Faculty of Education - Theses

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    The preparation and development of middle leaders in Victorian secondary schools
    Cooper, Peter Anthony Hope ( 2021)
    Middle leaders in schools provide a critical link between senior leadership and teaching staff. Employing a multi-perspective case study methodology, this study looked at the common themes facing middle leaders at three Victorian secondary schools, Catholic, government, and independent, with regard to their preparation for leadership, their professional and personal development in the role, how their role is perceived by those to whom they report and those they lead, and how they determine if they have been successful in their role. At each school, the following staff members were invited to participate in the study: senior leaders, middle leaders, and teachers. The middle leaders involved in this research were actively involved in leading pastoral, academic, and/or co-curricular departments within a Catholic, government, or independent school. Semi-structured interviewing was used for the purpose of collecting their responses. The participants’ responses were analysed, and emergent themes described. A total of 56 themes with 78 sub-themes emerged from the study, covering the dimensions of preparation, development, perception, and success in leadership. Common themes raised by middle leaders were professional learning, the support provided in their role, career progression, their ability to influence school direction, level of autonomy in the role, departmental management, professional relationships, and their support of students’ achievement. The study indicates that middle leaders’ measurement of success in the role was primarily linked to student achievement in academic and social domains. A leadership development model is offered to support aspiring and current middle leaders.
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    Mapping the landscape of language learning in Victorian independent schools
    Tuckfield, John ( 2017)
    The researcher for this study was granted access to a hitherto unanalysed collection of data: the results of annual surveys on language learning of all independent schools in the state of Victoria, Australia. These surveys detailed the language learning programmes of 126,377 students in 203 primary and secondary schools in 2013. Using the methodologies of Descriptive Research and Grounded Theory, the researcher undertook quantitative analyses of the data to produce an overview of language learning across the Independent sector in Victoria, and snapshots of several languages, calculating the total number of students learning the language and schools teaching it, the location of the schools (metropolitan or regional), the average Socio-Economic Status (SES) index of the schools, the gender balance of students and the number of teachers. The next part of the study involved pursuing patterns and theories that emerged from the data. Four main issues were explored using the data from the surveys: 1. the concentration of students at primary school level in learning certain languages, and the time allocated to these languages in schools; 2. the issue of compulsory language studies, and retention rates; 3. boys and language learning; and 4. children of different socio-economic status and language learning. It was found that some languages, such as Japanese and Italian, were almost exclusively taught in primary school, but in most schools they were given considerably less than the government recommend ninety minutes per week; there was a strong correlation between the mandating of language studies and student retention, and making languages compulsory for longer was associated with higher retention rates in the final year of schooling; languages in the final year of schooling showed in general a stronger proportion of girls, but this was largely due to the strong position of French, which showed a marked imbalance between the genders; and children of low socio-economic status were more likely to learn languages in their final year of schooling than other students, but they tended to choose community languages, which had an impact on the score used to determine university entrance.
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    Problem based learning and information and communications technology: can problem based learning improve year 9 students' motivation to learn ?
    Di Pilla, Janet ( 2009)
    This study investigated the use of Problem Based Learning (PBL) as a teaching and learning strategy in Year 9 (15 year olds) Information and Communications Technology (ICT) classes. Researchers (Ahlfeldt, Mehta & Sellnow, 2005; Hmelo-Silver, 2004; Colliver, 2000; Albanese & Mitchell, 1993) claim that PBL improves the educational motivation of tertiary students through its use of small groups working collaboratively to solve a real problem. Researchers also claim that PBL requires a high level of maturity (Drinan, 1997) and that secondary school students lack the necessary social skills to work effectively in a team (Achilles & Hoover, 1996). It is reported that Year 9 students have a low rate of engagement with their learning and a decreased level of motivation to learn (Cole 2006, Weiss, 2003; Johnson, Crosnoe & Elder 2001, Woods, 1995; Lumsden, 1994). Hence, this study was undertaken to see if PBL could be used at Year 9 level to motivate students while maintaining the required curriculum outcomes. Student motivation was assessed by administering Martin's Student Motivation Scale (SMS) (Martin, 2002) at regular intervals throughout the year in two Year 9 ICT classes. These two classes were run using different mixes of traditional teacher-directed classrooms and PBL classrooms. Additional attitudes and activities, considered important to students' motivation to learn, were assessed using the Samford Attitudes and Activities Assessment Scale (SAAAS). This study found that PBL was a teaching and learning strategy that enabled the required educational standards to be addressed. Results from the SMS and SAAAS showed that the introduction of PBL into these Year 9 ICT classrooms led to improvements in student Motivation, Learning Attitudes and Learning Activities as measured by the SMS and SAAAS while achieving the required curriculum outcomes for Year 9 ICT. This study also found that the use of PBL over an extended period of time maintained these positive effects.
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    Teachers' use of ICT in the secondary school: investigating the impact of change on teachers' use of ICT
    Kitchen, Timothy Paul ( 2007)
    This thesis investigates the impact of four initiatives (the provision of a desktop computer, the change of operating systems from Windows to Linux, the compulsory use of a Learning Management System (LMS) and the implementation of professional development) on the use of Information Communications Technologies (ICT) as perceived by secondary teachers at an independent school in Melbourne's East. A mix of qualitative and quantitative data were gathered for this case study by surveying the secondary teaching staff, interviewing six teachers and two key leaders of ICT, and analysing documentation such as computer bookings and school policy records. These data were analysed and compared to that of wider local, national and international research and the following five findings were evident: 1. Evidence was found of an overall increase in the use of ICT since the four initiatives were implemented; 2. Less than half (44%) of the teachers surveyed perceived that there was an improvement in the quality of their use of ICT as a result of the changes, the majority (52%) perceived that no change had occurred for them with 4% claiming that the quality of their use of ICT had actually decreased as a result of changes; 3. At least one of the teachers interviewed demonstrated some profound improvements in their use of ICT as a result of the four initiatives; 4. The provision of personal access to a desktop computer was perceived by the teachers to have had the most impact on improving the use of ICT, followed by the implementation of the LMS and the PD program; S. The change of operating systems from Windows to Linux was perceived by the majority of teachers as a having a negative influence on their use and development of ICT. This study should be of benefit to school administrators who are in the processes of implementing initiatives to help improve the use of ICT by their teachers. It could also be helpful for teachers who are wanting to develop their professional attributes in relation to the use of ICT and make ICT a more effective tool in the teaching and learning process.
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    An investigation of the role description of the information and communications technology leader in secondary schools
    Keane, Therese ( 2008)
    While growing numbers of schools have an Information and Communications Technology leader, the role is defined in a variety of different ways. As position descriptions vary from school to school, there is surprisingly little consensus on who an Information and Communications Technology leader should be or what the position should entail. Although the role of the Information and Communications Technology leader in schools has not been formally investigated as much as that of Principals, some commentators have begun to suggest that Information and Communications Technology leaders have a crucial role to play. In Victoria, Australia, Information and Communications Technology leaders in secondary schools have been given a variety of position titles. In some schools the position is treated as a senior role, while in others it is not terribly important. Financial remuneration and time allowance for the Information and Communications Technology leader role varies. In addition, no system-wide description of the role or expectation of an Information and Communications Technology leader .exists. Moreover, there are differences in practice as to what kinds of experience and qualifications are necessary to undertake this role. In describing the Information and Communications Technology leadership role, the goal of this research was to obtain perspectives from a variety of personnel in key leadership positions in schools as well as teacher perspectives to evaluate: the similarity and differences of perspectives compared to the literature. For this purpose, comparisons were conducted across the seven schools. In all, a total of 51 questionnaires were completed by the participants: Heads of Departments, Deputy Principals, Classroom Teachers, Head Librarian, Computer Technicians, Principals, Network Administrators and Curriculum Coordinators. In addition, six people were interviewed from the pool of participants in the questionnaires. From the study it was identified that to be an effective Information and Communications Technology leader, one needs to have experience and skills in four specific areas. The four specific areas are: � Resources/Equity � Pedagogy � Professional Development � External Factors These specific areas are strongly connected to key aspects of the questionnaire and provide important points of amplification in terms of developing a position description. Additionally, the study identified that the Information and Communications Technology leader needs to as have the following components in the role: � Knowledge and Skills - both in terms of having a sound educational background and knowledge of hardware and software. � Team Leadership - with regards to technical team and Information and Communications Technology vision team and all staff in terms of professional development. � Leadership - with particular respect to vision and strategic leadership � Seniority - especially with respect to belonging on senior teams within a school and being able to have direct communication with the Principal. From this study, an Information and Communications Technology leader's role was derived and a position description produced which may be applied to schools.
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    The community language school: a study on early adolescents' coping and attachment to parents, peers and teachers
    Karakis, Mari ( 2009)
    Community language schools (CLS) are voluntary educational settings which provide heritage language and culture study to school-age children. Despite their longstanding presence in the Australian community, very limited research exists on these institutions or the youth who attend them (Clyne & Fernandez, 2008; Strand, 2007). In acknowledging the paucity of research in this area, and the importance of close relationships for children's development, the main aim of the present study was to investigate the quality of parent, peer and teacher relationships in a sample of students attending CLS. This study therefore provided the first insights into the nature of relationships established in the language school setting. Relationship quality was investigated within an attachment theoretical framework. Attachment theory, regarded as one of psychology's most influential theories of close relationships and emotional development (Morelli & Rothbaum, 2007; Posada & Jacobs, 2001) aims to understand the influence of significant relationships throughout the lifespan. Relationship constructs consistent with the theory were measured to understand the quality of participants' relationships both within and external to the language school setting. Participants' coping behaviours were also measured to provide an index of well-being in order to help elucidate which of the relationships measured linked more or less closely to adaptive behaviour. A total of 160 students aged 9 to 13 years attending Chinese (n = 75) and Greek (n = 85) community language schools in Melbourne took part. All participants were asked to report on a questionnaire about their perceived attachment security in four relationship types: relationships with parents, relationships with peers from the mainstream school, relationships with peers from the language school, and the relationship with the teacher from the language school. A coping questionnaire also elicited information on participants' coping styles. In addition, a random selection of participants (n = 37) took part in an interview exploring their likes, dislikes and friendships from the language school. The results showed significant cultural effects for attachment security. Greek participants reported higher levels of felt security towards parents and peers from the language school setting. Gender effects were also found with females consistently reporting higher levels of attachment security to peers. Perceived security in the parental relationship associated most strongly and consistently with both productive and non productive coping styles. Security in the peer relationships across the two school settings (mainstream and language school) showed differential links to coping. Perceived security in the teacher relationship from the language school did not show any significant links to coping. Analyses of the interview data highlighted themes on the need to modify the learning methods adopted in the language school curriculum in order to further engage students. The findings of the present study underscore the importance of examining culture and gender in relationship research and reaffirmed the significance of the parental relationship during early adolescence. Implications of the research relate to the benefits of conducting multi-systemic explorations of close relationships, as insights were offered on interventions within school and community contexts.
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    Prensky's digital immigrants: the life of Science and English teachers with digital learning technologies in a progressive school
    Ashton-Smith, Norma ( 2008)
    Computer based technologies are widely presented as the dominant cultural artefact of our time and a key to the reinvention of teaching and learning in schools. To explain the slower than expected uptake of new technologies in schools and to locate the teacher in this issue, Prensky (2001) coined the term "Digital Immigrant". The phrase has since had wide currency amongst Information Technology consultants and educational managers. This ethnogenic study examines the umwelt of Prensky's "Digital Immigrants" in the English and Science Departments within Southern School, a well established, innovative, liberal progressive school, in outer Melbourne. In their conversations over three years with the author (Director of Curriculum with broad responsibilities for the quality of the curriculum and teaching in the school) the teachers present narrative accounts of the transformation of their pedagogical reasoning in the normative space of teaching with the new learning technologies. The accounts of the social and cultural meaning they construct for themselves and the ways in which their identity and agency as educators have been informed by Harr�'s "Positioning Theory". This is the key analytical tool used in locating each teacher in their own storylines. In these everyday conversations they offer accounts of the local moral order of the school at a particular period of time as it is transformed by new technologies. Foucault's "Technologies of Self' offers a secondary account of the way they transform themselves. The fine grained analysis of their agential positioning and modes of self governance offers an alternative image to Prensky's "Digital Immigrant." This study, and others like it, makes a contribution to New Institutional Theory that seeks to monitor and forcibly delimit the paths that self cultivation takes. Teacher self cultivation is both the conscious production of the self and the transformation of the communal conditions of future self-production. It is shown here dealing with the hard choices and potentially irredeemable losses of liberal education.
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    Developing better practice: towards a reconceptualization of clinical nursing education
    Sawyer, Glenys J. ( 2007)
    On the commencement of professional practice, most nursing graduates experience difficulties in making the transition from student to beginning practitioner. New graduates, as well as their more experienced colleagues, consider the inadequate clinical practice component of undergraduate nursing education preparation as a major factor contributing to poor graduate performance on entering the workforce. In the education of nurses over the past forty years, emphasis has been placed on the development of theoretical knowledge. During this time contemporary learning theories from general education have been employed to support nursing education. These learning theories, developed specifically for classroom learning, have extended beyond the classroom to support clinical learning as well. The underlying assumption is that knowledge learnt in the classroom will transfer to the clinical area when required. This thesis is a critical examination of past and present approaches to clinical practice in nursing education. Specifically, it is argued that contemporary learning theory supporting nursing education is insufficient for clinical practice, and that learning does not transfer in the manner assumed by current nursing educational practices. While situated learning theories, developed specifically in practice, are more suited to clinical practice, they remain limited because they do not account for how humans actually learn. Recent advances in the neurosciences can give an inclusive scientific account for learning, and are therefore more suitable to support both the theory and practice of nursing education. It is argued that viewing clinical nursing as vector coding, processing, and neural weight development, frees nursing practice from the conception that it is a subsidiary of the theoretical knowledge developed as part of the theoretical component of nursing knowledge. In order to develop better nursing practice, nursing education requires a new theoretical framework that properly reflects our current best knowledge of human learning and information processing.