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Dive into the research topics where Julianne Moss is active.

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Featured researches published by Julianne Moss.


Australian Educational Researcher | 2003

Inclusive schooling policy : an educational detective story?

Julianne Moss

Since the publication of the Salamanca statement (UNESCO 1994), inclusive schooling has formed a growing part of the deliberations of the special education community. Inclusive schooling research in Australia in the main continues to reproduce traditions of the special education field, emphasising the dominant psychological perspectives that have been superimposed on inclusive education discourses. At the fifth International Congress of Special Education (ISEC 2000) held in Manchester, ‘the death knell of the concept of special education’ (ISEC 2000) was announced. The concept proposed by Mike Oliver, Professor of Disability Studies at the University of Greenwich, asserts an end to understandings of diversity dependent on medical, psychological and charity-based discourses. From a recent study of inclusive schooling policy, and drawing from poststructuralist methodology, I suggest an approach to research, policy development and practice that questions traditionalist theorising in the special education field. Reflecting on the implementation of the Inclusion of Students with Disabilities Policy (DECCD 1995) in the Tasmanian government school system, I outline my alignment with Oliver’s view and highlight how questions of epistemology and reconstructions of research methodologies are central to rethinking understandings of difference. I also illustrate a methodological orientation that offers possibilities for a different science to take place, thereby understanding diversity as multiple and contradictory — and beyond the single ‘detective story’ (Gough 1998) of the medical, psychological and charity-based discourses that circulate in schools as the populist conceptions of ‘inclusion’.


Asia-pacific Journal of Teacher Education | 2008

Leading professional learning in an Australian secondary school through school‐university partnerships

Julianne Moss

As the limitations of one‐off and disconnected professional learning programs for teachers are recognised, there is widespread interest in building learning communities and professional learning teams within schools. When considering how to build local learning communities, school and university partnerships are seen as offering rich possibilities for transformative professional action. Set in the context of the international agenda of “Education For All” (UNESCO, 2005) a model of sustained on‐going professional learning, developed in one large secondary school in Australia, is analysed. The social practices that generate action and participation for partnership members are then scrutinised for the legitimacy of school‐university partnerships and the contribution to enhancing teacher learning.


International Journal of Inclusive Education | 2002

Inclusive schooling: representation and textual practice

Julianne Moss

This paper reports on a larger study carried out in the island state of Tasmania, Australia, between 1996 and 1998. The research reviewed the impact of the Inclusion of Students with Disabilities Policy (ISDP) within the government school system. The qualitative study describes the interpretations of five key informants: a parent; two teachers—a support teacher and a class teacher—a policy-maker and a university academic, during the early period of the implementation of the ISDP. The visual and literary ‘data stories’ of the research are woven together to narrate inclusive schooling in the Tasmanian context as a ‘detective story’ of the special education knowledge tradition. Drawing from poststructuralist methodology and narrative theory the multi-voiced text is a deliberate attempt to enter into conversations with the reader rather than tell the story. Researching inclusive schooling policy through representation and textual practice, I question dominant research practices in the special education field and populist slogans of ‘inclusion’.


International Journal of Inclusive Education | 2004

Reading for meaning: Problematizing inclusion in Indonesian civic education

Mary Fearnley-Sander; Julianne Moss; Lesley Harbon

This paper reports on the use of the Index for Inclusion in five socioeconomically different primary school contexts in Indonesia. The research was designed and developed through Australian and Indonesian teachers and teacher educators collaborative efforts over a year. The work took place during the post‐Suharto reform period and focuses on the field of Civics education. The research examines what the ethic of inclusion means to teachers participating in political and educational democratization as they attempt to embrace and develop citizenship classroom practices that feature respect for difference. The theoretical interest is in both citizenship theory and inclusion; showing how the civic cultures of school and nation intersect; and the implications of that intersection for inclusion theory and cross‐cultural theorizing of inclusion more broadly.


International Journal of Inclusive Education | 2014

Embedding learning in a paediatric hospital: changing practice and keeping connected

Liza Hopkins; Julianne Moss; Julie Green; Glenda Strong

This paper, the final paper in the Keeping Connected special issue, presents the key findings of the overall study and focuses on the challenging process of re-imagining a hospital setting as a community of learning for young people in light of these findings. The paper focuses on young people as learners within the overarching themes emanating from the Keeping Connected research such as normalcy, diversity and communication. Taking up Slees notion of ‘the irregular school’, we describe how one setting in a large urban paediatric hospital in Victoria, Australia, is transforming the way in which children and young people are supported to maintain their connectedness to learning. We reflect on the evidence of the Keeping Connected project to inform the ways in which a hospital can respond to young peoples needs as learners and offer a model of inclusion as a form of cultural change in this important out-of-school setting. Directions for future research are also offered.


International Journal of Inclusive Education | 2011

Pedagogical and curriculum renewal in Australia: a visual and intertextual research approach

Julianne Moss

This paper takes the form of a curriculum inquiry text. The context is the recent history of pedagogical renewal in Australian schools. Methodologically, in the post‐millennium period I inform the understanding of reform practices through visual and intertextual readings. Adopting a critical perspective and using visual methods, I ask: pedagogically, how do systems support a curriculum for all? Working visually and reading intertextually the problems of implementation processes of curriculum renewal and the dual challenges of creating system wide professional learning and a curriculum for all are exposed.


International Journal of Inclusive Education | 2011

Understanding visual and intertextual approaches in pedagogical and curriculum research: a pretext

Julianne Moss

In our globalised and hypertexual world, representations of curriculum reform are highly visual. The material world of these practices can be analysed through visual research methods. This paper is a pretext developed to explain the elements of the visual and intertextual approaches that can be applied in researching inclusive education through a curriculum focus. The pretext selectively situates recent developments in educational research that use visual methods as a part of the overall quest for ongoing conceptual and professional improvement of understanding a curriculum for all through practitioner and small‐scale research.


International Journal of Inclusive Education | 2014

Keeping Connected: The Design and Overview of the Research.

Julianne Moss

The special issue Keeping Connected: Identity, Social Connection and Education for Young People opens with a paper that discusses the research design and overview of a three-year project by a Melbourne (Australia)-based multi-disciplinary team. Over 2007–2009, the Keeping Connected team of 10 researchers investigated the lives of adolescents with ongoing health conditions. The project centrally is developed by the young peoples perspectives, their identity and wellbeing, relationships with others and engagement within changing contexts and their altered opportunities in the world. The research design includes image production underpinned by visual methods and a narrative-informed approach to interview and interpretation of images. The study, which crosses the health and education interface, set out to highlight differences of perspectives adopted by 31 young people, their families and the professional groups, such as teachers and health professionals. The special issue discusses key project findings and contributes a body of scholarship that expands our knowledge of evidence-based research across the education and health interface. The longitudinal study highlighted two themes of importance for education, and poorly catered for in current policies and guidelines: that the situation of these young people needs to be addressed by schools as a process over time (including prospectively); and that the young peoples identity is strongly marked by a desire to be seen and treated as ‘normal’ combined with an awareness of being vulnerable.


Archive | 2017

Employment Pathways, Mobility and Retention of Graduate Teachers

Diane Mayer; Mary Dixon; Jodie Kline; Alex Kostogriz; Julianne Moss; Leonie Rowan; Bernadette Walker-Gibbs; Simone White

The relationship between the quality of teacher education and the employability and retention of graduate teachers in schools has received increased attention from policymakers and researchers in the current context of educational reforms (Barber and Mourshed in Shaping the future: how good education systems can become great in the decade ahead. McKinsey and Company, Singapore, 2009; Bransford et al. in Preparing teachers for a changing world: what teachers should learn and be able to do. Wiley, San Francisco, 2005; TEMAG in Action now: classroom ready teachers. Australian Government, Canberra, 2014).


Inclusive education: making sense of everyday practice | 2017

Inclusive Education, Subjectivities and the Posts

Ben Whitburn; Julianne Moss; Joanne O’Mara

Inclusive education scholarship and practice could be described as being resistant to the first and second waves of disability studies in education (DSE). In the third wave of DSE, wherein “the posts” (St. Pierre, 2013, p. 646) gain purchase, the construction of difference and its implications for inclusive schooling are being reworked. Advancing the critique of taken-for-granted knowledge making machinery, the posts demand that we consider “possible worlds in which we might live” (St. Pierre, 2013, p. 654) in which alternative conceptions of difference are examined for their generative potential.

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Trevor Hay

University of Melbourne

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Alex Kostogriz

Australian Catholic University

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