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Term one, 2009 Each term we will bring you information about current professional issues, learning and research. This term, our focus is on some of the wider issues that impact on teaching and learning; on factors that operate well beyond the classroom.
Feel free to contact us with your comments, references and ideas:
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People from backgrounds of low socio-economic status (SES) are significantly under-represented in Australian higher education. In urban areas, people from low SES comprise 12.8% of the population but occupy only 9% of higher education places (Universities Australia 2008, 5). However, once enrolled at university, low-SES students in urban areas have similar patterns of retention, success and completion as those from other backgrounds.
A new study finds that certain brain functions of some low-income 9- and 10-year-olds pale in comparison with those of wealthy children and that the difference is almost equivalent to the damage from a stroke.
Twenty-four children have delivered "emotion reports" in a classroom study destined for an international audience. In the study conducted by Canterbury University, video cameras were installed in the ceiling of classrooms and trained on individual students, tracking their every move.
Middle-class teenagers will continue to shun trades and other industry-based courses unless Australia radically alters how it provides such education, according to one of Australia's leading job-training educators.
This BES, by the Bidulphs, is a big read, but a really useful consideration of how families and communities influence students’ social and academic achievement. The picture is complex, but one that is hugely important – particularly if we want schools to be seen as part of the answer to improving outcomes for kids, but not the only answer!
Does standardised testing impact on student engagement? Some researchers in Massachusetts think so… According to a recent study by the Education Trust, the United States is now the only industrialized country where youths are less likely than their parents to earn a high school diploma. What’s being referred to nationally as the “silent epidemic” has ramifications for individuals and communities few of us can imagine. From February — April 2009, public broadcasters WGBH and WBUR focus a journalistic lens on the dropout crisis in Massachusetts. Follow student video diaries on the website, offer your comments and stories at projectdropout.org and join the online chat during the live special in April.
Useful web links NZC online – support for middle managers
AEU Vic professional voice Current research from our colleagues in Australia
PPTA Curriculum Support Days http://www.ppta.org.nz/index.php/professional-learning PD spotterLooking for professional development opportunities?
TRCC – by teachers, for teachers…
PPTA Pasifika – The Niu Generation conference, 16-17 July 2009, Auckland… http://www.ppta.org.nz/index.php/events/conferences/206-conf-pacifika-nui
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