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International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education | 2004

Poststructuralism in English classrooms: Critical literacy and after

Bronwyn Mellor; Annette Patterson

This paper explores the effects of poststructuralism on the work of two English teachers and writers of classroom texts. It traces aspects of their theoretical and practical engagement with poststructuralism from an initial acceptance of what appeared to promise the possibility of a truly critical practice through ideology critique to a stance that endeavors to include a consideration of the emergence of English pedagogy as well as theories about language and meaning.


Reading Research Quarterly | 1995

Reading research methodology and the Reading Research Quarterly: a question of gender

Annette Patterson

The paper discusses an aspect of reading research methodology as represented by papers published by the Reading Research Quarterly from the beginning of 1989(volume 24, Number 1) to the end of 1993 (volume 28, Number 4). The discussion suggests some points of departure between this research community and an Australian community broadly defined as poststructural. A focus for this investigation is the function of “gender” within the methodological approaches of the two communities. Suggestions are made regarding some potentially productive points of intersection between the work of American and Australian reading researchers.


Oxford Review of Education | 2013

Re-reading the reading lesson: episodes in the history of reading pedagogy

Bill Green; Phillip Cormack; Annette Patterson

Reading pedagogy is constantly an object of discussion and debate in contemporary policy and practice but is rarely a matter for historical inquiry. This paper reports from a recent study of the history of reading pedagogy in Australia and beyond. It focuses on a recurring figure in the historical record—the ‘reading lesson’. Presented as a distinctive trope, the reading lesson is traced in its regularity in and through the discourse of reading pedagogy, starting in 1930s Australia and moving back into 19th-century Europe, and with specific reference to the UK and the USA. Teaching reading is expressly identified as a moral project—something that, it can be argued, clearly continues into the present.


Paedagogica Historica | 2012

The child, the text and the teacher: reading primers and reading instruction

Annette Patterson; Phillip Cormack; William Green

From the late sixteenth century, in response to the problem of how best to teach children to read, a variety of texts, such as primers, spellers and readers were produced in England for vernacular instruction. This paper describes how these materials were used by teachers to develop, first, a specific religious understanding according to the stricture of the time and, second, a moral reading practice that provided the child with a guide to secular conduct. The analysis focuses on the use of these texts as a productive means for shaping the child-reader in the context of newly emerging educational spaces, which fostered a particular, morally formative relation among teacher, child and text.


History of European Ideas | 2014

The Legacy of Ian Hunter's Work on Literature Education and the History of Reading Practices: Some Preliminary Remarks

Annette Patterson

Summary Ian Hunters early work on the history of literature education and the emergence of English as school subject issued a bold challenge to traditional accounts that have in the main focused on English either as knowledge of a particular field or as ideology. The alternative proposal put forward by Hunter and supported by detailed historical analysis is that English exists as a series of historically contingent techniques and practices for shaping the self-managing capacities of children. The challenge for the field is to advance this historical work and to examine possible implications for English teaching.


International Journal of Training Research | 2006

Trade Barriers: To Invest, Or Not to Invest, in a Trade as a Career

Nola Alloway; Leanne Dalley-Trim; Annette Patterson; Karen Walker

Abstract This paper highlights on-going concern in Australia about the contested terrain of skills shortages, particularly as they apply to traditional trades. The paper reports on a school-based study of student career choice that was undertaken for the federal government to inform its deliberations1. Drawing on the study, the paper examines key issues related to students’ preparedness, and schools’ readiness, to pursue school-based apprenticeships in traditional trades, reflecting the hope of attenuating the much touted gaps in labour supply and avoiding the social and fiscal effects ofskills shortages, matters to which the nation has been alerted.


Discourse: Studies in The Cultural Politics of Education | 1997

Critical Discourse Analysis: a condition of doubt

Annette Patterson


Australian journal of career development | 2006

Counsellor practices and student perspectives: perceptions of career counselling in Australian secondary schools

Karen Walker; Nola Alloway; Leanne Dalley-Trim; Annette Patterson


Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy | 2000

Critical Practice: Teaching "Shakespeare.".

Annette Patterson; Bronwyn Mellor


Teaching in Higher Education | 2001

Teaching and Learning Generic Skills in Universities: The case of 'sociology' in a teacher education programme

Annette Patterson; James W. Bell

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Bill Green

Charles Sturt University

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Kerry M. Mallan

Queensland University of Technology

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Phillip Cormack

University of South Australia

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Carolyn D. Young

Queensland University of Technology

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Phil Cormack

University of South Australia

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