Learning opportunities in the ‘Golden Years’ in a regional city

Bronwyn Ellis

Several projects relating to older learners have been conducted over the past decade or so, some involving the University of the Third Age (U3A) Whyalla, as well as other groups composed of older citizens. Here a wide range of learning activities, as revealed by survey data, publicly available information, and participant observation, are described. Some provide examples of engagement with the local university campus; others have this potential. Together with long-running group activities, new activities – a men’s shed and a music learning activity – have potential outcomes for participants’ health and wellbeing. Such opportunities help meet non-metropolitan lifelong learning needs. Maximising information sharing and cooperation can lead to mutual benefits, including for educational institutions. Increasing social inclusion benefits the whole community.

Preparing pre-service teachers for rural appointments

Kathy Jenkins, Linley Cornish

Pre-service teachers need to be prepared to teach in both rural and urban contexts. Preparation to teach multi-grade classes in rural schools is excellent preparation for teaching any class, including urban single-grade classes. Based on our previous research and experience, we designed a unit to prepare our pre-service teachers for the issues they may face in their employment and especially in rural schools, including multi-grade teaching, coping with isolation, working as a casual teacher, and communicating with parents and caregivers. There are significant issues that are distinct in rural and urban contexts, including how metrocentric departmental policies can emphasise the rural/urban divide.

Learner agency and assessment for learning in a regional New Zealand high school

Jennifer Charteris

Assessment for Learning (AfL) pedagogies can have a significant impact on student learning and achievement. This paper reports on data from a study of four teachers and 48 student participants within a regional high school. An inquiry approach to teacher professional learning is explored through an AfL lens, in particular, how teacher feedback for professional learning can be nuanced and dialogic. The research draws from one reflective dialogue interview where a teacher explores student voice data to consider her learners’ perceptions of how they learn and of the classroom learning practices of feedback, feedforward and self-assessment. The paper addresses learner agency as an important aspect of curriculum implementation for teachers and assessment for learning for students.

A partnership aimed at improving Health and Physical Education at a rural school: Impacts on pupils, university students, teachers and academics.

Judith Miller, John Haynes, Jim Pennington

Challenges and benefits arose when a rural school and a neighbouring university formed a partnership with the aim of improving the school’s Health and Physical Education (HPE) program. The HPE programs were enhanced through two joint research projects. The first research project had two facets, including an evidence-based curriculum for Physical Education in the school, and a remediation program for children identified through the coordination testing process. The second research project was designed to investigate students’ Health Education knowledge and explore any behavioural changes in and around nutritional choices. Both the projects were conducted as mutually productive partnerships within the school, resulting in beneficial changes for the school, the university and for the multiple participants. For the school, the Physical Education curriculum and pedagogies were modified and for students identified as requiring remediation, a multi-partnered intervention program was implemented. Students, teachers, parents and pre-service teacher education students benefited from the movement intervention program. The health education curriculum was enhanced when the school developed a social marketing approach to facilitate health-related decisions for pupils, teachers and ancillary staff. The university changed their pre-service teacher education curriculum, teaching methods, and achieved stronger research based outcomes by partnering with the school across both projects.

Editorial

Welcome to the second edition of the Australian and International Journal of Rural Education (AIJRE) for 2015. We are pleased to offer our readers a range of articles to stimulate discussion and creative thinking around the issues facing rural and remote learners, educators and institutions broadly grouped into areas related to relationships, overcoming isolation and curriculum.

Rural Voices Gather in the City

A prominent K-12 Queensland school principal and a number of leading academics will this week attend a conference at Deakin University’s Geelong Waterfront campus to discuss the future of rural education policy in Australia. Calen District State College and Society for the Provision of Education in Rural Australia (SPERA) President, Mr Brian O’Neill, will be […]

City & Beyond

Written by Josh, Caitlin and Damien Boccamazzo, and Brent Kealy City & Beyond is a resource we created for rural students to help with the transition from high school to university. Rural students are at a significant disadvantage to their urban counterparts for primarily two reasons: Complete lack of information and resources, and Having no choice but […]

Advance Australia Fair

Written by Nathan Williams In 2011, I was offered a sponsored place to the Annual SPERA Conference in Adelaide. Now I’m back! I’d like to open the doors of my home to you and why the conference is so important to me. At the time, I was the first person in our family to attend […]

Notre Dame Pre-service Teachers contribute to the lives of the children in the Tjuntjuntjara Remote Community

Written by Glenda Cain, The University of Notre Dame Australia The Principal of the Tjuntjuntjara Remote Community School, Daniel Havelberg, has great praise for the ten The University of Notre Dame Australia pre-service teachers and staff who recently spent a week in the school and contributed significantly to the lives of the children. Tjuntjuntjara is located […]

German debut for CQUni Music Theatre graduate

Obtained from CQUniversity Media newsletter and ABC Radio interview CQUniversity Music Theatre graduate Paul Tabone will soon make his German debut in a return season of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Phantom of the Opera sequel – Love Never Dies – in Hamburg’s Operettenhaus. The lyric tenor, who attended CQUni’s Central Queensland Conservatorium of Music in Mackay, has […]

Deakin University Geelong Waterfront Campus – Travel, Accommodation and Dining

Travelling to Geelong Geelong is a city located on Corio Bay and the Barwon River, in the state of Victoria in Australia. It is located approximately 75 kilometres south-west of the state capital, Melbourne. Geelong has all of the benefits of a sizeable city, but with the relaxed atmospher of coastal country. Geelong boasts a […]

Queensland State P-10/12 School Administrators’ Association – a brief overview

Written by Geoff Latta, State President, Queensland State P-10/P-12 School Administrators’ Association The 81 current P-10/12 schools are scattered across our great State and are a very important part of its education history. Our schools are some of the largest and smallest in the State. In 1957, the number of secondary departments, forerunners to what we […]

Update from the President – Aug/Sep 2015

Thank you for the positive comments regarding the July 2015 edition of the newsletter. Thank you to those of you who have contributed to this edition and to those of you who have indicated that you will be contributing articles in the future. My vision for SPERA is to reach out and to form partnerships […]

31st National SPERA Conference 2015

The 2015 conference theme is Mapping education policy landscapes: Rurality and rural futures. Deakin University’s Geelong Waterfront Campus is located on Corio Bay, in the central business district of Geelong.

Australian Rural Education Award (AREA) 2015

Nominations for the 2015 Australian Rural Education Awards are now closed. Thank you to all nominees for your submissions. SPERA will be in touch in due course. Since 1994, the Australian Rural Education Award has been awarded annually to an institution, organisation or industry to recognise excellence in rural education in Australia. Nominations are sought […]

2015 Conference Update

Written by Jodie Kline, Deakin University – SPERA 2015 Conference Director Mapping education policy landscapes: rurality and rural futures Jo-Anne Reid (Charles Sturt University), Gary Fry (Charles Darwin University – Centre for School Leadership), Marie Brennan (Victoria University), Sabina Knight (Mount Isa Centre for Rural and Remote Health) and Jim Watterson (Director General – Queensland […]

AIJRE Vol 25, No 2 (2015)

Journal Papers Learner agency and assessment for learning in a regional New Zealand high school Jennifer Charteris 2-13 Preparing pre-service teachers for rural appointments Kathy Jenkins, Linley Cornish 14-27 Learning opportunities in the ‘Golden Years’ in a regional city Bronwyn Ellis 28-43 Comparing rural and urban education contexts for GLBTIQ students Tiffany Jones 44-55 A partnership […]

31st SPERA Conference

Deakin University | Geelong Waterfront Campus: 4-6 November 2015 Confirmed speakers and guests include: Jim Watterston (Director-General, Dept. Education and Training – Qld) Jo-Anne Reid (CSU) Sabina Knight (Australian Rural Health Education Network) Josh Arnold (Small Town Culture) Bernadette Walker-Gibbs (Deakin University) Marie Brennan (Victoria University), and Gary Fry. A copy of the SPERA 2015 Conference […]

Update from the President – July 2015

A great deal has been happening with SPERA and I am happy to highlight these activities in the July edition of our newsletter. This year has heralded the introduction of our online journal – that is right, the Australian and International Journal of Rural Education (AIJRE) has gone online and our first edition was released on Wednesday 20 May 2015. […]

Encouraging Regional Aboriginal Students to Pursue Health Careers

Written by Bronwyn Ellis, University of South Australia A conference aimed at encouraging regional Aboriginal students to pursue careers in health, held at the University of South Australia’s Whyalla campus early this year, was timely: it came just after the release of the latest Closing the Gap report, which revealed only limited progress in areas related to […]

July 2015 Newsletter

From the President Mr Brian O’Neill Welcome to the first edition of our newsletter for the 2015/16 financial year. A great deal has been happening with SPERA and I am happy to highlight these activities in this edition. This year has heralded the introduction of our online journal – that is right, the Australian and […]

Student Teacher Draws on Scientific Experience to Lead Whale Shark Project

Written by Murdoch University and Dr Susan Ledger A Murdoch University education student is taking the lead on a whale shark tagging project which will see pupils from schools across WA follow the progress of several of the majestic fish. Dr Andrew Nield, who holds a PhD from Murdoch for a research project on the emu’s role in seed dispersal, […]

South Australian Rural Students Take to the Skies

Written by Bronwyn Ellis, University of South Australia A small independent school in Port Pirie offers an exciting program that attracts students from many other schools. The Mid-North Christian College, a non-denominational, co-educational, F-12 school of 260 students gives senior students the choice of Aviation Studies. The program is available to any student who has a desire to enter the […]

Allied Health Students get a Chance to Experience Research Projects in Regional City

Written by Bronwyn Ellis, University of South Australia Once again in the November to February period after examinations, a scholarship scheme run by the University of South Australia’s Department of Rural Health has enabled allied health students, mostly from the metropolitan area, to live and work in Whyalla for four or eight weeks. As well as giving […]

AIJRE Vol 25, No 1 (2015)

Journal Papers Recruiting and retaining teachers in rural schools in South Africa: Insights from a rural teaching experience programme Alfred Masinire 2-14 Influencing pre-service teachers’ intentions to teach in rural locations Henriette van Rensburg, Karen Noble, Peter McIlveen 15-24 From little things big things grow: Enhancing literacy learning for secondary students in rural and regional Australia […]

2014 AGM Minutes

The 2014 SPERA AGM was held at the University of New England on Thursday 2 October 2014. The following were nominated and accepted for Executive. Don Boyd John Borserio Louisa Bowman Aaron Drummond Aspen Forgan Paula Jervis-Tracey Jodie Kline Sue Ledger Louise Martin Brian O’Neill Sue Trinidad Charles Bradley – Public Officer Following the AGM […]

Sponsorships for Pre-Service Student to SPERA Conference 2014

Pre-service Educator Sponsorship to attend 2014 – 30th SPERA National Conference is provided by SPERA, the Isolated Children’s Parents Association QLD, Isolated Children’s Parents  Association WA, the Catholic Education Office Toowoomba, and the Sidney Myer Chair, Rural Education and Communities (Dr J Halsey, Flinders University). This offer of support is for thee pre service educators; one from […]

2014 Notice of Annual General Meeting

Dear SPERA Member Traditionally SPERA held its Annual General meeting in conjunction with its National Conference,.  This year SPERA will hold its Annual General at the 30th National SPERA Conference at the University of New England, Armidale NSW. The AGM will be held on Thursday 2 October commencing at 16:15 Eastern Standard Time.  You are […]

2013 AGM Minutes

The 2013 SPERA AGM was held via Teleconference on Tuesday 17 September 2013. The following were nominated and accepted for Executive: Gary Allen Don Boyd John Borserio Tania Broadley Vincent Connor Robyn Henderson Paula Jervis-Tracey Jodie Kline Sue Ledger Karen Noble Brian O’Neill Michael Preece Emmy Terry Please note that the positions of President, Vice […]

Australian Rural Education Award (AREA) 2014

Applications are called for in the three divisions for the 2014 AREA Awards.  Division One – (existing projects)  Division Two – (new projects)  Division Three – (pre-service citations) The initial application involves a brief on-line process. The selection panel will shortlist the applications. Shortlisted applicants will then be involved in a more detailed selection process.  The […]