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Featured researches published by Jo Lampert.


Teaching Education | 2012

Teaching in a nutshell: navigating your teacher education program as a student teacher

Jo Lampert

Teacher education programs bridge the interests of two worlds - the world of educational theory and the world of teaching practice. Despite teacher educators’ best attempts to convince pre-service teachers that theory and practice are linked, it is often during their practicum placements when pre-service teachers claim that their ‘real’ learning takes place. It is also on practicum when students teachers face (and are surprised by) the ‘extensive decision-making role of the teacher, the emotional aspects of teaching, and the sheer volume of work’ (p.4). Kosnick and Beck’s new book Teaching in a Nutshell utilises the authors’ extensive research with beginning teachers to help students ‘navigate’ their way through their programs. Identifying what they have found in their research to be the seven key priorities for teachers, each chapter follows a helpful structure beginning with an overview of current thinking in the priority area, followed by a case study of a beginning teacher showing how s/he implements the strategy...


Office of Education Research; School of Cultural & Professional Learning; Faculty of Education | 2016

Teacher Education for High Poverty Schools

Jo Lampert; Bruce M. Burnett

This volume captures the innovative, theory-based, and grounded work being done by established scholars who are interrogating how teacher education can prepare teachers to work in challenging and diverse high-poverty settings. It offers articles from the US, Australia, Canada, the UK and Chile by some of the most significant scholars in the field. Internationally, research suggests that effective teachers for high poverty schools require deep theoretical understanding as well as the capacity to function across three well-substantiated areas: deep content knowledge, well-tuned pedagogical skills, and demonstrated attributes that prove their understanding and commitment to social justice. Schools in low socioeconomic communities need quality teachers most, however, they are often staffed by the least experienced and least prepared teachers. The chapters in this volume examine how pre-service teachers are taught to understand the social contexts of education. Drawing on the individual expertise of the authors, the topics covered include unpacking poverty for pre-service teachers, issues related to urban schooling as well as remote and regional area schooling.


Office of Education Research; Faculty of Education | 2016

Re-thinking Teacher Quality in High-Poverty Schools in Australia

Bruce M. Burnett; Jo Lampert

As is the case globally, Australian schools that serve high-poverty communities most often employ the least experienced, least prepared teachers. Beginning with a discussion of poverty in Australia this chapter draws on 6 years of learnings from Australia’s National Exceptional Teachers for Disadvantaged Schools [NETDS] program to examine how social justice can be taught within a mainstream Initial Teacher Education program in an increasingly neoliberal climate where teacher education curriculum around social justice struggles to find a place within the current discourses of quality teaching and its preoccupations with standards, accountability, and high-stakes testing.


Clcweb-comparative Literature and Culture | 2008

The Ambiguous Nature of Multiculturalism in Two Picture Books about 9/11

Jo Lampert

This article deconstructs two picture books about September 11, deomnstrating how the discourses about multiculturalism have changed since the attacks on the World Trade centre.


Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures | 2012

Old-Fashioned and Forward-Looking: Neo-Liberalism and Nostalgia in the Daring Books for Girls

Susanne Gannon; Marnina Gonick; Jo Lampert

This paper interogates the international bestselling series, The Daring Books for Girls (Buchanan & Peskowitz, 2007, 2008), asking what kinds of girls are produced through these texts.


Office of Education Research; School of Cultural & Professional Learning; Faculty of Education | 2016

Teacher Education for High-Poverty Schools in Australia: The National Exceptional Teachers for Disadvantaged Schools Program

Bruce M. Burnett; Jo Lampert

This chapter focuses on teacher education for high-poverty schools in Australia and suggests that a contextualization of poverty is an important step in identifying solutions to the persistent gaps in how teachers are prepared to teach in schools where they can make a lasting difference. Understanding how poverty looks different between and within different countries provides a reminder of the complexities of disadvantage. Similarities exist within OECD countries; however, differences are also evident. This is something that initial teacher education (ITE) solutions need to take into account. While Australia has a history of initiatives designed to address teacher education for high-poverty schools, this chapter provides a particular snapshot of Australia’s National Exceptional Teachers for Disadvantaged Schools program (NETDS), a large-scale, national partnership between universities and Departments of Education, which is partially supported by philanthropic funding.


Sex Education | 2012

Sh-h-h-h: representations of perpetrators of sexual child abuse in picturebooks

Jo Lampert

Childrens picturebooks dealing with the topic of child sexual abuse first appeared in the early 1980s with the aim of addressing the need for age-appropriate texts to teach sexual abuse prevention concepts and to provide support for young children who may be at risk of or have already experienced sexual abuse. Despite the apparent potential of childrens picturebooks to convey child sexual abuse prevention concepts, very few studies have addressed the topic of child sexual abuse in childrens literature. Based on a larger study of 60 picturebooks about sexual child abuse published over the past 25 years, this paper critically examines eight picturebook representations of the perpetrators of sexual child abuse as a way to understand how potentially dangerous adults are explained to the young readers of these texts.


Australian Planner | 2003

Native title and the planning profession

Richard D. Margerum; Victor G. Hart; Jo Lampert

Abstract Legal decisions in the 1990s have dramatically changed the legal rights of Indigenous people in Australia. Many professionals in fields like urban and regional planning must re‐tool their knowledge and skills to adapt to these new situations. A survey of professional planners revealed that many understand the basic concept of native title, but are not aware of the range of applicable settings, implications or resolution approaches. These perceptions could lead to missed opportunities for constructive planning processes. However, many respondents expressed a desire for more training and information, and emphasised the importance of native title as part of a broader process of community building.


Faculty of Education | 2005

Introductory Indigenous Studies in Education: The Importance of Knowing

Jo Lampert; Jean Phillips


Faculty of Education | 2003

The Alabaster Academy: Being a Non-Indigenous Academic in Indigenous Studies

Jo Lampert

Collaboration


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Bruce M. Burnett

Queensland University of Technology

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Marnina Gonick

Pennsylvania State University

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Kelli McGraw

Queensland University of Technology

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Barbara Comber

Queensland University of Technology

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Gordon Tait

Queensland University of Technology

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Nan Bahr

Queensland University of Technology

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Wendy Patton

Queensland University of Technology

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