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Featured researches published by Julia Morris.


International Research in Geographical and Environmental Education | 2017

The influence of ecological citizenship and political solidarity on Western Australian student teachers’ perceptions of sustainability issues

Geoff W. Lummis; Julia Morris; Graeme Lock; Judith Odgaard

ABSTRACT This article presents the findings of a qualitative research study on student teachers’ perceptions of sustainability, specifically influenced by ecological citizenship and political solidarity. Research was conducted with 18 Graduate Diploma of Education (Primary) student teachers at one university, as they only have one year in which to train as teachers. A clear conceptualisation of Education for Sustainability is required for teachers to effectively implement the Australian Curriculum, which has sustainability as a cross-curriculum priority. Subsequently, Education for Sustainability is a key issue for teacher education and particularly within the short Graduate Diploma course. The findings showed that student teachers’ perceptions of sustainability are shaped by aspects of ecological citizenship and political solidarity, and are informed by the local context. The findings also showed that the student teachers were moving from a more environmentally-centred conception of sustainability to a definition that included the other pillars of economic and socio-political sustainability. This article concludes with an argument for integrating the complex concepts of ecological citizenship and political solidarity within teacher education, so that student teachers graduate with the appropriate content knowledge to explore global citizenship and the ecological space with their future primary students.


Learned Publishing | 2018

Early career experiences of navigating journal article publication: Lessons learned using an autoethnographic approach: Early career journal article publication

Margaret K. Merga; Shannon Mason; Julia Morris

The successful publication of peer reviewed academic journal articles is an essential achievement for early career researchers (ECRs) seeking to establish themselves in their profession. However, this journey can pose several significant challenges for ECRs. We use an autoethnographic approach that draws deeply on our lived experience as ECRs to capture our recent and current experiences of negotiating the academic journal article publication journey to explore the tensions, contradictions, and benefits encountered in the journey. We critically examine challenges we experienced in choosing a target journal and negotiating the follow‐up process; undertaking revisions; and our experiences of limitations and possibilities in peer review and editorial support. While the peer review journal writing process has played a significant role in supporting us to become more effective ECRs, we also highlight challenges we faced negotiating ethical quandaries in this space, as well as illustrate how our preconceptions of a simple publication journey were confounded by subsequent experience of the complex realities of the space. We also suggest that educational interventions are indicated to provide ECRs support in foundational knowledge about what constitutes valuable revisions, an effective paper, and the scope of issues that can be addressed to make a paper more effective, with reference to the possibility of academic mentoring to support this need. Finally, we explore our findings in light of the tensions imposed by the relative inexperience and lack of power yielded by ECRs.


International Journal of Science Education | 2018

Astronomy alternative conceptions in pre-adolescent students in Western Australia

E. V. Slater; Julia Morris; David H. McKinnon

ABSTRACT Alternative conceptions in astronomy are a road block to new learning. Astronomy content is included in the Australian Curriculum (AC) from Year 3 and then intermittently in Year 5, Year 7 and Year 10. In accepting that science is socio-culturally constructed, it is important for teachers to have a clear understanding of the alternative conceptions that students bring with them to the science classroom. This article reports on the alternative conceptions elicited from 546 students ranging from Year 5 through Year 7 using a modified form of the Astronomy Diagnostic Test [Danaia, L. (2006). Students’ experiences, perceptions and performance in junior secondary school science: An intervention study involving a remote telescope (Doctoral dissertation). Charles Sturt University, Bathurst]. Results show that some well identified alternative conceptions, such as the ‘eclipse model’ to explain the phases of the Moon, exist before students enter high school and prior to any formal learning on the topic. In addition, this research identified a number of alternative conceptions held by pre-adolescent students in Western Australia that were based on knowledge that should have been consolidated by students in Year 3, viz., the relative movements of the Earth, Moon and Sun. Armed with students’ alternative conceptions as a part of their pedagogical content knowledge, teachers can construct active learning experiences that will challenge students’ existing constructs in order to allow for new learning. This sample suggests that we need to identify the reasons behind the lack of consolidation of the foundation astronomy content of the Australian Curriculum outlined for students in Year 3.


The History Education Review | 2016

The Western Australian Art and Crafts Superintendents’ advocacy for years k-12 Visual Arts in education

Geoffrey W. Lummis; Julia Morris; Graeme Lock

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to record Visual Arts education in Western Australia (WA) as it underwent significant change between 1967 and 1987, in administration, policy, curriculum and professional development. Design/methodology/approach – A narrative inquiry approach was utilized to produce a collective recount of primary Visual Arts teacher education, based on 17 interviews with significant advocates and contributors to WA Visual Arts education during the aforementioned period. Findings – This paper underscores the history of the role of Western Australian Superintendents of Art and Crafts and the emergence of Visual Arts specialist teachers in primary schools, from the successful establishment of a specialist secondary Visual Arts program at Applecross Senior High School, to the mentoring of generalist primary teachers into a specialist role, as well as the development and implementation of a new Kindergarten through to Year 7 Art and Crafts Syllabus. It also discusses the disestablishment...


NJ | 2015

Exploring the drama experiences of Western Australian pre-service primary teachers

Geoffrey W. Lummis; Julia Morris; Christine Lovering

Abstract Primary teachers may facilitate children’s first formal experiences of drama, and as such, one Western Australian University was motivated to explore the experiences of its Bachelor of Education primary pre-service teachers. By investigating the experiences of pre-service teachers, the University academic staff could determine the prior experiences of drama on entering and graduating their teacher education course and hypothesise about the learning experiences these teachers may require during their time at university. Approximately 20% of both first and fourth-year students participated in a mixed methods study involving a questionnaire and follow-up semi-structured interviews. The researchers found positive drama experiences led to increased self-efficacy in teaching, and learning using drama.


The Australian Journal of Teacher Education | 2014

An investigation of Western Australian pre-service primary teachers' experiences and self-efficacy in the arts

Geoff W. Lummis; Julia Morris; Annamaria Paolino


International Journal of Innovation in Science and Mathematics Education | 2017

Educative Curricula and PCK Development Driven by STEM Professional Learning in Rural and Remote Schools: A longitudinal Type IV Case Study

Arthur Townsend; David H. McKinnon; Michael T. Fitzgerald; Julia Morris; Geoff W. Lummis


Issues in Educational Research | 2016

Focus on the journey, not the destination: Digital games and students with disability

Susan Main; John O'Rourke; Julia Morris; Helen Dunjey


The Australian Journal of Teacher Education | 2015

Where Western Australian Graduate Diploma of Education Primary Students Source Their Information on Sustainability.

Geoff W. Lummis; Julia Morris; Graeme Lock; Judith Odgaard


Australian Art Education | 2014

Investigating the personal experiences and self-efficacy of Western Australian primary pre-service teachers in the visual arts

Julia Morris; Geoffrey W. Lummis

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Graeme Lock

Edith Cowan University

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