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Article
Learning for teaching: building professional knowledge on a national scale
Canadian Journal of Learning and Technology (2009)
  • Elizabeth A Hartnell-Young, University of Melbourne
Abstract

This paper takes a large-scale social perspective in describing a national project in Australia that was premised on local school communities working together and contributing ideas for the benefit of their students, and potentially, the whole country. The project was intended to improve schools’ capacity for educating boys, and in the long-term, the learning outcomes of under-performing boys, using evidence-based and action research methods. It was supported by the web spaces and tools of the National Quality Schooling Framework and Think.com. This paper emphasises the structures and processes teachers engaged in while building knowledge through their daily work, where the resulting ideas became the property of the whole community. Analyses focus on the extent to which an underlying social structure for knowledge building developed in various parts of the nation during the project, making it possible to characterize a process for innovations in education with commitment to continual idea improvement.

Keywords
  • Australia,
  • School communities,
  • Students,
  • Educating boys,
  • School improvement,
  • Learning outcomes,
  • Research methods,
  • National Quality Schooling Framework
Publication Date
2009
Citation Information
Elizabeth A Hartnell-Young. "Learning for teaching: building professional knowledge on a national scale" Canadian Journal of Learning and Technology Vol. 35 Iss. 1 (2009)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/elizabeth_hartnell-young/4/