The primacy of the mother tongue : Aboriginal literacy and non-standard English
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret , Muir, Wayne , Lin, Zheng
- Date: 2003
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: The Australian Journal of Indigenous Education Vol. 32, no. (2003), p. 51-60
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- Description: This article describes Indigenous Australian languages as having a history of pejoration dating from colonial times, which has masked the richness and complexity of mother tongues (and more recently developed kriols) of large numbers of Indigenous Australians.The paper rejects deficit theory representations of these languages as being inferior to imported dialects of English and explains how language issues embedded in teaching practices have served to restrict Indigenous Australian access to cultural capital most valued in modern socio-economic systems.We go on to describe ways in which alternative perspectives where acknowledgment of rich,complex and challenging features of Indigenous Australian languages may be used by educators as empowering resources for teacher education and teaching in schools. Our paper stresses the urgency of establishing frameworks for language success within which to develop other successful learning outcomes of Indigenous Australians.
- Description: C1
- Description: 2003000496
Designing capacity : Broadening and deepening design capacity through design education
- Authors: Barron, Deirdre , Zeegers, Margaret
- Date: 2008
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at The European Conference on Educational Research: From Teaching to Learning?, Gothenburg, Sweden : 10th-12th September 2008
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- Description: In this paper we canvass a shift in professional practice for teachers and teaching and learning as it focuses on Design Education. We acknowledge that changes in formal educational settings result from the scope and rapidity of changes in emerging technologies and understandings of pedagogical influences on teaching and learning. In canvassing the changes, in this paper we identify issues that emerge in relation a number of proposed solutions in dealing with gaps in teacher education in the field of Design Education. We suggest that these same solutions draw on traditional disciplines which ignore the possibilities of Design to engage 21st Century problems in teaching and learning. We draw attention to a neglect in current teacher education programs in relation to teachers of design and what this may imply for classrooms, teachers, and their work.
- Description: 2003006590
From supervising practica to mentoring professional experience : Possibilities for education students
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret
- Date: 2005
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Teaching Education Vol. 16, no. 4 (2005), p. 349-357
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- Description: This paper explores the possibilities presented in examining taken for granted aspects of pre-service teacher practicum practices, especially in terms of naming and positioning within teacher education, as they present at a regional university in Ballarat, Australia. The University of Ballarat has introduced a new P-10 teacher education course which is about to enter its fourth year. The course has focused some of its attention on traditional aspects of paid supervisory and assessment roles of practising teachers in relation to student teachers. As a result, changes have been made, with reconfigured foci on the roles of both practising teachers and undergraduate students, as well as those of other staff who support the new programme. One such focus is on what Schön described as "indeterminate zones of practice," and the result has been a research programme exploring those zones as part of mentorship in relation to mandated supervision and assessment requirements for graduate registration. Examination of data provided by transcripts of focus groups conducted with the students, mentors, community coordinators, and university teachers involved in the programmes suggests possibilities that may serve to inform efforts to meet a major part of the challenge to better prepare pre-service teachers in finding innovative and relevant ways to improve practicum experience from the outset of undergraduate education. Those involved in the programme at the University of Ballarat have examined assumptions underlying participants' roles in relation to partnerships within communities of practice in relation to the roles of university and educators in the field, as well as critically examining concepts of mentoring that guide reflection on practice and scaffold student learning. Such considerations go beyond concerns of individual pre-service teacher classroom performances, focusing on the generalizability of pre-service teacher experience in relation to the profession as a whole. © 2005 School of Education, University of Queensland.
- Description: C1
- Description: 2003001329
Making the familiar strange to pre-service teachers – practicum as ethnography
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Book chapter
- Relation: Learning beyond cognition Chapter p. 243-256
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- Description: 2003005603
Research experience as professional learning and a change agent for design: two examples of undergraduate participation in design research projects
- Authors: Barnes, Carolyn , Taffe, Simone , Barron, Deirdre , Jackson, Simon , Zeegers, Margaret
- Date: 2010
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Design Education (ConnectED 2010), Sydney, Australia, 28 June - 01 July 2010
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- Description: This paper considers the imperatives of professional learning and research experience in design education. It reports on two research projects that included Honours students in the investigation team. Providing undergraduate students with research experience is seen as intrinsic to the pedagogical success and socio-economic value of university education. Including professional learning, where undergraduate students work in an industry context or on real-world projects, is thought to make learning more relevant and better prepare students for work. Offering Honours design students research experience as a special form of professional learning has potential benefits for graphic design. Knowledge in a vocational field like graphic design is mostly practice-driven, graphic design's status diminished by designers' lack of access to systematically produced evidence and exemplars of effective practice. The projects discussed in this paper investigated the use of participatory processes in graphic design. Today, co-creative practices and audiencecreated content are seen as important drivers of economic activity and cultural innovation, but participatory design is rarely used in graphic design since project budgets and time frames allow little scope for rigorous audience research. The nature of participatory design also challenges graphic designers' professional identity as creative and communication experts. Our paper reviews general arguments for the inclusion of professional learning and research experience in undergraduate education, considering their implications for design. The paper's discussion section builds on our findings and relevant literature to present research experience in design education as a potential change agent in graphic design.
- Description: 2014084649
Redefining the role of English as a foreign language in the curriculum in the global context
- Authors: Zhang, Xiaohong , Zeegers, Margaret
- Date: 2010
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Changing English Vol. 17, no. 2 (2010), p. 177-187
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- Description: The English language has become a global language, a development which has influenced English language teaching and learning throughout the world. This influence has occurred more impressively in China than in other parts of the world as a result of the breathtaking pace at which China has integrated with global economies. Increasing industrial, economic and multicultural development has spurred language educators in China to question the English as a Foreign Language (EFL) curriculum in relation to the role of English, particularly in secondary schools. In this paper we present a brief review of the role of English as a global language in the Chinese context, a context which is now to be seen as a global one. The new curriculum has been progressively rolled out in Chinese schools since 2001. We highlight the redefinition of the role of English in the new EFL curriculum in Chinese secondary schools in particular and the significance of this as it presents new features of the new EFL curriculum as part of a developing research field, based on a comparison with the 1993 EFL curriculum. In this study, we focus on policy statements and curriculum documents as well as published previous research in order to understand the redefining of the role of English as a foreign language in the new EFL curriculum.
China and secondary school textbooks surface and deep learning approaches
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret , Zhang, Xiaohong
- Date: 2004
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: International Journal of the Book Vol. 2, no. (2004), p. 255-258
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- Description: This paper explores features of secondary school English as Second Language textbooks in use in China. It examines a number of textbooks in relation to surface and deep learning approaches,particularly as these relate to western constructs of Chinese learners.
- Description: C1
- Description: 2003001332
A clash of chronotopes: Adult reading of children's and young adult literature
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret , Pass, Charlotte , Jampole, Ellen
- Date: 2010
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: The International Journal of the Book Vol. 7, no. 4 (2010), p. 89-97
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- Description: In this paper we explore ways in which adults engage children's and young adult books in primary and secondary schools in relation to Bakhtin's (1981) posited chronotope. We base our discussion on an analysis of experienced practising teachers' own engagement with books that are offered to children and young adults as part of teachers' didactic activities in developing literacy skills and literature appreciation in classrooms, drawing on the concept of the chronotope as going beyond the didactic to embrace the artistic and cultural in children's responses to their reading and writing. The suggestive possibilities of the chronotope as an organising feature of teaching reading and writing in a number of genres and production of text types, affords new ways of approaching reading by teachers, at the same time as it invites these teachers to examine their own responses to the literature that they engage in the process. The concept of the chronotope opens up spaces for literary and pedagogical responses that derive from children's own experience of their world, but we argue that teacher responses that are restricted by their own views of the world may inhibit a full exploration by children of the possibilities that the books that they encounter as didactically bound and culturally limiting.
English community school teacher education and English as a second language in Papua New Guinea
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret
- Date: 2005
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education Vol. 33, no. 2 (2005), p. 135-146
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- Description: This article explores community (primary) school teacher education in the subject, English, at a Papua New Guinea (PNG) teachers' college as manifested in end-of-year English lessons in practicum rounds of pre-service community school teachers. English is the official language overlaid on 700 indigenous languages in this country where reconstructionism informs policy decisions. Given this, the importance of success in English in schools is not to be underestimated. The research focuses on the implementation the knowledge, skills, strategies and materials acquired by pre-service English teachers in a coastal province in PNG in the context of a number of public statements on educational policy and practice. It examines the impact of these as indicated in lesson plans and supervisors' reports
- Description: C1
- Description: 2003003551
Critical pedagogy and situated practice : An ethnographic approach to pre-service teacher education
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret , Smith, Patricia
- Date: 2004
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: International Journal of Learning Vol. 10, no. (2004), p. 3455-3461
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- Description: C1
- Description: 2003000804
Student response to the IT handicap
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret , Beales, Brad
- Date: 2006
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: International journal of learning Vol. 12, no. 10 (2006), p. 39-43
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- Description: This paper investigates undergraduates' innovative reflection-as a scripted and performed comedy routine in their School Revue-on their introduction as pre-service teachers (PSTs) to the discourses of Information Technologies (ITs) in teaching in schools. It is a small case study that we present here, mondful of the lack of generalisability that this presents, but we feel that it does lend itself to a close examination of a wide array of issues, experiences and outcomes in this small group that wrote and implemented the sketch in the Revue. Given the primacy of the role of language in any educational undertaking, it is perhaps not surprising that the focus of this sketch is on language, particularly as it is received by students, in that group of novice IT for Education students.
- Description: C1
- Description: 2003001862
Discourses of deficit in Higher Degree Research Supervisory pedagogies for international students
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret , Barron, Deirdre
- Date: 2008
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Pedagogies: An International Journal Vol. 3, no. 2 (2008), p. 69-84
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- Description: Global student mobility has placed pressure on western universities to recruit students from non-western, non-English-speaking backgrounds. In this article, we argue that language requirements such as the International English Language Testing System bands are underpinned by discourses that privilege western modes of thought. We go on to argue that English language proficiency underpins discourses of deficit that construct non-western students as less able to undertake research programmes. In exploring pedagogical possibilities, we draw on a published story of an international higher degree research student, called Mei, at an Australian university. We question the idea that a research higher degree is more about linguistic skills than it is about research skills, and we argue that rigour, scholarship, and new knowledge constitute the assessable factors in what international higher degree research students produce.
- Description: C1
- Description: 2003006373
A 3D approach to first year English education
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret
- Date: 2013
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Quality Assurance in Education Vol. 21, no. 1 (2013), p. 54-69
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- Description: Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to explore the suggestive possibilities of an approach to undergraduate English teacher education that the author has called the 3D Approach - Develop professional knowledge, Display professional knowledge, Disseminate professional knowledge - in relation to a number of groups of first year pre-service teachers (PSTs) engaging the teaching and learning materials of their English education course. Design/methodology/approach: The paper examines ways in which this approach has been assessed by the PSTs themselves, constructing this as an expression of their lived experience as PSTs. The author draws on Vygotsky's concept of the Zone of Proximal Development, initiates a systematic and orchestrated program of explicit scaffolding of first year PST learning and draws on University-generated student assessment of their courses, focus groups and individual interviews to investigate ways in which the 3D approach may be considered as enhancing first year PST learning. Findings: PSTs' own informed evaluations of their own developing knowledge have made visible the teaching and learning that they have engaged and articulated. What the author outlines in this paper is not a "Eureka" moment for first year PSTs, but it is the result of careful scholarly considerations of what careful scholarly considerations by first years in Education courses may engage. For this cohort of PSTs, and for the author, it is a particular form of engagement with pedagogy. It is a pedagogy for teachers, part of active engagement on the part of the teacher and the learner, producing knowledge together. Research limitations/implications: Lack of generalisability from case study research may be considered as a limitation, but the author would argue that it is the details thrown up for careful examination in a case study which may serve to inform professional discussion and debate. Practical implications: Negative press of inadequate teachers emerging from universities, with their specious claims will not progress reasoned discussion; research on how the PSTs are themselves taught and how they develop as professionals will. PSTs' own informed evaluations of their own developing knowledge will go some way towards enabling this to happen. This sort of research opens up possibilities for starting with the right sort of questions, a shift from asking the wrong sort of questions, which the author would argue is that sort on which the media are basing their opinion pieces. Social implications: Continuing public discussions, usually conducted in and by the media, about teacher quality, particularly as this tends to be tied to notions of teacher pay, indicates a wider social concern about the need for quality teachers. This sort of social concern is also a major concern for teacher educators, and is to be addressed as such. This paper addresses some of those concerns. Originality/value: The paper engages issues about teacher education raised publicly in the media and ties these to the more private domain of university practice in a given teacher education course. © Emerald Group Publishing Limited.
From the scriptoria to the printing press : A consideration of scholarship and library
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret , Barron, Deirdre
- Date: 2009
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: International Journal of the Book Vol. 6, no. 4 (2009), p. 9-16
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- Description: Ancient social systems have exhibited constructs of scholarships based on social configurations and requirements that have involved tribal, temple, village or palace elders teaching and developing their apprentices using oral communication such as storytelling, recitation of recipes, formulas and chants, plus work in the field itself as young people developed as midwives, shamans, carpenters, and so on. While writing is a mighty technological achievement of some 5,000 years ago, perhaps even mightier is that of the printing press about 500 years ago. It is generally held to be the development that marked the end of Medieaval times, and has had an even more profound an effect than the first moon landing, so much did it shake the foundations of society. For one thing, the same elders entrusted with the education of the young were able to use print as part of their education protocols. This in itself enabled a shift in constructs of scholarship, as it was possible to record in print what had formerly been kept in memory. The possibilities that emerged were those of teaching learners how to develop knowledge from information, and not rely on information alone. Such possibilities have not really been taken up until fairly recent times. Emerging new paradigms present scholarship in the light of information work whose dependence on information storage systems has already transformed the relationship between scholarship and libraries to a stage where the dominant partner is the library, scholarship becoming marginalised in the so-called information age. Such a sea change requires a major adjustment on the part of both partners in what has for so long been a most productive relationship. To be able to understand the magnitude and order of the change, it is necessary to take a close look at what has underpinned it for so long. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Description: 2003007960
Enhancing learning, teaching, assessment and curriculum in higher education : Theory, cases, practices
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret
- Date: 2010
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Higher Education Research & Development Vol. 29, no. 2 (2010), p. 212-214
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Green marketing the Chinese way: Insights from a medium-sized high-tech daily chemical firm
- Authors: Song-Turner, Helen , Courvisanos, Jerry , Zeegers, Margaret
- Date: 2014
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Journal of Asia-Pacific Business Vol. 15, no. 2 (2014), p. 164-192
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- Description: Research on green marketing in China is still underdeveloped. The purpose of this article is to present findings on perception, motivation, and marketing practices of a “daily chemical” firm in China that has successfully adopted a green sustainable business approach. Establishing characteristics of firms that instigate green initiatives, it provides a unique conceptual framework for this study. Findings have confirmed much of the literature on green marketing, while making visible specific categories that challenge some previously-held assumptions within the literature. It provides new insights to green marketing in contexts that are not immediately conductive to green sustainable principle.
Beyond the curriculum documents: One learning community's contribution to integrating primary school curriculum
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret , Beales, Brad
- Date: 2010
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: International Journal of Applied Educational Studies Vol. 7, no. 1 (2010), p. 72-79
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- Description: In this paper we focus on the production of a local Catholic primary school Annual Concert by Grade 3-4 students, which took as its theme, Wauthaurong Heritage in the Region. The school approached the local University's School of Education to suggest one of its Bachelor of Education students who might be willing to work with the school on this production. With this initiative, we were presented with the basis for a community-based project which would incorporate the local Aboriginal Collective, a private Catholic primary school, and a School of Education within the University of the city in the form of the annual school concert. Combining the knowledge, expertise and experience from each of these organisations to deal with a variety of issues involved in education and community perceptions, the project was set to explore the ways in which these were to be dealt with.
The chronotope and Australian children's and young adult books
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret
- Date: 2005
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: International Journal of the Book Vol. 3, no. 1 (2005), p. 19-24
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- Description: The chronotope is suggested as going beyond the didactic to embrace the artistic and cultural in children's responses to their reading and writing. The essentially solipsistic concerns of young children and young adults in schools may be engaged using the suggestive possibilities of the chronotope as an organising feature of teaching reading and writing in a number of genres and production of text types, affording new ways of approaching reading and writing in classrooms. The chronotope opens up spaces for literary and pedagogical responses that takes teachers and students beyond the traditional and conventional referents of characterisation, plot, theme, setting, style, and so on. While this paper's focus is on literature designed for Australian children and young adults, the concepts may be applied more generally in relation to literature from within other cultures as well.
- Description: C1
- Description: 2003001334
From slogan to pedagogy : Teacher education and reflection at the University of Ballarat
- Authors: Smith, Patricia , Zeegers, Margaret , Russell, Rupert
- Date: 2004
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: International Journal of Learning Vol. 10, no. (2004), p. 3357-3371
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- Description: C1
- Description: 2003000806
Lessons from the other: What may be learned from Papua New Guinea's teacher training programmes
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret
- Date: 2010
- Type: Text , Book chapter
- Relation: International Handbook on teacher education worldwide p. 829-968
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