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Featured researches published by Judy Peters.


Teachers and Teaching | 2014

Promoting early career teacher resilience: A framework for understanding and acting

Bruce D. Johnson; Barry Down; Rosie Le Cornu; Judy Peters; Anna Sullivan; Jane Pearce; Janet Hunter

In this paper, we undertake a brief review of the ‘conventional’ research into the problems of early career teachers to create a juxtaposed position from which to launch an alternative approach based on resilience theory. We outline four reasons why a new contextualised, social theory of resilience has the potential to open up the field of research into the professional lives of teachers and to produce new insights into the social, cultural and political dynamics at work within and beyond schools. We then move from these theoretical considerations to explain how we used them in a recent Australian research project that examined the experiences of 60 graduate teachers during their first year of teaching. This work led to the development of a Framework of Conditions Supporting Early Career Teacher Resilience which we outline, promote and advocate as the basis for action to better sustain our graduate teachers in their first few years of teaching. Finally, we reflect on the value of our work so far and outline our practical plans to ‘mobilise’ this knowledge in ways that will make it available to a variety of audiences concerned with the welfare of this group of teachers.


Educational Action Research | 2004

Teachers Engaging in Action Research: challenging some assumptions

Judy Peters

Abstract A number of recent professional development projects in Australia have expected teachers to engage in action research as a process for professional learning and educational reform. This study investigated the experiences of ten teachers from one school who spent a year undertaking action research projects as part of the Innovative Links Project. The author was a participant observer in the study in her role as the schools ‘academic associate’ for the project. In this article, the projects expectations of the teachers are examined to reveal the extent to which they were based on realistic assumptions about the conditions within which the teachers worked as they tried to achieve them.


Johnson, B., Down, B. <http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Down, Barry.html>, Le Cornu, R., Peters, J., Sullivan, A., Pearce, J. <http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Pearce, Jane.html> and Hunter, J. (2012) Early career teachers: Stories of resilience. Australian Government. Australian Research Council/Early Career Teacher Resilience, Adelaide, S.A.. | 2015

Early Career Teachers: Stories of Resilience

Bruce D. Johnson; Barry Down; Rosie Le Cornu; Judy Peters; Anna Sullivan; Jane Pearce; Janet Hunter

This book addresses one of the most persistent issues confronting governments, educations systems and schools today: the attraction, preparation, and retention of early career teachers. It draws on the stories of sixty graduate teachers from Australia to identify the key barriers, interferences and obstacles to teacher resilience and what might be done about it. Based on these stories, five interrelated themes - policies and practices, school culture, teacher identity, teachers’ work, and relationships – provide a framework for dialogue around what kinds of conditions need to be created and sustained in order to promote early career teacher resilience. The book provides a set of resources – stories, discussion, comments, reflective questions and insights from the literature – to promote conversations among stakeholders rather than providing yet another ‘how to do’ list for improving the daily lives of early career teachers. Teaching is a complex, fragile and uncertain profession. It operates in an environment of unprecedented educational reforms designed to control, manage and manipulate pedagogical judgements. Teacher resilience must take account of both the context and circumstances of individual schools (especially those in economically disadvantaged communities) and the diversity of backgrounds and talents of early career teachers themselves. The book acknowledges that the substantial level of change required– cultural, structural, pedagogical and relational – to improve early career teacher resilience demands a great deal of cooperation and support from governments, education systems, schools, universities and communities: teachers cannot do it alone. This book is written to generate conversations amongst early career teachers, teacher colleagues, school leaders, education administrators, academics and community leaders about the kinds of pedagogical and relational conditions required to promote early career teacher resilience and wellbeing.


Archive | 2015

Promoting Early Career Teacher Resilience : A socio-cultural and critical guide to action

Bruce D. Johnson; Barry Down; Rosie Le Cornu; Judy Peters; Anna Sullivan; Jane Pearce; Janet Hunter

In Promoting Early Career Teacher Resilience the stories of 60 graduate teachers are documented as they grapple with some of the most persistent and protracted personal and professional struggles facing teachers today. Narratives emerge detailing feelings of frustration, disillusionment and even outrage as they struggle with the complexity, intensity and immediacy of life in schools. Other stories also surface to show exhilarating experiences, documenting the wonder, joy and excitement of working with young people for the first time. This book makes sense of these experiences in ways that can assist education systems, schools, and faculties of teacher education, as well as early career teachers themselves to develop more powerful forms of critical teacher resilience. Rejecting psychological explanations of teacher resilience, it endorses an alternative socio-cultural and critical approach to understanding teacher resilience. The book crosses physical borders and represents experiences of teachers in similar circumstances across the globe, providing researchers and teachers with real-life examples of resilience promoting policies and practices. This book is not written as an account of the failures of an education system, but rather as a provocation to help generate ideas, policies and practices capable of illuminating the experiences of early career teachers in more critical and socially just ways at an international and national level.


Archive | 2015

Policies and Practices

Bruce D. Johnson; Barry Down; Rosie Le Cornu; Judy Peters; Anna Sullivan; Jane Pearce; Janet Hunter

Policies and practices refer to the officially mandated statements, guidelines, values and prescriptions that both enable and constrain early career teacher wellbeing. Early career teacher resilience and wellbeing is enhanced when systems’ policies and practices show a strong commitment to the principles and values of social justice, teacher agency and voice, community engagement, and respect for local knowledge and practice.


The Journal of Educational Enquiry | 2009

Towards constructivist classrooms: the role of the reflective teacher

Rosie Le Cornu; Judy Peters


Johnson, B., Down, B. <http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Down, Barry.html>, Le Cornu, R., Peters, J., Sullivan, A., Pearce, J. <http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Pearce, Jane.html> and Hunter, J. (2010) Conditions that support early career teacher resilience. In: Australian Teacher Education Association Conference (ATEA) 2010, 4 - 7 July 2010, Townsville, Queensland | 2010

Conditions that support early career teacher resilience

Bruce D. Johnson; Barry Down; R. Le Cornu; Judy Peters; Anna Sullivan; Jane Pearce; Janet Hunter


Archive | 1996

Collaborative Learning Through School-University Partnerships

Judy Peters; Rosie Dobbins; Bruce D. Johnson


The International Journal of Learning: Annual Review | 2009

Sustaining School-university Collaboration for Reciprocal Learning

Rosie Le Cornu; Judy Peters


Archive | 2014

Induction round table: becoming a professional practitioner

Marie Cameron; Rosie Le Cornu; Judy Peters; Deanne Commins

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Rosie Le Cornu

University of South Australia

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Bruce D. Johnson

University of South Australia

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Anna Sullivan

University of South Australia

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