english curriculum studies 1 - lecture 1

Post on 28-Nov-2014

1.044 Views

Category:

Education

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

This is the first lecture for English Curriculum Studies 1 at QUT in semester 1 2011.

TRANSCRIPT

English Curriculum Studies 1

CLB018 / CLP408

Lecture 1: IntroductionKelli McGraw

Why do you want to be an English teacher?

‘Because I believe in the improving and

civilising qualities of literature’

‘Because I

love

reading!’

‘I had a great teacher

that inspired me’

‘Teachers get good holidays, and I liked English’

‘I look good in cardigans’

‘it complements my other

teaching area’

‘I’ve seen too many students who can’t read or write well – I want to make a

difference’

‘It’s a secure career path’

‘because I’m a film buff ’

‘I have a wild

imagination and want

to encourage

creativity in others’‘Because the English language is beautiful

and amazing’ ‘I love to create with words – I’d love to be a writer or an actor or something in another life’

‘to start a revolution’

What is your relationship

with language?

What do you read?What do you write?

Do you like visual texts?Do you have a bookshelf?

Do you visit the library if you don’t have to?Do you borrow books or films from others?

Are you a gamer?

How much social writing do you do online?

What are you most afraid of?

How much TV do you watch?

How this unit help you become a better English teacher:

Module 1 “Informing theories of language” will help you to:

• build your own personal philosophy for English teaching• recognise outdated (but persistent) theories of language• understand how different approaches and philosophies overlap• evaluate the theoretical underpinning of classroom resources

Module 2 “Supporting students and instructional planning” will help you to:

• plan English lessons• identify and select effective teaching strategies • be aware of learners’ needs• become familiar with a range of English curriculum requirements

The times, they are a-changing (curriculum)

Come gather 'round peopleWherever you roamAnd admit that the watersAround you have grownAnd accept it that soonYou'll be drenched to the boneIf your time to youIs worth savin'Then you better start swimmin'Or you'll sink like a stoneFor the times they are a-changin'.

NOW = Essential Learnings for Years 3, 5, 7 and 9 plus Senior English Syllabuses

SOON = Australian Curriculum for English Foundation-10 and 11-12

Some concepts to help ‘anchor’ your thinking

‘LITERACY’ is more than decoding letters. It is:

Operational

CriticalCultural

The argument has been that the most worthwhile, robust understanding of literacy is one that brings together the ‘operational’, ‘cultural’ and ‘critical’ dimensions of literate practice and learning...I’ve come to see that there’s particular pedagogic value in starting with the cultural dimension, with its focus on meaning-making in context. This means drawing the critical and the operational in, organically, as the occasion and the need arises, although it also entails making quite sure that this does in fact happen, somewhere along the line.(Green reading week 3 – CMD)

‘MULTILITERATE’ students can ‘read’ all five semiotic systems:

Linguistic

Visual

Audio

Gestural

Spatial

“The concept of text including semiotic systems other than just the linguistic is relatively new.”(Bull & Anstey reading week 3 – CMD)

Texts delivered by traditional (paper and live) and new (digital-electronic) communication technologies can all combine the signs and symbols of a range of semiotic systems to convey meaning.

Literary culture has always been defined against popular culture, ‘high’ or ‘elite’ culture against ‘low’ or ‘mass’ culture. For many, I know these are still uncomfortable formulations. There is a much larger debate in all this – a social and cultural debate, and not simply an ‘aesthetic’ one. (Green reading week 3 – CMD)

English curriculum is about more than

‘Literature’

Preparing for classes next week...You must:1. Pick up the prescribed textbooks for this unit2. Read the first three chapters of Charged with meaning (Gannon et al.)3. Read Mark Matcott’s teacher narrative (it’s short!)4. Print out and bring the Bushell reading to your tutorial

You can:• Join Twitter and ‘follow’ @CLB_018 and @ETAQld• Check out some English teachers blogs. You might start with mine

kellimcgraw.com• Visit the websites listed on Blackboard e.g. ETAQ, AATE, MyRead

Tutorials begin this week: tutes running today and tomorrow will include introductory exercises, information about assignment 1 and the formation

of important work groups – be sure to attend!

top related