Reciprocal mentoring across generations: sustaining professional development for english teachers


Autoria(s): Boyer, Ivan; Maney, Bev; Kamler, Barbara; Comber, Barbara
Data(s)

01/09/2004

Resumo

This article draws on a collaborative research project entitled Teachers Investigate Unequal Literacy Outcomes: Cross-generational Perspectives, funded by the Australian Research Council 2002-2004 and awarded to Barbara Comber, University of South Australia and Barbara Kamler, Deakin University. The university researchers invited early career teachers in their first five years of teaching, and late career teachers with at least twenty-five years experience, to collaboratively explore the problem of unequal outcomes in literacy. Over a period of three years, the teacher researchers conducted audits of their classroom literacy programs and the effects on different children; case studies of students they were most concerned about; and redesigns of their literacy curriculum and pedagogy.  Bev Maney and Ivan Boyer collaborated as research partners in the context of their work together as English teachers at Portland Secondary College, Victoria. This paper is based on transcripts of their many conversations with one other and the research team and is represented as an interrupted conversation with the university researchers. Here they critique current models of professional development and the effects of standardised testing and argue for the importance of serious teacher conversations and ongoing school-based research.<br />

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30008765

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

University of Waikato

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30008765/kamler-reciprocalmentoring-2004.pdf

http://education.waikato.ac.nz/journal/english_journal/uploads/files/2004v3n2nar1.pdf

Direitos

2004, University of Waikato

Palavras-Chave #literacy #literacy curriculum #pedagogy #school-based research #professional development #standardised testing
Tipo

Journal Article