This paper explores the introduction of the new Teacher Performance Assessment (TPA) for graduate teachers in Australia. We investigate how the broader discussion around TPAs has been understood by multiple agents during an eight-month period from January 2019 to August 2019. Data includes legacy media, social media tweets and a survey of school leaders. The analysis draws on Bernsteinian (1975) theory about the way particular social relations produce differing sentiments of social unity. While eschewing a strict binary, legacy media was characterised by a mechanical solidarity which promoted the TPA as akin to a test. Contributions to social media and responses to the survey suggested an orientation to organic solidarity and a recognition ...
Teachers’ professional conversations regarding the qualities evidenced in student work provide oppor...
This paper documents the creation, implementation and analysis of a survey instrument designed to re...
The use of social media is now as prevalent as ever, and its educational ramifications still need to...
This chapter explores how news media represent teacher education reform, the emergence of teaching p...
This paper presents the start-up methodology for a project that leverages the opportunities that soc...
The aim of this article is to examine how the discourse of formative assessment is perpetuated and t...
In this chapter we examine our collective experiences with a relatively new medium of communicating ...
In 2014, Australia’s Teacher Education Ministerial Advisory Group (TEMAG) emphasised the need for a ...
Alternative teacher education programmes have emerged in many countries as a new approach to recruit...
The advent of social media has allowed teachers to speak in, with and to publics in new ways. The ch...
Social media are a group of technologies such as Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn which offer people c...
This paper explores how teachers discursively construct socially desirable identities to sustain the...
Analyzing the influence of social media on the learning process is no longer a novel idea; however, ...
It is a requirement for pre-service students in Initial Teacher Education programs in Australia to s...
.Background: An extensive and international evidence base positions professional learning communitie...
Teachers’ professional conversations regarding the qualities evidenced in student work provide oppor...
This paper documents the creation, implementation and analysis of a survey instrument designed to re...
The use of social media is now as prevalent as ever, and its educational ramifications still need to...
This chapter explores how news media represent teacher education reform, the emergence of teaching p...
This paper presents the start-up methodology for a project that leverages the opportunities that soc...
The aim of this article is to examine how the discourse of formative assessment is perpetuated and t...
In this chapter we examine our collective experiences with a relatively new medium of communicating ...
In 2014, Australia’s Teacher Education Ministerial Advisory Group (TEMAG) emphasised the need for a ...
Alternative teacher education programmes have emerged in many countries as a new approach to recruit...
The advent of social media has allowed teachers to speak in, with and to publics in new ways. The ch...
Social media are a group of technologies such as Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn which offer people c...
This paper explores how teachers discursively construct socially desirable identities to sustain the...
Analyzing the influence of social media on the learning process is no longer a novel idea; however, ...
It is a requirement for pre-service students in Initial Teacher Education programs in Australia to s...
.Background: An extensive and international evidence base positions professional learning communitie...
Teachers’ professional conversations regarding the qualities evidenced in student work provide oppor...
This paper documents the creation, implementation and analysis of a survey instrument designed to re...
The use of social media is now as prevalent as ever, and its educational ramifications still need to...