‘Team teaching’ across disciplines at Australian universities is rare. Academics are rigorous in developing specific disciplinary expertise that often prevents collaboration outside of their disciplinary area. In pre-service primary education courses, academics often teach in traditional and exclusive disciplinary approaches. This separation is at odds however with the impetus for a pedagogical move forward towards an interdisciplinary approach in primary schools. The authors contend that primary<br>teacher educators must model effective interdisciplinary practice to their student teachers and unpack the processes of how to make meaningful connections together. This paper presents the work of two teacher educators who are involved in a broader, innovative, team teaching, field based collaboration with schools and non-school settings for the Bachelor of Teaching (Postgraduate) at Deakin University. In this paper, the authors firstly discuss their rationale for adopting a team teaching approach and describe how they are working towards an interdisciplinary model, bringing together the two areas; music and literacy and providing examples from their team teaching experience. The paper concludes with reflections and recommendations for future team teaching at the tertiary level.<br>
History
Location
Fremantle, Western Australia
Language
eng
Notes
This paper is available on page 177 of attached link.
Publication classification
E1 Full written paper - refereed; E Conference publication
Copyright notice
2006 Australian Teacher Education Association
Editor/Contributor(s)
J Gray
Pagination
170 - 176
Start date
2006-07-05
End date
2006-07-08
ISBN-13
9780977568505
ISBN-10
0977568504
Title of proceedings
ATEA 2006 : Making teaching public : reforms in teacher education : Proceedings of the 2006 ATEA Conference, The Esplanade Hotel, Fremantle
Event
Australian Teacher Education Association National Conference (2006 : Fremantle, Western Australia)