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Australian Curriculum: Perspectives & Prospectives
Matthew AbsalomThe University of Melbourne | AFMLTA
Come with me…
Today’s journey Thinking about curriculum You, me and curriculum Curriculum in context Where are we and where are we going? Over to you Back to me
The issue with curriculum
… educators must abandon the conviction that curriculum is an object – explicit, proscribed, and given …
… can lead teachers to think of themselves as technicians whose realm only includes lesson plans, curriculum guides, outcomes and tests but excludes their own artistry and their students’ curiosity …
The issue with curriculum
… when educators focus on discrete parts of curriculum and do not see the big picture, they may view themselves as employees … not empowered professionals …
… For curriculum to be understood as process for transforming educational aims and practices, it must be conceptualized as an undertaking that encompasses inquiry and introspection …
The issue with curriculum
… the concept of curriculum should include in-depth examination of practices, interactions, values and visions as well as “an inward journey” of personal reflection …
… consider ultimate aims for students and society …
… reflect on our beliefs and actions and […] engage in a vigorous discourse about moral and social visions for education…
From Pamela Bolotin Joseph (2011) Cultures of curriculum
Making curriculum work
Success factors› Leadership/Political will › Agreement on desirability of the change › Availability of staff development › Clarity about the nature and extent of
changes › Institutional/community support
From Susan Toohey (1999) Designing Courses for Higher Education
You, me and curriculum
What do we want for our students? This is what I want:
› No freaks› The thrill of doing and discovering› The adventure of it all› A love for language› A thirst to improve and to keep growing› The return of reading
Are we limited by our own fears/flaws/insecurities?
What do we need to do to get our students to where we want them?
Cu
rricu
lum
‘r’ us
Com
parin
g co
nte
xts
So w
hat?
University School
• languages as disciplines • languages as communication
• curriculum is institution-specific/idiosyncratic
• curriculum is defined at the system level
• educators as curriculum designers and enactors
• educators as curriculum enactors and designers
• macro/micro • micro
We need to consider the differences Build capacity through sharing Be open Not hide behind excuses
Curriculum contexts
National Curriculum UK National Standards for Foreign Language
Education Victoria:
› Communicating in a language other than English› Intercultural knowledge and language
awareness South Australia:
› Communication› Understanding language› Understanding culture
Australian Curriculum: Languages
Update› Shape Paper revised and released 11/11› Test the strands (communicating,
understanding, reciprocating) through curriculum development
› Writing teams for Italian and Chinese Rationale; Scope and Sequence; Exemplars ‘Unpacking’ strands into sub-strands
› National Panel this week
Australian Curriculum: Languages› Three strands become two with ‘reciprocating’ as a cross-
cutting idea› Writers for ATSI languages framework due to begin work
end of March› Achievement standards and language-specific content
descriptions are starting to be considered/developed› All languages developed ready to go by end of 2013
(with implementation in 2015 after trialling in 2014)› How languages are chosen will be a mixture of
pragmatism and collaboration at Federal/State & Territory level
› Our curriculum builds on past experience but importantly recognises the impact of cohort by way of pathways (building on significant work in States/Territories)
Australian Curriculum: Languages
Three interrelated aims› To communicate in the target language› To understand language, culture, and
learning, and their relationship, and thereby develop an intercultural capability in communication
› To understand oneself as a communicator. Two strands
› Communicating› Understanding
Perspectives/Prospectives
What are the pros and cons of an Australian Curriculum: Languages?
Nothing new under the sun? Chasing our tail? What is communication anyway? Are we really so special? How to make sure the curriculum
makes a difference?
The biggest challenge?
Curriculum scoping and sequencing is about levelness› How do we understand levelness?› What theoretical frames do we use to
understand this?› Or is it anecdotal, idiosyncratic,
conventionalised?› How can we shift our perspective?
Over to
you
Language-specific work› Two strands (communicating; understanding)› One text› Consider how you would use this text with
learners (need to consider pathway)› Imagine you are working with students you
don’t normally work with› Reporting back at the end
Arabic Chinese French German Greek Indonesian Italian Japanese Korean Spanish Turkish Vietnamese English text for teachers of other languages
Working with text
Communicating Understanding
• what• to whom• how• when• why
• what• how• why
Back to me
Make a choice: Be involved Stay informed Keep learning Reduce distraction Say no Say yes Love what you do, or get out… Now, say hi to someone you haven’t met
before!