The Refugee Action Support (RAS) program began in 2007 as a collaborative arrangement between the University of Western Sydney (UWS), the Australian Literacy and Numeracy Foundation (ALNF), and the New South Wales (NSW) Department of Education and Training (DET). It aims to provide targeted literacy and numeracy support to humanitarian refugee students who have transitioned, within the previous two years, from Intensive English Centres (IECs) to mainstream secondary schools. Despite the fact that all refugee children who attend secondary schools are provided with English language instruction through enrolment in Intensive English Centres (IECs), time restrictions of four school terms in government funded centres result in only a partial dev...
This paper focuses on issues of access to productive literacy learning as part of socially just scho...
Sudanese refugees currently constitute the largest single group of arrivals to Australia under the h...
As several notable international scholars have argued, the standardised practices of schools are pro...
The Refugee Action Support program in the School of Education, University of Western Sydney, represe...
Rarely do refugee students entering Australian schools possess the multiple forms of social, linguis...
This paper discusses the community engagement program, Refugee Action Support (RAS) at the Universit...
This paper discusses the Refugee Action Support program, which is a program of literacy support for ...
On arrival to Australia, many refugee background students experience difficulties adjusting to their...
This report examines how the Refugee Action Support program (RAS), a collaboration between the Austr...
The Refugee Action Support (RAS) program began in 2007 as a collaboration between the University of ...
This paper discusses the role of community, non-government organisations and universities in assisti...
Many African refugee students entering Australian high schools have come from war-torn regions in Af...
The Refugee Action Support program was launched in 2007 through a partnership between Western Sydney...
Schools provide refugee young people with safe spaces for new encounters, interactions, and learning...
This paper discusses the Refugee Action Support Partnership Project between the University of Wester...
This paper focuses on issues of access to productive literacy learning as part of socially just scho...
Sudanese refugees currently constitute the largest single group of arrivals to Australia under the h...
As several notable international scholars have argued, the standardised practices of schools are pro...
The Refugee Action Support program in the School of Education, University of Western Sydney, represe...
Rarely do refugee students entering Australian schools possess the multiple forms of social, linguis...
This paper discusses the community engagement program, Refugee Action Support (RAS) at the Universit...
This paper discusses the Refugee Action Support program, which is a program of literacy support for ...
On arrival to Australia, many refugee background students experience difficulties adjusting to their...
This report examines how the Refugee Action Support program (RAS), a collaboration between the Austr...
The Refugee Action Support (RAS) program began in 2007 as a collaboration between the University of ...
This paper discusses the role of community, non-government organisations and universities in assisti...
Many African refugee students entering Australian high schools have come from war-torn regions in Af...
The Refugee Action Support program was launched in 2007 through a partnership between Western Sydney...
Schools provide refugee young people with safe spaces for new encounters, interactions, and learning...
This paper discusses the Refugee Action Support Partnership Project between the University of Wester...
This paper focuses on issues of access to productive literacy learning as part of socially just scho...
Sudanese refugees currently constitute the largest single group of arrivals to Australia under the h...
As several notable international scholars have argued, the standardised practices of schools are pro...