Dr Susan La MarcaHead of Library & Information Services
Genazzano FCJ [email protected]
The School Library and Curricular:
An Australian Experience
• Background & Overview of Australian Curriculum
• Resourcing
• Mapping
• General Capabilities
• Cross Curricular Priorities
http://www.mceecdya.edu.au/verve/_resources/national_declaration_on_the_educational_goals_for_young_australians.pdf
http://www.australiancurriculum.edu.au/Curriculum/Overview
www.australiancurriculum.edu.au
Resourcing
Resourcing
Mapping Curriculum against Library Programs
The Australian Curriculum includes a focus on seven general capabilities
ENGLISHTogether the three strands focus on developing students’ knowledge, understanding and skills in listening, reading, viewing, speaking and writing.
The three strands are:
Language: knowing about the English language
Literature: understanding, appreciating, responding to, analysing and creating literature
Literacy: expanding the repertoire of English usage.
Strands and sub-strands
Content descriptions in each strand are grouped into sub-strands that, across the year levels, present a sequence of development of knowledge, understanding and skills. The sub-strands are:
language literature literacy
Language variation and change Literature and context Texts in context
Language for interaction Responding to literature Interacting with others
Text structure and organisation Examining literature Interpreting, analysing and evaluating
Expressing and developing ideas Creating literature Creating texts
Sound and letter knowledge
TEXTS
‘….While the nature of what constitutes literary texts is dynamic and evolving, they are seen as having personal, social, cultural and aesthetic value and potential for enriching students’ scope of experience. Literature includes a broad range of forms such as novels, poetry, short stories and plays; fiction for young adults and children, multimodal texts such as film, and a variety of non-fiction.’
The application of the general capabilities in the learning areas offers many opportunities for teacher librarians to collaborate with learning-area teachers. For example, one of the capabilities most strongly represented across all learning areas is Critical and creative thinking. It draws on many of the skills and processes teacher librarians would recognise as integral to information literacy, including:• posing insightful and purposeful questions• suspending judgement about a situation to consider the big
picture and alternative pathways• generating and developing ideas and possibilities• analysing information logically and making reasoned
judgements• evaluating ideas, creating solutions and drawing conclusions• assessing the feasibility, possible risks and benefits in the
implementation of their ideas• reflecting on thinking, actions and processes• transferring their knowledge to new situations.
These skills and processes are essential learning in all four learning areas, being most evident in the Literacy strand of English, the Historical skills strand of History, the Inquiry skills strand of Science and the problem-solving and reasoning skills of Mathematics. Teacher librarians are in a strong position to support class and learning-area teachers in addressing the critical and creative thinking demands of learning-area content.
Dr Grette TonerSenior Project Officer, Cross Curriculum Australian Curriculum
Assessment and Reporting Authority (ACARA)SCIS Connections, Issue 76, 2011
Critical and Creative Thinking
wsi.slav.vic.edu.au/question-generator
Critical and Creative Thinking
http://www.youtube.com/user/merspi
The Australian Curriculum has three cross-curriculum priorities -
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander histories and cultures,
Asia and Australia’s engagement with Asia and
Sustainability
Respond to:
Cross curricular priorities – Indigenous Culture - Asian Pacific Focus
Need for Various format types – poetry, illustrated stories, cartoon style.
Innovative approaches and various voice styles (first, second and third person).
The structure of the short story.
Merspi power searching
I like the strong focus on intellectual engagement and intellectual adaptability, with strong and clear emphasis on developing meaning and understanding through the transformation and use of information in all its forms. There is also a focus on the creation of new knowledge that enables purposeful participation in society and its growth and sustainability. These foci give emphasis to developing students as critical, reflective, imaginative and creative thinkers who are able to interrogate meaningfully their information landscape and be innovative problem solvers.
Dr Ross Todd ‘Lead, Transform, Create’ Synergy, Volume 10, Number 2, 2012
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