Deakin University
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Conceptualising challenges for teachers and learning futures

conference contribution
posted on 2011-01-01, 00:00 authored by Debra Bateman
The assumption that all education prepares students for their futures is misguided. Rather, students are prepared, through curriculum and institutional practices for politically constructed notions of the future, which are often based on another assumption that what has worked in the past will continue to work in the future. This is evident in the absence of articulated futures within curriculum and other policy documents. This research showcases a critical ethnography which was undertaken in a Victorian primary school. The specific project focussed on the ways in which Year 5/6 classroom teachers reconceptualised curriculum to incorporate futures thinking as a result of ongoing professional learning and support. Through the use of analytical bracketing and post-analytic ethnomethodology for analysis across the data, the presenter proposes a conceptual model which highlights the complexity of this work as well as a theoretical explanation of why futures remains the missing dimension in education.

History

Event

Australian Curriculum Studies Association Biennial Conference (15th : 2011 : Sydney, N.S.W.)

Publisher

ACSA

Location

Sydney, N.S.W

Place of publication

[Sydney, N.S.W.]

Start date

2011-10-07

End date

2011-10-09

Language

eng

Publication classification

E2 Full written paper - non-refereed / Abstract reviewed

Copyright notice

2011, ACSA

Title of proceedings

ACSA 2011 : Leading Curriculum Change : Proceedings of the 2011 Australian Curriculum Studies Association Biennial Conference

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