posted on 2007-01-01, 00:00authored byA Coco, M Goos, Alex Kostogriz
A partnership project was developed in which parents volunteered to support teachers in training years 1-3 children in computer skills at a primary school in a small, low socio-economic community. This article identifies the ways teachers and the ‘tutors’ (as the volunteers were called) understood the value of the project. ‘Being a teacher’ and ‘being a volunteer’ were structured by different forms of social engagement, which in turn influenced the ways individuals were able to work with each other in collaborative processes. We argue that the discursive practices encoded in homeschool- community partnership rhetoric represent ruling-class ways of organising and networking that may be incompatible with those of people from low socio-economic backgrounds. When such volunteers work in schools their attendance may be sporadic and short-term whereas teachers would like ‘reliable’ ongoing commitment. This mismatch wrought of teachers’ and volunteers’ differing everyday realities needs to be understood before useful models for partnerships in disadvantaged communities may be realised.
History
Journal
The Australian educational researcher
Volume
34
Pagination
73 - 87
Location
Coldstream, Vic
Open access
Yes
ISSN
0311-6999
eISSN
2210-5328
Language
eng
Notes
Reproduced with kind permission of the copyright owner.
Publication classification
C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal; C Journal article