The key learning area movement : A force for pedagogical change or a facade for continued conservatism?
conference contribution
posted on 2004-01-01, 00:00authored byC Harris
Throughout the early 1990s the formal curriculum across all Australian States and Territories was re-organised to accommodate a Key Learning Area (KLA) focus. The KLA approach to schooling marked a departure from an historical reliance on individualised school subjects as the organisers of disciplinary knowledge. Indeed a KLA structure has the potential to promote interdisciplinary teaching and learning, a focus on the skills, values, attitudes and knowledge students are to learn and to break away from the sometimes divisive subject subcultures that permiate schools. In short the potential for a KLA 'movement' of positive benefit to teaching and learning exists.
Over the last decade however, the impact of the 'KLA movement' on teacher practice has become more apparent. Far from being a force for pedagogical change, some KLAs are merely re-badged versions of traditionalist conceptions of school subject and knowledge. This paper draws on data from a study of New South Wales (NSW) history and Human Society and Its Environment (HSIE) teachers and provides an evidenced argument about the use and misuse of Key Learning Areas.
History
Event
Australian Association for Research in Education. Conference (2004 : Melbourne, Vic.)
Pagination
1 - 11
Publisher
Australian Association for Research in Education
Location
Melbourne, Victoria
Place of publication
Melbourne, Vic.
Start date
2004-11-28
End date
2004-12-02
ISSN
1324-9339
Language
eng
Publication classification
E2 Full written paper - non-refereed / Abstract reviewed
Copyright notice
2004, AARE
Editor/Contributor(s)
P Jeffery
Title of proceedings
AARE 2004 : Doing the public good : positioning educational research ; AARE 2004 International Education Research conference proceedings