High-stakes testing is changing what it means to be a ‘good teacher’ in the contemporary school. This paper uses Deleuze and Guattari's ideas on the control society and dividuation in the context of National Assessment Program Literacy and Numeracy (NAPLAN) testing in Australia to suggest that the database generates new understandings of the ‘good teacher’. Media reports are used to look at how teachers are responding to the high-stakes database through manipulating the data. This article argues that manipulating the data is a regrettable, but logical, response to manifestations of teaching where only the data counts
This paper reports on topic-specific pedagogical content knowledge (PCK) enacted by three pre-servic...
Architecture is about buildings? Should schools of architecture be involved with learning to build?...
By intertwining new math concepts with important and relevant social issues, teachers can empower st...
Learning Outcomes Assessment (LOA) has been a key component of lesson planning in information litera...
Teachers regularly state there is not enough ‘time’ to get through curriculum or to teach children o...
This paper offers a critically informed report examining ways in which nondirective pedagogy can be ...
The development of English language learners’ academic literacy is a key issue in their successful t...
The research aims to establish a relevant research agenda on issues of new digital learning opportun...
This critical essay discusses the challenges and prospects for the reform of school-based literacy p...
How does the Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education function in relation to the inf...
In 2013, SINTEF cited that 90% of the world’s data had been created over the past two years.1 With t...
In a recently published research article in this journal, Avramidis & Skidmore (2004) argued that it...
There isn’t much room for dissenters in public education today – whether they are respectful or not....
A qualitative study of online management education and the role of writing as an indicative measure ...
In New Zealand schools, the adoption and persistent use of digital tools to aid learning is a growin...
This paper reports on topic-specific pedagogical content knowledge (PCK) enacted by three pre-servic...
Architecture is about buildings? Should schools of architecture be involved with learning to build?...
By intertwining new math concepts with important and relevant social issues, teachers can empower st...
Learning Outcomes Assessment (LOA) has been a key component of lesson planning in information litera...
Teachers regularly state there is not enough ‘time’ to get through curriculum or to teach children o...
This paper offers a critically informed report examining ways in which nondirective pedagogy can be ...
The development of English language learners’ academic literacy is a key issue in their successful t...
The research aims to establish a relevant research agenda on issues of new digital learning opportun...
This critical essay discusses the challenges and prospects for the reform of school-based literacy p...
How does the Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education function in relation to the inf...
In 2013, SINTEF cited that 90% of the world’s data had been created over the past two years.1 With t...
In a recently published research article in this journal, Avramidis & Skidmore (2004) argued that it...
There isn’t much room for dissenters in public education today – whether they are respectful or not....
A qualitative study of online management education and the role of writing as an indicative measure ...
In New Zealand schools, the adoption and persistent use of digital tools to aid learning is a growin...
This paper reports on topic-specific pedagogical content knowledge (PCK) enacted by three pre-servic...
Architecture is about buildings? Should schools of architecture be involved with learning to build?...
By intertwining new math concepts with important and relevant social issues, teachers can empower st...