Erika Hepple
Queensland University of Technology
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Featured researches published by Erika Hepple.
Education Research International | 2013
Rebecca S. Spooner-Lane; Donna Tangen; Louise Mercer; Erika Hepple; Suzanne Carrington
This paper describes a program called Patches that was implemented to assist a group of Australian and Malaysian pre-service teachers to enhance their intercultural competence through their involvement in a series of reciprocal learning activities. Each learning experience was considered a “patch” that eventually created a “quilt of intercultural learning.” The purpose of this study was to enhance the intercultural competence of domestic and international students through organized intercultural activities, through a series of reflective writing sessions, and mutual engagement on a common project. The effectiveness of the Patches program was analysed in accordance with Deardorff’s elements of intercultural competence. The qualitative findings indicate that both cohorts of preservice teachers showed elements of intercultural competence through participation in the program, with both groups reporting a deeper appreciation and understanding of how to communicate more effectively in intercultural contexts.
Journal of Education for Teaching | 2012
Erika Hepple
There are increasing opportunities in many countries for pre-service teachers to engage in a transnational school-based experience as part of study abroad programmes. The transformative potential of such transnational teaching experiences is recorded in research studies, often supported by data from participant surveys. However, there has been a lack of evidence investigating shifts in professional understanding derived from such experiences. This qualitative study addresses this issue by exploring the perspectives of 16 pre-service teachers of English as a Second Language from Hong Kong, who engaged in transnational teaching activities with primary school pupils in Australia during their study abroad programme. Discourse analysis of participants’ dialogues traces how they encountered conflicting Discourses of ‘student-centredness’ in the Australian classroom. Reflecting dialogically on their experiences led participants to negotiate and reframe their understandings of language teaching pedagogy and themselves as language teachers. The findings demonstrate the importance of both peer and lecturer feedback into the process of dialogic reflection and the need for more longitudinal research into the impact of transnational school-based experience in pre-service teacher education.
Asia-pacific Journal of Teacher Education | 2017
Donna Tangen; Deborah J. Henderson; Jennifer H. Alford; Erika Hepple; Amyzar Alwi; Zaira Abu Hassan Shaari; Aliza Alwi
ABSTRACT This article explores the shaping of Australian and Malaysian pre-service teachers’ possible selves in a short-term mobility programme. With the theory of possible selves, individuals imagine who they will become based on their past and current selves. The focus of the research was on pre-service teachers’ possible selves as global and culturally responsive teachers. The experiential learning through participation in the programme allowed participants to consider their future possible selves as teachers with a deeper understanding of diverse learners’ needs and how they might strive to address these needs in their own classrooms. The scaffolding of reflections in the programme encouraged the pre-service teachers to take on multiple perspectives, to step outside their comfort zones and in many ways to see the world from different eyes. The research found that through experiential learning in the short-term mobility programme both the Australian and Malaysian pre-service teachers gained in positioning their cultural selves currently and as future teachers, suggesting that there is merit in utilising the theory of possible selves in future research in the area of shaping teacher identity.
Asia-pacific Journal of Teacher Education | 2016
Sonia White; Erika Hepple; Donna Tangen; Marlana Comelli; Amyzar Alwi; Zaira Abu Hassan Shaari
Internationally there is interest in developing the research skills of pre-service teachers as a means of ongoing professional renewal with a distinct need for systematic and longitudinal investigation of student learning. The current study takes a unique perspective by exploring the research learning journey of pre-service teachers participating in a transnational degree programme. Using a case-study design that includes both a self-reported and direct measure of research knowledge, the results indicate a progression in learning, as well as evidence that this research knowledge is continued or maintained when the pre-service teachers return to their home university. The findings of this study have implications for both pre-service teacher research training and transnational programmes.
School of Teacher Education & Leadership; Faculty of Education | 2018
Deborah J. Henderson; Donna Tangen; Jennifer H. Alford; Erika Hepple; Amyzar Alwi; Zaira Abu Hassan Shaari; Aliza Alwi
This chapter draws from research on the ways in which a group of Australian and Malaysian pre-service teachers reflected on their collaborative experiences during a short-term outbound mobility programme in Malaysia, funded through the Australian Government’s Study Overseas Short-Term Mobility Program. The research focused on how both groups of pre-service teachers reflected on themselves as culturally responsive global citizens during and after the two-week programme in Kuala Lumpur. Findings suggest that from initial ethnocentric assumptions, the Australian and Malaysian pre-service teachers developed a respect for cultural difference through their intercultural encounters with each other, gained deeper insights into their cultural selves as global citizens, and reflected on how global perspectives can be shaped through regional contexts in the Asia–Pacific.
Faculty of Education | 2017
Lenore Adie; Amanda Mergler; Jennifer H. Alford; Vinesh Chandra; Erika Hepple
Establishing communities of practice is a tenuous process fraught with a multiplicity of experiences and artefacts that come together and either strengthen or hinder the practice. In this chapter a diverse group of teacher educators reflect on their experience of being brought together to form a community of practice in the scholarship of teaching. Their task was to collaboratively consider and problem solve some of the key issues currently impacting on teacher education, and more broadly on higher education. How the group negotiated shared meaning and purpose is a focus of the chapter. There were many challenges and issues that the group needed to collaboratively and individually solve before progressing towards shared meaning. The experiences of the assigned leaders of this group are also considered, yet it is the evolving understanding of leadership through collaboration that is of greater importance. The interplay of the experiences of all group members along with the artefacts and practices that reify the group’s purpose are considered. We explore how the group members began to understand how to work collaboratively across the boundaries of their disciplines, and how reflecting on their learning and participation in this group enabled them to work through issues that were constraining their progress.
Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy | 2014
Erika Hepple; Margaret Sockhill; Ashley Tan; Jennifer H. Alford
The Australian Journal of Teacher Education | 2011
Donna Tangen; K. Louise Mercer; Rebecca S. Spooner-Lane; Erika Hepple
Teaching and Teacher Education | 2017
Erika Hepple; Jennifer H. Alford; Deborah J. Henderson; Donna Tangen; Mary Hurwood; Amyzar Alwi; Zaira Abu Hassan Shaari; Aliza Alwi
Australian Journal of Adult Learning | 2015
Anne R. Hickling-Hudson; Erika Hepple