DIVERSITY AND AUSTRALIAN EDUCATION

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DIVERSITY AND AUSTRALIAN EDUCATION Professor Steve Dinham National Research Director Teaching, Learning and Leadership ACER Robert Bosch Foundation Workshop Berlin 4 th December 2008

2

Diversity: Yes Spectrum of academic ability/mixed ability Inclusion/mainstreaming of students with intellectual/physical disability Focus on the individual, catering for difference, teaching the whole child Interpersonal learning, more emphasis on thinking, life skills to equip the individual Respect/recognition of varying socio-cultural cultural backgrounds, views Anti-discrimination, backed by legislation Tolerance, anti-bullying, anti-victimisation Different school system types, approaches to structuring schooling 3

Diversity: No Doesn t/shouldn t/shouldn t t mean tolerating or rationalising poor performance from certain groups on the basis that they are different because of their background or because of a belief that they are innately inferior. 4

A Common view The The most important reason to include all students in the mainstream is that it is the fair, ethical, and equitable thing to do...it is discriminatory that some students, such those "labelled" disabled, must earn the right to be in them regular education mainstream or have to wait for educational researchers to prove that they can profit from the mainstream, while other students are showed unrestricted access simply because they have no label. No one should have to pass anyone's test or prove anything in a research study to live and learn in the mainstream of school and community life. This is a basic right, not something one has to earn ( Stainback and Stainback, cited in Mastropieri & Scruggs, 2004). Mastropieri,, M., & Scruggs, T. (2004). The Inclusive Classroom: Strategies for Effective Instruction (Second Edition ed.). Ohio: Pearson: Merrill Prentice Hall. 5

Australia: Demographics People arrived in Australia at least 40-45,000 45,000 years ago Over 110 broad Indigenous countries (see map previously) First European settlement 1788 terra nullius 1850 s s gold rushes attracted significant migration (British, Irish, German, other European, Chinese) 1901- Federation (Commonwealth of Australia) Immigration Restriction Act 1901 ( White( Australia Policy ) Post WWI immigration (mainly British) 6

Australia: Demographics 1948: : Indigenous peoples recognised as citizens 1967: : Referendum 1) Commonwealth could make special laws in respect of Aboriginal people 2) Counted in census 7

Australia: Demographics Post WWII: Massive immigration; British, displaced Europeans, Greeks, Italians ( populate( or perish ) Subsidies for immigration until 1970 More recently: Lebanese, Iraqi, Chinese, Pacific Islander, South Korean, Chinese, Indian/Pakistani/Sri Lankan Combination of skilled workers and refugees (e.g., Sudan) Current worker shortages in rural areas; temporary migrant workers from Asia, Pacific 8

Australia: Demographics Population today: 21,500,000 Aging population (median 37) Annual growth rate 1.4% 85% European descent 2.5% Indigenous (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander) (69% of whom are mixed race) 25% of the population born overseas 15% of the population speak a language other than English at home 9

Most Common Languages In order: Only English Italian Greek Cantonese Arabic Mandarin Vietnamese Spanish Filipino + Tagalog German Hindi Macedonian Croatian Aboriginal languages 10

Overview of Education School education, curricula, public exams a State/Territory role yet mainly financed by federal government More than 60% attend government schools although non-government sector growing (most religious-based) Government funding of non-government schools (contentious) 11

Overview of Education Curricula until mid 1960s: Prescriptive Public, internal exams mono-cultural curriculum Indigenous, primitive history Assimilation emphasis on new arrivals Society, culture British Students with disabilities in special schools Tiers of schooling, loosely based on SES Minority competed secondary school (<20%) 12

Overview of Education Changes from mid-late 1960s: Comprehensive secondary schools (extra year) School Based Curriculum Development (frameworks rather than prescription; local content/context) Values, social issues, more prominent in curriculum More focus on the individual student; emotional and personal development as well as academic 13

Overview of Education From 1970s: Multiculturalism: policies, perspectives, content Broadening of curriculum Mainstreaming/integration of some students Personal development education Higher post-compulsory retention Society itself far more diverse Decline in exams, greater in-school assessment Anti-discrimination legislation Indigenous activism 14

Overview of Education From 1980s/90s: More detailed policies, resources on: Sexism, racism, homophobia, bullying, anger Greater acknowledgment of difference Indigenous culture recognised Greater attention to individual student progress, remediation, ESL/needs of NESB students, literacy, student welfare programs, rights and responsibilities 15

Overview of Education Community involvement, context Greater range of programs to support students as learners and people Greater emphasis on training teachers in behaviour management Greater emphasis on facilitating learning Overall emphasis on inclusion and recognition of diversity Achievement conceived more broadly ( Adelaide( Goals of 1999 academic, personal, social) 16

Overview of Education Emphases in teaching: Discovery learning, constructivism, inquiry-based teaching and learning Students taking more responsibility for learning Individualised instruction, learning contracts Major emphasis on outcomes-based teaching, assessment Teaching more responsive to the individual student Greater tracking of student performance, intervention, remediation Catering for less academic post-compulsory student (VET) Standardised testing (see later) ICT 17

Victoria: Case Study Department of Education and Early Childhood Development Blueprint See http://www.education.vic.gov.au/about/direction s/blueprint2008/default.htm 18

Victoria: Case Study Major Priorities of DEECD: Increase access to high-quality early childhood health, education and care services Strengthen public confidence in a world-class school education system, with a strong and vibrant government school sector at its core Integrate services for children and families Improve outcomes for disadvantaged young Victorians. See http://www.education.vic.gov.au/about/directions/default.htm 19

Professional Standards State/territory teacher registration authorities (ATRA) Diversity embedded in standards Standards for: Graduate Teachers Competent teachers Accomplished teachers Leading/expert teachers Leadership Currently being aligned nationally 20

Example from New South Wales Institute of Teachers Professional Leadership 2.4.1 Use expert theoretical knowledge of student diversity to develop effective and practical policies, programs and teaching strategies that address students social, ethnic, cultural and religious backgrounds. See http://www.nswteachers.nsw.edu.au/main- Professional-Teaching Teaching-Standards.html 21

Significant Developments Today National Approaches: National Curriculum (English, maths, science and history: 2011 ) see http://www.ncb.org.au/default.asp National standardised testing (NAPLAN) (2008-) Years 3,5,7,9 see http://www.naplan.edu.au/ National standards and accreditation of teacher education courses (2008- ) National standards and certification for higher levels of teacher accomplishment (2009?- ) 22

Significant Developments Today Much greater attention to quality teaching, student, teacher and school performance Accountability and scrutiny Performance pay (Victoria, 2009/2010?) National early childhood literacy initiative Greater attention to evidence, research on teaching and learning e.g. meta-analytic analytic effect size research Instructional leadership role for principals 23

Pressing Issues Australia s s relatively good performance on international measures: high quality yet low equity (long tail ) see PISA http://www.acer.edu.au/ozpisa/ SES has a larger influence on student achievement than in some other highly performing nations Indigenous health, housing, employment and education closing the gaps Instruction in English, community schools, boarding, early literacy 24

Pressing Issues A quality teacher in every classroom is the biggest equity issue in Australian education (attracting, preparing, retaining) (see Dinham, Ingvarson & Kleinhenz, 2008) Student disengagement in the early secondary years, widening achievement gaps Pressure for openness, accountability Competition within and between systems Higher post-compulsory retention (now over 75%) The place of vocational educational training (VET) 25

Pressing Issues The teacher and leadership exodus Attracting, retaining teachers, leadership succession Balancing shortages with quality (fast tracking) Intervention in areas of poor educational performance Continued shift of responsibilities to schools ( extras plus the basics ) Rethinking, reconfiguring schools The balance between diversity, individual student, school context, and lifting, measuring student achievement ( league( tables, failing schools) 26

Quality Teaching Business Council of Australia (Dinham, Ingvarson & Kleinhenz, 2008) See http://www.bca.com.au/ Content/101446.aspx 27

Dinham (2008) ACER Press http://shop.acer.edu.au/acer-shop/product/a4066bk shop/product/a4066bk 28

Contact Details Professor Stephen Dinham Research Director Teaching, Learning and Leadership Australian Council for Educational Research Private Bag 55 Camberwell Vic 3124 Australia Email: dinham@acer.edu.au Phone: + 61 (0) 3 9277 5463 / 0427275591 Website: www.acer.edu.au/staffbio/dinham_stephen.html 29