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Dive into the research topics where Janet Helmer is active.

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Featured researches published by Janet Helmer.


Professional Development in Education | 2011

Coaching (and) Commitment: Linking Ongoing Professional Development, Quality Teaching and Student Outcomes.

Janet Helmer; Claire Bartlett; Jennifer R. Wolgemuth; Tess Lea

This research conducted in primary schools in Northern Australia evaluated the effectiveness of the web‐based program ABRACADABRA (ABRA) as a tool to complement early childhood literacy instruction in an Australian and Indigenous context. A further component of this research was to monitor implementation fidelity. The ABRA training was built around professional development best practices to address the challenges of providing ongoing training in remote areas. Teachers attended a one‐day workshop that trained them in the use of ABRA, and continued learning was reinforced by pairing teachers with a literacy coach. Data were gathered through an implementation fidelity measure, researcher field notes, focus groups, teacher logbooks, and the Early Language and Literacy Classroom Observation tool. This paper outlines challenges and successes that the researcher/coaches experienced while supporting teachers.


Sex Education | 2015

Improving sexual health for young people: making sexuality education a priority

Janet Helmer; Kate Senior; Belinda Davison; Andrew Vodic

How well do young people understand their developing sexuality and what this means? This paper reports on findings from the Our Lives: Culture, Context and Risk project, which investigated sexual behaviour and decision-making in the context of the everyday life experience and aspirations of Indigenous and non-Indigenous young people (16–25 years) in the Northern Territory, Western Australia and in South Australia. Using qualitative data, this paper focuses on what participating young people thought was necessary to improve the quality of sexuality education. Participants suggest that current forms of sexuality education are too clinical, didactic and unengaging, and are missing in relevant content. Young people requested more information on relationships, first sexual experiences and negotiating condom use. These requests indicate that young people realise that they need more knowledge in order to have healthy relationships, which conflicts with the popular belief that providing young people with open, honest information around sex will encourage them to have sex or increase sexual risk taking. Making sexuality education more of a priority and listening to the needs of young people could be a positive step towards improving sexual health and well-being.


Culture, Health & Sexuality | 2014

‘Young clean and safe?’ Young people's perceptions of risk from sexually transmitted infections in regional, rural and remote Australia

Kate Senior; Janet Helmer; Richard Chenhall; Victoria Burbank

This paper examines young peoples perceived vulnerability to sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and their efforts to create a sense of personal safety within an environment in which risks may be high and where STIs are highly stigmatised. The paper reports on findings from research involving both Indigenous and non-Indigenous 16- to 25-year-olds from remote, rural and regional Australia, including communities in the Northern Territory, Western Australia and South Australia. The study used qualitative methods, including body mapping and scenario based interviewing, to explore how young people made decisions about potential sexual partners and how STIs were understood within the context of young peoples everyday social worlds. The paper has important implications for the design and implementation of sexual-health education programmes by documenting the stigmatisation of young people with STIs and the protective mechanisms peer groups employ to create perceptions of personal safety.


Journal of Educational Research | 2014

Examining the Impact of ABRACADABRA on Early Literacy in Northern Australia: An Implementation Fidelity Analysis

Jennifer R. Wolgemuth; Philip C. Abrami; Janet Helmer; Robert Savage; Helen Harper; Tess Lea

ABSTRACT To address students’ poor literacy outcomes, an intervention using a computer-based literacy tool, ABRACADABRA, was implemented in 6 Northern Australia primary schools. A pretest, posttest parallel group, single blind multisite randomized controlled trial was conducted with 308 students between the ages of 4 and 8 years old (M age = 5.8 years, SD = 0.8 years). Findings suggested that computer-based instruction under controlled conditions can improve student literacy, especially for Indigenous students at risk of reading difficulties. The authors examine the fidelity with which the computer-based literacy tool was implemented and the impact of implementation fidelity measures on student outcomes. Student exposure to and use of the literacy tool, and quality of instruction and lesson delivery, were analyzed for their influence on students’ literacy outcomes. Implementation fidelity measures accounted for between 1.8% and 15% of the variance of intervention students’ scores.


Asia Pacific Journal of Education | 2014

Challenges of conducting systematic research in Australia's Northern Territory

Janet Helmer; Helen Harper; Tess Lea; Jennifer R. Wolgemuth; Kalotina Chalkiti

This paper explores the challenges of conducting systematic research, using our experiences of conducting a study to evaluate the effectiveness of ABRACADABRA, an online tool for early childhood literacy instruction as the contextual framework. By discussing how the research team resolved such perennial issues as high teacher turnover, low or erratic Indigenous student attendance, difficulties with collecting reliable data on student outcomes, and the time and funding required to travel long distances, we show how rigorous research might still be conducted, to counter the usual proffering of such challenges as reasons why experimental research should not be attempted. Without minimizing the dimension of the logistical and funding challenges facing the conducting of experimental research in regional and remote settings, we end with an appeal that such work be prioritized, lest already disadvantaged education settings suffer further neglect in terms of national research priorities.


Australian Journal of Learning Difficulties | 2010

Attendance, performance and the acquisition of early literacy skills: A comparison of Indigenous and non-Indigenous school children

John F Ehrich; Jennifer R. Wolgemuth; Janet Helmer; Georges Oteng; Tess Lea; Claire Bartlett; Heather Smith; Susan Emmett


Australasian Journal of Educational Technology | 2011

Using Computer-Based Instruction to Improve Indigenous Early Literacy in Northern Australia: A Quasi-Experimental Study.

Jennifer R. Wolgemuth; Robert Savage; Janet Helmer; Tess Lea; Helen Harper; Kalotina Chalkiti; Christine E. Bottrell; Philip C. Abrami


Computers in Education | 2013

ABRACADABRA aids Indigenous and non-Indigenous early literacy in Australia

Jennifer R. Wolgemuth; Robert Savage; Janet Helmer; Helen Harper; Tess Lea; Philip C. Abrami; Adrienne Kirby; Kalotina Chalkiti; Peter S. Morris; Jonathan R. Carapetis; William Louden


The Australian Journal of Language and Literacy | 2012

ABRACADABRA for magic under which conditions? Case studies of a web-based literacy intervention in the Northern Territory

Helen Harper; Janet Helmer; Tess Lea; Kalotina Chalkiti; Susan Emmett; Jennifer R. Wolgemuth


Australian Association for Research in Education conference proceedings 2009 | 2009

The trials and tribulations of conducting early childhood literacy research in remote Australia.

Janet Helmer; Jennifer R. Wolgemuth; John F Ehrich; Claire Bartlett; Tess Lea; Heather Smith

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Tess Lea

University of Sydney

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Helen Harper

Charles Darwin University

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Kate Senior

University of Wollongong

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Claire Bartlett

Charles Darwin University

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Andrew Vodic

Charles Darwin University

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Heather Smith

Charles Darwin University

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