Faculty of Education - Theses

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    The integration of a Down's Syndrome child into an independent school
    Wilkes, Beverley ( 1989)
    Integrating students with impairments, disabilities or problems in schooling does not only mean that these students participate in the educational programmes and the social life of regular schools. It also necessitates the development of procedures and programmes to ensure that their participation is maintained and continued. Integration of these students represents a change in Ministry of Education policy in Victoria, but due to the complexity of social implications involved when adapting to the alterations of any value system, the change becomes multi-dimensional. This thesis examines the impact the enrolment of a five year-old girl with Down's Syndrome had on one Independent Girls' School in Melbourne, Victoria. The thesis is presented as a case study over a three year period, and focuses on the changes made by the staff members involved with the child; changes within the infant area of the school, and school policy changes made as a result of the child's enrolment. In analysing these changes, the issues that were examined and the findings that were made have been discussed, and the responses made by the staff and the school have been recorded.
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    Instruments of cultural preservation in the Greek community of Melbourne
    Kefalianos, Venetia ( 1989)
    To the world Australia represents a uniform social environment, whilst the Australian stereotype is one of the blonde, athletic, down-to-earth individual. A closer examination however, of the Australian cultural framework reveals that the Australian citizen is quite different from that stereotype. Australia is far from culturally homogeneous, there are countless cultural groups that work, live and survive in their unique social groupings. The aim of this minor thesis is to examine the Greek Community of Melbourne. After giving a historical background of its early years I will examine the many and varied areas of cultural Preservation i.e., the Church, Brotherhoods, the Greek School, the Press, Cafenion etc. Throughout this minor thesis I will assess how culturally intact this community has remained. The specified areas have to be examined so as to establish their cultural maintenance techniques and to assess the extent of their traditional links with Greece. The ground work for this minor thesis began with my contact with the Greek community and my personal desire to explore those facilities which had become a part of my personal and social experiences as a functional Greek mother. My teaching experience at Richmond High School during 1981-1987 proved to be an invaluable resource, as it gave me a realistic insight into the wider issues of cultural maintenance. Consequently I gathered a wealth of material from Parent-Teacher nights, Report-Nights etc. which gave diverse insights into the hopes, ideals and expectations of the Greek Australian. The face to face contact with young Greek Australian students on the other hand, gave me the chance to assess how successful those cultural facilities had become in the second generation Australian-Greek. My findings are very heartening for the existing system of cultural maintenance. At the moment it is at its peak performance, catering for the needs of a primarily youthful community. Future success will largely depend on the second generation's desire to replace Australian Anglo-Saxon social experiences with the predetermined Greek ideals of social existence and family commitments.
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    Fairness in selection of students to a B. Business (Accounting) course
    Gregory, James Clive ( 1989)
    This study examines the consequences of selecting students on the basis of Level 12 scores without reference to sub-groups among applicants or the use of additional criteria. The central purpose of the study is to determine whether the use of a single criterion for selection results in unfair outcomes for particular sub-groups among applicants. The study also seeks to determine whether adverse consequences might be avoided by the use of differing "cut-off" requirements for particular groups of applicants or the use of additional-criteria in the process, of selection. The study traces the academic progress and achievement of 287 students who commenced a Bachelor of Business (Accounting) course between 1980 and 1982. Academic progress has been traced for a minimum of five years for all entrants in order to compare achievement, persistence and graduation levels for identifiable sub groups. The main conclusions related to sub-groups are that women from an H.S.C. background achieve significantly higher graduation rates than men from an H.S.C. background and-that students from T.O.P. background achieve significantly lower graduation rates than those from an H.S.C. background. Further analysis of notional intakes using different cut-off requirements shows that by favouring particular sub-groups, graduation rates could be increased. A secondary conclusion is that the use of additional criteria in selection related to specific Level 12 subjects would be unlikely to result in higher graduation rates. This study shows that in order to ensure that 'selection practices are not unfair to particular groups of applicants, different "cut-off" requirements should be used for particular groups of applicants. Finally, the study addresses, by use of a survey, questions related to student background and motivation in an endeavour to suggest why the different groups to which the study relates achieve different graduation rates.
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    An analytical survey of percussion education at the immediate pre-tertiary level
    Barber, Bruce ( 1989)
    The standard of music education for players of percussion instruments appears to be deficient when compared to that of players of other musical instruments. Research has been conducted amongst students of percussion with the purpose of identifying characteristics which may suggest the need to adopt particular teaching strategies to address problems related to educational background. A profile of percussion students at the Box Hill College of TAFE Music Department refers to such matters as age, educational background, musical training and experience, learning skills and achievement. This profile is presented along with an analysis of some learning difficulties and problems encountered by students and the strategies adopted to address those problems. The role of published materials used in percussion teaching at Box Hill College of TAFE and the rationale for the writing of further tuition material is discussed. The content and context of the instrumental lesson and curriculum models which pertain to instrumental tuition form a large part of the study. The role of the teacher in the instrumental lesson is seen to include functions which go beyond the immediate processes of skill and knowledge development into the realm of personal growth and development. An essential aspect of skill development for musicians is the daily practice programme. The aims of practice, the motivation to practice and the materials and organisation of practice are all examined together with related problems experienced by students and the strategies used to address such problems. Percussion tuition, traditionally having been conducted outside the mainstream of music teaching institutions, is now seen to be most effective when conducted within the context of a comprehensive music education programme. Students of percussion clearly benefit from a course of study which includes not only percussion tuition but also aural and theoretical training, the study of music history, composition and practical experience in performance ensembles.
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    Some had vision: P.L.C. and its teaching of science 1875 to 1912
    Bertagnolio, Robert J. ( 1989)
    In the 1980's, educators have devised programs which have encouraged girls to broaden their career aspirations. An important goal has been to persuade more girls to study maths and the physical sciences {physics and chemistry) at years 11 and 12. This thesis sets ou1 to investigate whether the 1980's has been the only period when females have been encouraged to study science, and if encouragement was given, was it limited to domestic science subjects which even today some believe are particularly suited to females. The thesis focuses in particular on science teaching at the Presbyterian Ladies' College (P .LC.) from 1875 to 1912. The cost of apparatus, the lack of qualified staff and a matriculation system which gave very little incentive to studying science subjects, meant that science was not a significant part of the curriculum in either girls' or boys' schools in the nineteenth century. Science was perceived as light relief from more rigorous study in English, mathematics and the Classics. While institutions such as the Vieusseux Ladies' College and P.LC. offered a broad and academic curriculum which included lectures in science, it was understood that this knowledge was not to be used ou1side the private sphere of home and family. Science lectures of a general nature, as a break from rigorous study, fitted comfortably with notion of a female accomplishments education and therefore were seen as a legitimate area of study for girls. During the Edwardian period science became more closely linked to economic and political power, and to the fortunes of the nation-state. In VICtoria, the Fink Royal Commission encapsulated the belief that 'hard' science needed to be developed for Australia's Mure strength and security. This paradigm of science, which exalted the physical sciences, physics and chemistry with their industrial, mechanical and technical potential, was increasingly linked to masculinity and therefore seen as inappropriate for females. Acceptable areas of science study for females were perceived to be botany and physiology - and as the Edwardian period progressed, domestic science. The domestic science movement argued that the role of wife and mother was the most appropriate for all women, and mounted a powerful and successful campaign which saw the introduction of some domestic science courses at nearly all levels of the education system. Unlike In the 19th century when P.LC. 's science teaching was typical of other girls' (and boys') schools, in the. Edwardian period P.LC. did not follow the trend, and domestic science courses remained a minimal part of the overall curriculum. Instead, James Bee and S.G. Mclaren worked collaboratively to give P.LC. students the opportunity to study the physical sciences, building the first substantial laboratory in a girls' school in Australia. This emphasis on the physical sciences gave an elite at P.LC. the opportunity to pursue careers in medicine; it also gave many a valuable lesson - that girls could succeed in areas which society had deemed to be masculine areas of study. What makes the work of Bee and Mclaren significant is that they had the commitment and vision to pursue their beliefs which were against the dominant societal views of their time. As we move into the 1990's educators must continue to confront the idea that science is gendered.