Faculty of Education - Theses

Permanent URI for this collection

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 7 of 7
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    The teaching of history in state-supported elementary schools in Victoria, 1852-1954
    Trethewey, Alan Robert ( 1965)
    The major concern of this thesis, then, is to trace and account for the introduction of History as a subject in 1886, to show its development in an initial period of transition as the implications of the new subject were explored, to follow it through the years of the "New Education" to the time when it became an established and accepted subject, changing little, to examine a period of exciting rediscovery and revision in the early 1930's, and finally, after another twenty years of relative but deceptive calm,to describe the changes which led to the introduction of Social Studies at the expense of History, Geography and Civics in 1954.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    A comparative study of primary school social studies in three Australian states : Victoria, New South Wales and Western Australia, 1952-1975
    Reed, R. L (1943-) ( 1976)
    This study is concerned with the way in which Primary school Social Studies curricula have been revised, organized and developed from 1952 to 1975 in three Australian States - Victoria, New South Wales and Western Australia. As few commercially produced Social Studies courses, or indeed Social Studies units, have been forthcoming in these States, coverage in this thesis concentrates on those syllabus revisions which have been produced by Revision Committees organized by the respective Education Departments in these States. Underlying factors which have been instrumental in Social Studies revisions and their final outcome - a Social Studies Syllabus - have been analyzed by considering those constraints which form a part of the Curriculum Materials Analysis System (1967). The constituent six part cluster questions have been used in horizontal analysis to highlight features of Social Studies courses in the 1950's as compared to those of the 1960's, and the most significant changes which have occurred in the most current revisions. From courses which presented a high degree of uniformity in their emphasis on facts, social living and citizenship, have emerged State revisions which, though differing in format and degree of inclusiveness, reflect attributes commonly associated with 'new' Social Studies.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    The effects of student characteristics and computer based modes of drill and practice on achievement in primary school mathematics
    White, John David ( 1979)
    The study was designed to investigate the effects of extraversion, sex and computer based modes of drill and practice in arithmetic on achievement in arithmetic for grade three children. A computer based system of drill and practice in arithmetic, based on the 'Strands' program from Stanford University, was developed and implemented for the experiment which was conducted during Term II, 1978. The system of drill and practice was used in an interactive, individualized mode (CAI), a non-interactive individualized mode (CMI) and two modes in which the teacher selected exercises from the program. In one of these teacher selected modes the performances of the children were displayed in the classroom. The children were classified as extraverts, introverts or medium extraverts as a result of their responses to the Junior Eysenck Personality Inventory. The grade three children at Moreland Primary School were pretested for initial arithmetic achievement. They were randomly allocated to treatments of drill and practice in arithmetic after being ranked on the extraversion scale. The experimental program extended over eleven weeks in which the children were given daily drill and practice in arithmetic using the mode to which they were assigned. One hundred and seventeen students completed the program and the posttest. The experimental design for the investigation is a 2 X 3 X 4 factorial model for which an analysis of covariance was used to test the significance of the hypotheses formulated for the study. The cell frequency for the twenty-four cells was randomly reduced to three to enable analysis of covariance for equal cell frequencies. The hypotheses which were supported by significant t statistics are: i. Extravert students performed at a higher level of achievement in arithmetic than introverts ii. Boys had superior performance on the non-displayed mode of teacher selected. drill; when the results for the teacher selected mode were displayed the girls had superior performances iii. Extraverts are better suited to non-individualized modes of drill than introverts In six cases the analysis indicated possible trends that: i. Boys performed better than girls. ii. The performances on the teacher selected modes were superior to those on the individualized modes iii. The interactive, individualized mode of Grill and practice (CAI) produced superior results to the non-interactive individualized mode (CMI) iv. Extraverts are favoured by CAI, while the introverts are favoured by CMI v. In the teacher selected modes the introverts' performances improved on the displayed results mode; the extraverts' performances improved on the non-display of results, thus reducing the superiority of the. extraverts when the results were displayed.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    The development of tests for the measurement of cognitive objectives in social studies at the upper primary level
    Allen, Graham J ( 1966)
    The evolution of the school subject Social Studies in Victoria and in the United States of America is traced briefly, and an examination is made of educational objectives which are appropriate to such a subject. Tests are developed to measure achievement of cognitive objectives, encompassing areas named as Knowledge of Terminology in Social Studies, Knowledge of Generalizations in Social Studies, Comprehension in Social Studies, and Reasoning in Social Studies. The final forms of the tests are administered to 287 upper primary school children and descriptive statistics are computed from the results. Factor analysis is applied to the intercorrelations among scores on selected groups of items from the Social Studies tests and a number of marker variables. The sources of variance contributing to scores on the Social Studies tests are examined and some implications are drawn for measurement of cognitive objectives in Social Studies.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    English in the training of primary teachers
    Nolan, Francis Michael ( 1975)
    in 1968 a three year course of training for primary teachers was introduced in Victorian State teachers' colleges. The course was founded upon the report of an Advisory Committee on the Three Years' Course of Training for Primary Teachers published in March 1967 and commonly termed the 'Pryor Report'. One of the objectives of this course was to develop a well educated cultured person (with) the desire to read widely. with discrimination and appreciation of all that is best in literature . Means of achieving this objective included a compulsory two years' study of English, incorporating the best in traditional and contemporary writing', and children's literature. There is need for some evaluation of the degree to which this objective has been achieved. in this study, twenty-one young teachers who completed the three year course at one provincial teachers' college, and who were teaching in one-teacher rural schools, were visited and invited to discuss the subject of English, particularly English literature. in their college courses. Their current reading habits. and views and attitudes to literature were also discussed. The data collected from these discussions suggest that the objective of the three year course referred to above is not being achieved in the case of this small and possibly unrepresentative sample of graduates of the course. These teachers do not read widely. Their attitudes to literature are disappointing and the effects of these attitudes on the children they teach represent a matter of grave concern. It Is suggested that the compulsory study of 'adult' literature In a course of training for primary teachers is educationally doubtful. On the other hand compulsory study of the immensely rich field of children's literature appears justified on literary, sociological and educational grounds. The need for clear aims and procedures for studies In the language arts and methods of teaching English In the primary school Is also suggested by the lack of confidence shown in these areas by the young teachers. The presentation of the views and attitudes of a group of young, inexperienced teachers in a difficult and sometimes lonely school environment is an attempt to give life to problems in teacher training which statistical data may illuminate. No firm conclusions are possible from data obtained in this study but the study indicates a need for thorough evaluation of the efficacy of courses of training of teachers such as those founded on the 'Pryor Report.'
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    The effects of trait anxiety, mathematical ability, method of testing, task difficulty, and their interactions, on state anxiety and performance in mathematics at primary school
    Makin, Graeme John ( 1979)
    A review was made of the theoretical and research literature related to the trait-state concept of anxiety, the relationship of anxiety to academic performance; and some factors confounding the anxiety, performance relationship. A study investigating the differential effect of anxiety on performance under two different methods of testing was reviewed. A study to replicate the findings related to anxiety, performance and varying test precedures was proposed. Data collected in the study made possible an investigation of Spielberger's Trait-State concept of anxiety and Spence's Drive Theory. One hundred and seventy six male, State primary school children drawn from sixteen grade five and six classes took part in the study. All testing was carried out in term I of 1978. As hypothesized the formal method of testing proved to be more anxiety arousing than the informal method of testing and students performed better under the latter testing procedure. Low anxious students performed better than high anxious students under both testing conditions. The study provided further support for Spielberger's Trait-State anxiety theory with high trait anxious students displaying higher levels of state anxiety than law trait anxious students, confirming that the State-A scale is a sensitive device for measuring differential anxiety arousal. The hypotheses related to Spence's Drive Theory were only partially supported by the results. Explanations as to why the interaction between task difficulty, ability and anxiety might not have been significant in this study were discussed. In general this study found evidence confirming the notion that high anxiety hinders performance, particularly for low ability students.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    A comparative survey of the teaching of mathematics in primary schools in South Australia and Victoria
    Angus, Alan Grant ( 1976)
    During the last two decades the teaching of mathematics in Australian primary schools has experienced widespread changes in content and method. These changes were introduced, mainly, in an attempt to overcome certain problems associated with the teaching of the subject. The views of psychologists and mathematicians influenced the new approaches to a greater extent than on any previous occasion. At the outset this thesis discusses some of the problems encountered in the teaching of mathematics and outlines three areas.requiring attention. An overview is given of the place of mathematics in the primary school curriculum in South Australia and Victoria since the middle of the nineteenth century. In tracing this development, an historical setting is given for the current controversies in the teaching of mathematics. A number of important changes in the teaching of mathematics emerge. In particular the changes which have occurred during the last twenty years are considered in some detail. An attempt is made to compare these recent developments and special attention is given to the period since the Australian conference on primary school mathematics in 1964, when a major restructuring of courses was proposed. Finally, it is shown that in attempting to overcome the problems associated with the teaching of mathematics, other factors have emerged which have implications for future developments. The current claim that the 3 R's have been neglected is likely to bring about a change in emphasis.