demonstrates the changes between the previous and new syllabus structures:

General Preliminary Course

(current in 2017)

New Standard Year 11 Course (to be implemented in 2018) Topics and Subtopics

Financial Mathematics

Data and Statistics

Measurement

Probability

Algebra and Modelling

(FS) Communication

(FS) Driving

Algebra

MS-A1 Formulae and Equations
MS-A2 Linear Relationships

Measurement

MS-M1 Applications of Measurement
MS-M2 Working with Time

Financial Mathematics

MS-F1 Money Matters

Statistical Analysis

MS-S1 Data Analysis
MS-S2 Relative Frequency and Probability

School-based assessment requirements

Teachers should refer to the NESA Assessment and Reporting in Mathematics Standard Stage 6 document at: http://syllabus.bostes.nsw.edu.au/mathematics-standard-stage6/ . Teachers are encouraged to refer to the relevant NESA documents for updates. Some features for the new syllabuses include:

The Year 11 formal school-based assessment program is to reflect the following requirements:

  • three assessment tasks
  • the minimum weighting for an individual task is 20%
  • the maximum weighting for an individual task is 40%
  • one task must be an assignment or investigation-style with a weighting of 20–30%.

NESA has provided the following examples of some approaches to task types for the assignment or investigation-style task:

  • an investigative project or assignment involving presentation of work in class
  • an independently chosen project or investigation
  • scaffolded learning tasks culminating in an open-ended or modelling style problem
  • a guided investigation or research task involving collection of data and analysis.

The Year 12 courses

The Mathematics Standard courses are Board Developed Courses and so students can achieve an HSC if they complete the course.

The content

Mathematics Standard 1

The table below demonstrates the changes between the previous and new syllabus structures:

General HSC Course

(Current until 2018)

New Standard 1 Year 12 Course (to be implemented in 2019) Topics and Subtopics

Financial Mathematics

Data and Statistics

Measurement

Probability

Algebra and Modelling

(FS) Design

(FS) Household Finance

(FS) The Human Body

(FS) Personal Resources Usage

Algebra

MS-A3 Types of Relationships

Measurement

MS-M3 Right-angled Triangles
MS-M4 Rates
MS-M5 Scale Drawings

Financial Mathematics

MS-F2 Investment
MS-F3 Depreciation and Loans

Statistical Analysis

MS-S3 Further Statistical Analysis

Networks

MS-N1 Networks and Paths

Mathematics Standard 2

The table below demonstrates the changes between the previous and new syllabus structures:

 

General HSC Course

(Current until 2018)

New Standard 2 Year 12 Course (to be implemented in 2019)

Topics and Subtopics

Financial Mathematics

Data and Statistics

Measurement

Probability

Algebra and Modelling

(FS) Health

(FS) Resources

Algebra

MS-A4 Types of Relationships

Measurement

MS-M6 Non-right-angled Trigonometry
MS-M7 Rates and Ratios

Financial Mathematics

MS-F4 Investments and Loans
MS-F5 Annuities

Statistical Analysis

MS-S4 Bivariate Data Analysis
MS-S5 The Normal Distribution

Networks

MS-N2 Network Concepts
MS-N3 Critical Path Analysis

School-based assessment requirements

Teachers should refer to the NESA Assessment and Reporting in Mathematics Standard Stage 6 document for updates. Some features for the new syllabuses include:

The Year 12 formal school-based assessment program is to reflect the following requirements:

  • a maximum of four assessment tasks
  • the minimum weighting for an individual task is 10%
  • the maximum weighting for an individual task is 40%
  • one task may be a formal written examination with a maximum weighting of 30%
  • one task must be an assignment or investigation-style with a weighting of 15–30%.

Life Skills

The Life Skills course has been re-written to align with the new topics in Standard Mathematics: Measurement, Algebra, Financial Mathematics, Statistical Analysis, and Networks.

Teachers may choose the most relevant aspects of the content to meet the particular needs of individual students and identify the most appropriate contexts for the student to engage with the outcomes, for example, school, community or workplace. Students will not be required to complete all of the content to demonstrate achievement of an outcome.

In implementing the new syllabuses for Stage 6 Mathematics, the importance of collaboration of teachers between schools and within faculties will be essential. Professional learning opportunities such as those conducted by the Centre for Professional Learning will also be useful in supporting these processes. For more information visit: http://cpl.asn.au/

Terry Moriarty has been a Mathematics teacher and Head Teacher in South and South Western Sydney for forty years. He has been involved in curriculum development processes throughout his career.

On Site, On Tour and Online: the State Library of NSW and You

Pauline Fitzgerald welcomes you to the fascinating collection at the State Library of NSW…

No history of Australia, no local or family history, no national debate about Indigenous reconciliation or History Wars, no arguments about origins, attitudes, behaviours or politics can be written – or contested – without reference to archival and collecting institutions, and most require consultation with the Mitchell. Richard Neville, Mitchell Librarian

Supporting you

The State Library of NSW holds a unique collection in excess of 6 million items and valued at $3.15 billion. With 157,000 prints and drawings, 1.5 million photographs and negatives, 12 linear kilometres of manuscripts, 100,000 maps, not to mention 2.5 million books, how does the State Library of NSW support students and teachers?

In 2009 Learning Services was established. For K-12 students and teachers, the key objective has been connecting students and teachers with the extraordinary collections of the State Library – the home of Australia’s history. In the seven years since, a rich and diverse program has been developed to enhance learning opportunities for students and teachers around NSW. Programs are offered on site, online and on tour.

To date 57.51% of schools across NSW have connected with our services.

On site

On site in Macquarie Street, the State Library offers a range of excursions, all of which link to the NSW Syllabus for the Australian Curriculum. Fundamental to the development of our programs is the importance of introducing students to original collection material as we are well aware of the unique and important role the State Library holds as custodians of the documentary heritage of the nation.

Nowhere else in Australia will students have the opportunity to see, first hand, items such as First Fleet journals, Matthew Flinders maps, Henry Lawson’s death mask or Shakespeare’s first folio, to name but a few of our collection highlights.

The power of seeing ‘the real thing’ cannot be overstated.

Examples of our on-site programs include:

  • British Colonisation, one of our most popular programs, explores the arrival of the First Fleet, early days in the colony and the strength and resilience of Australia’s first peoples. Bringing the 1817-1818 Edward Close image Costumes of the Australasians to life through role play and interaction with original collection items such as James Cook artefacts, Aboriginal language lists, and convict material creates a rich and memorable learning experience for students.

  • Similarly, Walking into Australia is an immersive workshop providing students with the opportunity to step into the shoes of inland explorers Edward Eyre, Burke and Wills, Kennedy and Jackey Jackey, and Ludwig Leichhardt as they venture into the unknown. The survival zone truly transports the students as they struggle against strong head winds (industrial fans) in oversized gumboots lugging a heavy backpack to recreate a little of the physical hardship faced by early explorers.

  • Seeking Shakespeare  is a particularly popular program and the Library was particularly active in 2016 as we commemorated the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death. The Library collections include the first, second, third and fourth folios and the Library is the only institution in Australia to hold all four folios. The digitisation of the first folio  has made it accessible to classrooms across Australia. A visit to the exquisite Shakespeare room is a huge highlight of this program and it is now possible to take a peek inside this special room via a virtual tour.

Support for the HSC

Support for HSC students is core business for the State Library and tickets for our HSC student seminars are highly sought after and quick to sell out.

Co-hosted with Sydney Living Museums, History Extension: The Project gives students the opportunity to develop their research skills and gain valuable advice, resources and inspiration before they embark on their major work.

For English Extension 2, wordeXpress offers a similar program with subject experts and successful ex-students providing guidance in how to get started and maintain focus to achieve a first class major work. The wordeXpress initiative was developed with the NSW Education Standards Authority (formerly BOSTES) and in addition to student seminars we also host the awards ceremony for students featured in the wordeXpress Young Writers Showcase.

On tour

We are particularly pleased to offer wordeXpress student seminars in regional areas and last year we travelled to Tamworth and Coffs Harbour to afford students in regional NSW the same opportunities students in the Sydney region enjoy. The State Library Foundation provides financial support to make this possible and this forms part of our commitment to serve the people of NSW and improve equity of access no matter where in the state you live. Other services targeting HSC students include Introduction to HSC Resources, which is a workshop available both on site and via video conference.

Online

In addition to on-site and regional learning programs a major focus for Learning Services is the development of online learning resources. The State Library launched a new website in February 2016 and Learning is now accessible from the homepage. This increased visibility has resulted in a 250% increase in visits to the site and we have received very positive feedback on the resources we provide.

If you cannot come to us we can always come to you – with a virtual excursion. Our virtual excursions all feature original collection materials and are offered free of charge through DART connections.

Current topics include:

  • From Captain Cook to the Convicts

  • Art Around the Library

  • Explorers of the Australian Interior – Brave or Foolhardy

Captain James Cook – watercolour on ivory miniature in circular frame, ca. 1780-1784, a128550

New programs under development are:

  • Mary Reibey – The woman on the $20 note
  • On the Move – Migration to Australia
  • Shakespeare’s Folios

Learning activities currently available address syllabus outcomes for the NSW Syllabus for the Australian Curriculum – History, Geography and English. Learning Activities for Visual Arts are also available.

Our most popular online resources are:

Migration to Australia in the 1800’s

HSC Area of Study: Discovery

The Gold Rush

In addition to learning activities tailor-made for classroom use, other important areas of the website for teachers and students include:

Stories

Here you will find curated collections showcasing people, places and ideas inspired by the collections. You can travel with the Dutch, the Portuguese or James Cook in Voyages of Discovery: the Great South Land  or visit the goldfields of Hill End in the Holtermann Collection or delve deep into the stories and lives of Indigenous Sydney before European settlement in Eora . More than 80 stories are currently available and being added to constantly.

DX Lab

We are very proud to be the home of Australia’s first and only cultural-heritage innovation lab that supports new ways of design thinking, experimentation and deep research in the digital humanities. Our DX Lab is where experimentation and research happens and we use the latest technologies to find rich and interesting ways to explore our collections and data sets.

Professional learning and partnerships

We are grateful for the positive working relationship we have, including:

  • History Teachers Association
  • Society and Culture Teachers Association
  • English Teachers Association
  • School Library Association NSW
  • NESA, DOE and AIS

These partnerships ensure we are developing resources which meet the needs of students and teachers and lead the way in providing up to date resources which address changes to curriculum.

Professional learning for teachers is another important aspect of State Library services and as an endorsed provider we offer an annual conference and Reach Out! a FREE interactive workshop offered in schools around NSW. Please contact us to find out how you can have a State Library educator run a workshop for teachers in your area.

If you would like further details on any of our programs and resources please contact the Learning Services team learning.library@sl.nsw.gov.au  or 9273 1778

The Making of a Teacher: My Love Affair with History

Penny Russell reflects on what she loves about history before she takes up her new post at Harvard University…

I didn’t have to be a historian.
In my late adolescence I had a passion bordering on addiction for historical novels, especially historical romances. I read Jane Austen with an enthusiasm undimmed by endless repetitions. I developed an obsession for epistolary novels, for novels disguised as diaries (usually women’s diaries), and even for actual, historical diaries that had been published as books. All this reading lay in a realm of imaginative pleasure that to my mind seemed far away from the sterner demands of history.

The world of female domestic experience that so appealed to my imagination seemed to have no place in the history I learned at school, which dealt with wars and the rise of nations, economic fluctuations and political processes, only occasionally – in ways I found difficult to grasp – touching on something I would now call social history. So my interests, talents and loyalties lay primarily with literature.

Shock of the old

Not until I began an Arts degree at Monash in 1979 did I begin to discover that the ordinary female lives I found so absorbing could come under the purview of History.

Though ultimately transformative, the discovery crept upon me by degrees. Studying medieval English history in my first year, I was swept for a term into the lives of the Pastons, a Norfolk family caught up in the vicissitudes of English politics during the so-called Wars of the Roses. I was fascinated by the way the rhythms of their family life adapted to the disruptions of the conflict; awed by Margaret Paston’s adept, authoritative handling of crises large and small. And again and again I was jolted by the recognition that – although it appealed to me in the same way – this was not an imagined world.

Again and again the seductive illusion of familiarity, the comfortable aura of fiction, would dissolve to reveal what Tim Hitchcock has called the ‘shock of the old’ – persistent reminders of the real, never fully knowable, but significantly different, world of the past. It was my first encounter with the politics of emotion that Hitchcock associates with ‘history from below’, with its ‘demand that the reader empathise with individual men and women caught in a whirl of larger historical changes’. [i] And it still didn’t feel to me quite like ‘real’ history.

Poet of the revolution

My assumptions about the proper subject matter and methods of History were again challenged the following year, when in a course about the American War of Independence I was set an essay on the poems of Philip Freneau, called the ‘Poet of the Revolution’. Here I could exercise talents I had developed in my literary studies to probe the sentiments and meanings of Freneau’s delightfully banal verse – and at the same time could set his poems into their historical context in ways that my English tutors would have firmly discouraged.

Hitherto, I had found the ‘primary source exercises’ in my History courses dauntingly difficult, lacking the skills that could extract expansive meaning from a laundry list or a wages bill. But wallowing pleasurably in the volumes of Freneau’s verse was different. Here, I felt at home. During that year I had to choose between pursuing honours in History or English. My essay on Freneau was one of the reasons I chose History.

In my third year, I began to specialise in Australian history. Suddenly, traces of the history I was studying were all around me. And the primary sources I drew on for my essays felt real in a whole new way. That was the year I discovered the sensory pleasures of the archives: the tactile joy of opening one of those brown cardboard boxes to delve through the ordered chaos within, the shiver of excitement that comes when you untie the tape around a compact bundle of letters or ephemera, the musty tang that rises from the pages of a crumbling newspaper.

Pleasurable discoveries and unexpected successes

It was also the year that – notwithstanding my earlier enthusiasm for Margaret Paston – I discovered women’s history. When the Australian history course subdivided into specialist themes for a term, I chose the one on ‘Women’, and was thus introduced to the relatively new field of feminist historical scholarship in Australia.

Until then, I had assumed that feminism had little to do with me. Only by studying women’s history did I begin to realise just how precarious, how fortunate, was my right, as a woman, to the education I had taken for granted. And only in those tutorials did I find, at last, the confidence to speak for myself. I found, too, a history of other women for whom it had been difficult to speak in public, difficult to own the confidence or assume the authority that seemed to come so much more easily to men. Through women’s history I found a voice and a purpose.

Discovering the strenuous opposition and misogynist contempt women had encountered when they first demanded a political voice made me a feminist on their behalf, long before I was comfortable with the label on my own account. Realising just how little attention earlier historians had paid to those struggles, or to women’s experience more generally, made me a feminist scholar. I adopted with pride the badge of a ‘feminist historian’: not just a historian of feminism, but a scholar eager to correct the gendered imbalances of history. The rich, complex, largely unexplored terrain of women’s history beckoned to me irresistibly, and my personal politics were forged as I trod these new paths.

I didn’t have to be a historian. Thinking back now – and re-reading some of those formative essays of mine – I am reminded of choices once made and long forgotten, of opportunities seized or left lying, of disappointments that might have turned my path, of pleasurable discoveries and unexpected successes that confirmed it. I am reminded of inspirational, supportive, bracing and downright critical teachers, tutors and lecturers who all played a part as I gradually harnessed my interest in the particular, the personal, the domestic and feminine, and my preference for imaginative, subjective and creative forms of writing to the rigorous disciplinary demands of History – demands for evidence, structured argument, critical thinking, and a sense of the broader significance and patterns to be found in the small stories I so love. And I realise, too, that these days I reach automatically for historical interpretations, so that when asked to reflect on my love of history, I dig back into my own past to trace a story of cause and effect, of the interplay of individual purpose, social forces and historical accident.

I didn’t have to be a historian. But these days, it feels as though I always was.

Penny Russell is Bicentennial Professor of Australian History at the University of Sydney, with a particular interest in gender and colonial society. In 2016-17, she will be at Harvard University as the Gough Whitlam and Malcolm Fraser Professor of Australian Studies, where she will teach courses on emotions in history and the ‘intimate frontiers’ of nineteenth-century Australian society.

Penny Russell was interviewed by Dinoo Kelleghan at the NSW Teacehers Federation: http://education.www.stagingnswtf.com.au/education15/features-1/historians-go-adventuring/

Suggested Readings:

Dever, Maryanne, Sally Newman and Ann Vickery, The Intimate Archive: Journeys Through Private Papers Canberra: National Library of Australia, 2009.

Farge, Arlette, The Allure of the Archives [transl. Thomas Scott-Railton] New Haven: Yale University Press, 2013.

Grimshaw, Patricia, Marilyn Lake, Ann McGrath and Marian Quartly Creating aNation Ringwood: McPhee Gribble, 1994.

Griffiths, Tom, ‘The intriguing dance of history and fiction’, TEXT Special Issue 28: Fictional histories and historical fictions: Writing history in the twenty-first century, (eds Camilla Nelson and Christine de Matos), April 2015. http://www.textjournal.com.au/speciss/issue28/Griffiths.pdf

Hitchcock, Tim, ‘Sources, Empathy and Politics in History from Below’, in Mark Hailwood, Laura Sangha, Brodie Waddell and Jonathan Willis (eds), The Voices of the People: An Online Symposium (2015) https://manyheadedmonster.wordpress.com/voices-of-the-people/

Russell, Penny ‘Almost Believing: The Ethics of Historical Imagination’, in Stuart Macintyre (ed) The Historian’s Conscience Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 2004.

Russell, Penny, Savage or Civilised? Manners in Colonial Australia Sydney: UNSW Press, 2010.

Steedman, Carolyn, Dust: The Archive and Cultural History New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2002.

[i]Tim Hitchcock, ‘Sources, Empathy and Politics in History from Below’, in Mark Hailwood, Laura Sangha, Brodie Waddell and Jonathan Willis (eds), The Voices of the People: An Online Symposium (2015) https://manyheadedmonster.wordpress.com/voices-of-the-people/

 

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