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Dive into the research topics where Geoff Munns is active.

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Featured researches published by Geoff Munns.


Assessment in Education: Principles, Policy & Practice | 2006

Student engagement and student self‐assessment: the REAL framework

Geoff Munns; Helen Woodward

This article explores the relationship between student engagement and student self‐assessment. It reports on research that has reconceptualised ways of understanding levels of student engagement among primary school learners who live in poor communities. These ways of understanding have been influential in the development of a student self‐assessment framework. This framework is presented in the article, as well as a description of its evolution and how it is used within classrooms involved in the research.


Asia-pacific Journal of Teacher Education | 2005

Get real : making problematic the pathway into the teaching profession

Catherine Sinclair; Geoff Munns; Helen Woodward

Learning to be a teacher is a complex and very personal matter that involves transformation from student teacher (pre‐service teacher) to teacher. The pathway to being a teacher is scattered with what appears to be competing tensions in various realities. This paper explores those tensions and realities through the context of two final year integrated field‐ and campus‐based subjects that all pre‐service teachers undertake as they complete their four‐year teacher education journey into the primary (ages 5‐ to 12‐years‐old) teaching profession. We then propose a framework involving a variety of realities that pre‐service teachers face through the recognition and resolution of the tensions these pre‐service teachers experience in the workplace.


British Journal of Sociology of Education | 1996

Teaching Children in Poverty: three Australian primary school responses

Elizabeth Hatton; Geoff Munns; Jane Nicklin Dent

Abstract Studies of pedagogical relationships offer insights into policies and practices which have the capacity to promote progressive change in educational practice for children in poverty. This paper focuses on relationships established in three differently‐located Australian primary schools: Greytown, a medium sized inner‐city school in New South Wales; Mungar, a large suburban school in Queensland; and Meiki, a small rural school in New South Wales. Each school is a designated disadvantaged school and funded accordingly through a federal Disadvantaged Schools Program, is located in a working class area, and is ethnically diverse. The schools’ pedagogical responses to children in poverty are contrasted and analysed in terms of their capacity to contribute to socially just outcomes from schooling.


Journal of Children and Poverty | 2008

Reflections from the riot zone: The Fair Go Project and student engagement in a besieged community

Geoff Munns; Katina Zammit; Helen Woodward

This article describes and evaluates a pedagogical intervention aimed at improving student engagement in a very disadvantaged and low socio-economic status community in Australia. The intervention took place at a time of great community unrest and provides a contrast between wider public and media perceptions of poor communities and efforts at community renewal through education. A theoretical framework of student engagement developed in a research project into student engagement and students in poverty is introduced and then classroom changes that work within this framing are discussed. Finally, data showing results from the intervention are presented.


Journal of Youth Studies | 2016

It is risky business: can social capital reduce risk-taking behaviours among disadvantaged youth?

Natasha R. Magson; Rhonda Craven; Geoff Munns; Alexander Seeshing Yeung

ABSTRACT This study addresses the gap in the research for sound multidimensional assessment of social capital and its relationship with risk-taking behaviour among youths living in disadvantaged communities. Social capital and adolescent risk-taking outcomes were studied cross-sectionally in 1371 secondary students living in two disadvantaged communities within Australia. First, a multidimensional measure of social capital was developed and tested using confirmatory factor analysis. Then, the associations between social capital and a range of youth risk-taking behaviours were examined using structural equation modelling across five-year groups (Grades 7–12). With a few exceptions, higher levels of social capital and belongingness within the school and community were generally associated with decreases in smoking, alcohol and drug consumption, and physical violence. Some outcomes were more strongly associated with family and peer social capital, while others associated more with neighbour and community social capital, indicating that attempts to build social capital need to be targeted across the whole community. This study supports the notion that social capital can be measured empirically and is beneficial in alleviating many of the detrimental health outcomes commonly associated with risk-taking behaviours during adolescence.


British Journal of Sociology of Education | 2002

Student Engagement and the Social Relations of Pedagogy

Mark McFadden; Geoff Munns


British Journal of Sociology of Education | 2000

First chance, second chance or last chance? Resistance and response to education

Geoff Munns; Mark McFadden


International Journal of Inclusive Education | 2007

A sense of wonder: pedagogies to engage students who live in poverty

Geoff Munns


The Australian journal of Indigenous education | 2008

To Free the Spirit?: Motivation and Engagement of Indigenous Students

Geoff Munns; Andrew J. Martin; Rhonda Craven


Archive | 2009

Secondary Schooling in a Changing World

Susan Groundwater-Smith; Marie Brennan; Mark McFadden; Jane Mitchell; Geoff Munns

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Rhonda Craven

Australian Catholic University

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Wayne Sawyer

University of Western Sydney

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Andrew J. Martin

University of New South Wales

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Katina Zammit

University of Western Sydney

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Mark McFadden

Charles Sturt University

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Anne Power

University of Western Sydney

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Leonie Arthur

University of Western Sydney

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Helen Woodward

University of Western Sydney

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Phil Nanlohy

University of Western Sydney

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