Better preparing teacher educators for a rural workforce (1)

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OLT Extension grant project on better preparing teacher educators to work in a rural workplace

Transcript of Better preparing teacher educators for a rural workforce (1)

Building a rural workforce: Extending the work of a rural teacher education curriculum - Better preparing teacher

educators for a rural workforce

RRRTEC Extension projectOLT funded

Simone WhiteMonash University

Context

• In Australia (and internationally) rural,regional and remote school communities find it hard to recruit and retain quality teachers.

• How can we better prepare graduate teachers for a rural career and for the diversity of rural, regional and possible remote ‘places’ they might work in?

ALTC Funded Project

• 2 year project• Data collected– Literature review– Surveys – Teacher Educators and PST’s– State and national base incentives/programs

• Conceptual model• Curriculum and resource development• Website and disemmination

www.rrrtec.net.au

The final deliverable

The RRRTEC extension project set out to achieve three main goals:

• To improve and extend the use of the website (www.rrrtec.net.au).

• To develop and implement the RRRTEC professional experience package.

• To develop a set of professional learning tools and package for teacher educators on how to best use the website.

Reference group• Professor Nan Bahr, Queensland University of Technology*• Associate Professor Tania Broadley, Curtin University* • Ms Kelly Carabott, Monash University*• Ms Briony Carter, University of South Australia*• Associate Professor Rosie Le Cornu, University of South Australia*

The reference group met face to face in February-March, 2013 (27th -1st) in Melbourne and they have been the key Institutional contacts in: supporting the analysis of the teacher educator in-depth interview data (collected as part of the RRRTEC project); dissemination of this work; advising on the social media strategies; providing feedback in regards to the professional development workshop materials and in providing additional resources to the website.

– Professor Marie Brennan (Victoria University)* also joined the reference group meeting and advice was sought on a research strategy as part of the professional learning material development

• Dr Jodie Kline was employed as the Research Assistant• Mr Vi Lam was employed as the Social Media consultant

Developing a conceptual model for RRRTEC Extension:

• Knowledge mobilisation, dissemination and developing a professional learning strategy for teacher educators….

Social media and disemmination

Pedagogy and professional learning

Teacher educators need to be better equipped for the following reasons:

Workforce needs • Teacher shortages exist in rural, regional and remote contexts in every State and Territory across Australia. Rural,

regional and remote schools deserve high quality teachers and students urgently need teachers who are well prepared to commit to a rural teaching career and stop the staffing churn.

Teacher’s work• Teachers who work in rural, regional and remote contexts are more visible in the communities in which they

work. Teachers need to know about the places in which they are employed and be prepared to build relationships beyond the classroom. Teachers need to be classroom, school and community ready (White, 2010, White & Kline, 2012). Graduate and beginning teachers in rural contexts are more likely to be asked to take up leadership roles and are viewed by the communities they serve as leaders (Reid et. al, 2010). Teachers are also more likely to have the emotional dimension of their work amplified (Le Cornu, 2011). Multi-age teaching and teaching across stages is a skill that many teachers who work in rural, regional and remote contexts need from the beginning of their career.

Program standards• New AITSL Initial Teacher Education program standards 2.1 and 5.4 outline the needs for teacher education

curriculum to develop graduates who can work with parents/caregivers and within their local communities. Teacher Professional Standard 7 outlines also the importance of teachers’ work with communities. These national Standards demand teacher educators take greater responsibility for preparing teachers for all diverse school contexts.

New PD tab inserted

Developing the Social Media tool

• Social media was identified as an effective tool to provide the opportunity for teacher educators to share their own professional learning and development with their peers; create new resources and strategies; make suggestions and to critically reflect on their teaching practice.

• After some investigation of the appropriate ethics and suitability of different social media tools it was decided that a facebook site would be the most appropriate platform to compliment the website. It was envisioned that the facebook site would become the tool to disseminate the RRRTEC resources and broaden the audience participating in the professional learning.

The facebook site was created in February, 2013 and can be accessed via the following link -

https://www.facebook.com/rrrtec .

Using analytics

Country Visits Page views

Australia 4,672 14,962

China 3,076 3,490

United States of America 2,538 2,946

Japan 580 586

United Kingdom 414 541

Germany 278 350

Ukraine 254 283

Russian Federation 239 259

Republic of Korea 148 130

Canada 129 209

2014

• The RRRTEC website materials have been embedded into two other completed ALTC/OLT projects. Details of the other websites can be found at:

• www.teacherevidence.net• www.teacherassessment.net

Next phase?

Looking at developing PD ‘videos’ to add to the site

Building the ECR/HDR community

Contactsimone.white@monash.edu

Questions?