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Alford, Jennifer; Gordon, Danielle; Lennon, Sherilyn – English in Australia, 2022
In 2019, a new English Senior Secondary syllabus (QCAA, 2019) was implemented in all schools across Queensland, Australia. This syllabus, incorporating high-stakes external examinations and supporting documents, instigated a shift in the teaching and assessing of senior secondary English that has been both challenging and revitalising for…
Descriptors: Educational Change, English Teachers, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries
Green, Bill – English in Australia, 2017
The installation of the new Australian Curriculum offers rich possibilities for rethinking English in Australia, and beyond. This paper proposes that rhetoric is usefully drawn into this work of reconceptualisation, as strategically an organising principle for English curriculum theory and practice. It reviews existing work on rhetoric and…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, English Curriculum, Curriculum Development, Curriculum Enrichment
Moni, Karen – English in Australia, 2012
In late 2011, the author was approached by Garry Collins, the president of ETAQ, to deliver a keynote for ETAQ for their first meeting in March 2012. The reflections presented in this article have been drawn from the transcript of that presentation. The reflections focus mainly on implementing the Australian curriculum--English. (Contains 1 note.)
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English Instruction, National Curriculum, Curriculum Development
Miller, Andrew – English in Australia, 2013
How might a tertiary English teacher use Garth Boomer's ideas on "teaching against the grain" to challenge the rules and assumptions that dominate the Academic Language and Learning (ALL) industry in the university sector today? How might such a teacher use Boomer's ideas to enact "emancipatory pedagogies" (or something like…
Descriptors: English Teachers, English Instruction, College Faculty, Foreign Countries

English in Australia, 1972
Survey prepared by the Research and Curriculum Branch of the Queensland Department of Education. (SP)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Educational Trends, English Curriculum

Bulliwana, Hagar; Frawley, Jack; Garnarradj, Brandon – English in Australia, 2002
Discusses a holistic curriculum plan involving bininj (Australian Aboriginal) and balanda (non aboriginal) preservice teachers at Gunbalanya thinking, talking and writing about a philosophy on "both ways" education. Notes the curriculum addresses three essential issues: what "both ways" education is; what educators need to learn about "both ways"…
Descriptors: Cultural Differences, Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Higher Education

Tucker, Ernie – English in Australia, 1984
Expresses concern over the possible exclusion of literature from the English curriculum in Australia, arguing that through literature, students are able to reason, imagine, and speculate about the tension between the needs of the individual and the needs of society. (HOD)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Change, English Curriculum, Foreign Countries

Moss, Peter – English in Australia, 1982
Argues for the development of new literary texts and for the development of new and appropriate literary theories to teach these texts. (HOD)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Educational Theories, English Curriculum

Reid, Ian – English in Australia, 1982
Discusses the need for a reformed English curriculum. (HOD)
Descriptors: College English, Curriculum Development, Educational Change, English Departments

Locke, Terry – English in Australia, 2000
Attempts to make sense of "English in the New Zealand Curriculum" and, in addition, to reflect on ways in which the document has forced teachers to make sense of or construct English. Describes flaws in the national English curriculum as represented in the document, and notes some positives. (SC)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education, English Curriculum

Beavis, Catherine – English in Australia, 2000
Considers what happens to teachers and the curriculum when the philosophical and theoretical bases of subjects to which they are committed undergo significant change. Explores patterns of text choice for 9 teachers across 3 years. Finds all teachers were challenged into rethinking their views of literature. (SC)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Change, English Curriculum, Grade 12

Wyatt-Smith, Claire M. – English in Australia, 2000
Addresses a protracted struggle in Queensland about how to configure the relationship between language, literacy and textual studies in the English senior syllabus. Discusses a conflict between contrasting viewpoints about the nature and scope of subject English, the pedagogical stance that teachers should take in relation to their students, and…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Change, English Instruction, Foreign Countries

Hudson, Nicholas – English in Australia, 1984
Identifies and discusses nine "pressures" that have influenced curriculum development in Australia: universal expertise, inertia, Australian rules, "Golden Past," unpreparedness, wishful thinking, inexperience, nondisposable resources, and public expectations. (HOD)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Curriculum Problems, Educational Change, English Curriculum

Johnston, Scott; McCausland, Mike – English in Australia, 1999
Follows the progress of "negotiation" (a force for democratizing the curriculum) in Tasmanian English classrooms, claiming it (1) allows a fluid space where teachers and students can work together; (2) provides an alternative to direct and indirect political influence over curriculum construction; and (3) has the potential to empower…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Educational Policy

Petrosky, Anthony R.; Delandshere, Ginette – English in Australia, 2001
Considers how the process of developing standards is similar to previous development efforts such as defining "objectives" and "competencies" just a few decades ago. Analyzes how such standard development processes when combined with high stakes tests place teachers in the position of implementing curricula designed by others.…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Change, English Instruction, Foreign Countries
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