Barbara Kameniar
University of Melbourne
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Publication
Featured researches published by Barbara Kameniar.
Journal of Education for Teaching | 2013
Larissa McLean Davies; Melody Anderson; Jan Deans; Stephen Dinham; Patrick Griffin; Barbara Kameniar; Jane Page; Catherine Reid; Field W. Rickards; Collette Tayler; Debra Tyler
This paper describes the implementation of the Master of Teaching degree which was introduced at the University of Melbourne in 2008. The programme aims to produce a new generation of teachers (early years, primary and secondary) who are interventionist practitioners, with high-level analytic skills and capable of using data and evidence to identify and address the learning needs of individual learners. The programme marks a fundamental change to the way in which teachers have traditionally been prepared in the University of Melbourne and builds a strong link between theory and practice. This linking occurs within a new partnership model with selected schools. The model was influenced by the Teachers for a New Era programme in the USA and by the clinical background of senior faculty. The programme sees teaching as a clinical-practice profession such as is found in many allied health professions; this understanding is also embraced by the university’s partnership schools. These schools are used as clinical sites, actively involving their best teachers in the clinical training component. These teachers are recognised as members of the university and are highly skilled professionals who are capable of interventionist teaching and who use appropriate assessment tools to inform their teaching of individual children.
Educational Policy | 2010
Barbara Kameniar; Alia Imtoual; Debra Bradley
In this article, Grint’s model of leadership is used to shape discussions of how “problems” are responded to in the context of a preschool in an Australian regional town. Authority styles are described as command, management, or leadership. These authority styles result in approaching problems as “crises,” “tame problems” or “wicked problems” and approaching racial difference in terms of computed“essentialism,” “evasion,” or “cognizance.” This article engages with the approach to “wicked problems” by arguing that framing complex issues, such as race differences, as “wicked problems” allows for multiple ways of thinking through issues which are not possible if they are framed as “crises” or “tame problems.” In this article, we examine a number of examples from the preschool of how “wicked problems” occur in daily practice.
Religious Education | 2007
Barbara Kameniar
Abstract This article offers an analysis of religious education practice through the literature that informs it. It engages Derridas critique of the “metaphysics of presence” (1982a) to develop a theoretical framework for a new look at the ways in which different approaches to religious education represent religion and racial difference. The article specifically examines literature that has impacted mainstream Christian and “secular” religious education in South Australia from the 1970s until today. The article concludes by proposing a new approach to racial, cultural, and religious difference in religious education—one that begins to understand religious educations engagement with Others in terms of ethical questions, deliberation, and a radical openness to what is unforeseeable. It argues for the need for religious educators to begin to actively and deliberatively engage with “who” and “what” has traditionally been absent from multireligious approaches to religious education.
Archive | 2017
Barbara Kameniar; Larissa McLean Davies; Jefferson Kinsman; Catherine Reid; Debra Tyler; Daniela Acquaro
One of the more salient challenges facing teacher educators and curriculum leaders in schools is how to assist beginning teachers to link their academic studies with professional practice knowledge. Solutions from within the university frequently emphasise links between theory and practice through university based tasks requiring pre-service teachers (teacher candidates) to trial an idea in the classroom and report back in university classes. This approach can be seen as intrusive by classroom teachers or as decontextualised by teacher candidates and students in schools. On occasions, teacher candidates have reported complaints about this approach, as well as feeling the need to “take sides” in a perceived debate between academic studies and professional practice knowledge; however, the relationship between the two is more nuanced, complex, and multidimensional than a simple theory practice divide might suggest. In this chapter, we review literature that examines the complex and multidimensional nature of the challenge of linking academic studies with professional practice learning both in schools and within the university. This provides a context for our discussion of an innovative pedagogical and assessment practice, the Clinical Praxis Exam (CPE), which is a key feature of all Master of Teaching programs at the Melbourne Graduate School of Education. The CPE is described and the theoretical basis for the innovation is outlined. Particular attention is paid to the way in which the content of each CPE is drawn from the classroom practice of individual teacher candidates and their negotiations with students, mentor teachers, and school based university staff. The chapter then outlines responses from teacher candidates, mentor teachers, teaching fellows and university teachers who participated in two qualitative research projects examining the efficacy and impact of the CPE. Findings are then summarised and the next steps in the on-going refinement of the CPE are outlined.
Australian Journal of Early Childhood | 2009
Alia Imtoual; Barbara Kameniar; Debra Bradley
International Journal of Science Education | 2014
Joseph Ferguson; Barbara Kameniar
The Australian journal of Indigenous education | 2014
Barbara Kameniar; Sally Windsor; Sue Sifa
Transnational Curriculum Inquiry | 2008
Barbara Kameniar
Journal for the academic study of religion | 2010
Barbara Kameniar
Archive | 2017
Barbara Kameniar; L Mclean Davies; J Kinsman; Catherine Reid; Debra Tyler; Daniela Acquaro