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19091490
History of Australian Schooling
Descripción
Bridging (W4 - The history of schooling in Australia) OF EDU Mapa Mental sobre History of Australian Schooling, creado por Victoria Marks el 29/08/2019.
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week 5
friday
open foundation
of edu
w4 - the history of schooling in australia
bridging
Mapa Mental por
Victoria Marks
, actualizado hace más de 1 año
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Creado por
Victoria Marks
hace alrededor de 5 años
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Resumen del Recurso
History of Australian Schooling
Education vs. Schooling
Education
Gaining of knowledge, skills and understanding
What you view as education depends on the value you place an certain knowledge, skills and understanding
Formal and informal
Self-directed or otherwise
Purposeful or not
Subject of much philosophising
Schooling
The organisation, or structuring of education
Formal
Directed by others
Purposeful
Reflects the dominant cultural value of certain knowledge, skills and understanding
Subject of much social, cultural and political debate
Before Colonization
Schooling started with the arrival of the colonists
Education had already been present
Education deeply founded in cultural and spiritual practices
Learned in real-world situations
Often about Looking after the land and animals, hunting, gathering, food, making tools, history and culture
Pedagogy took the forma of storytelling, long metaphors, allegories, fables, drawing, singing, dancing, and via observing and imitation.
Access to knowledge depended on age and was often ritualistic
Late 1700s and early 1800s
1789- 1810 Captain Arthur Philip formed the colony of Sydney. the first school was set up for the children of convicts
Teachers
Anglican Church provided first formal instruction, which was based on the bible
First schoolmaster was the Reverend Richard Johnson
1789 - Isabella Rossen (a convict) was employed as the first teacher
1791 - Mary Johnson (convict) was hired in parramatta
Curriculum and Pedagogy
Non-convicts could educate their own children with governesses and tutors
Convict children
Separated from their parents as they were bad influences
They learned religious and moral discipline, loyalty, reading, writing, arithmetic, home skills, work skills, and manners
Taught using direct instruction and physical discipline
Learnt through practice, rote learning and memorising textbooks
Genders were taught diffrent things
Individual teaching method
Assessed through reciting and showing their work
1811 - the Monitorial school was established in sydney by William Crook (missionary)
Based on Lancaster system which involed the teacher taught older students (the monitors), and they taught the younger students
1814 - the native Institution in parramatta was opened by Governor Macquarie
Edicated students to become labourers and semi-skilled workers
Aboriginal School
The first stolen generation
Not successful and closed in 1833
Blacktown Native Institution opened 1820 and closed 1825
Focused on Discipline and Morality
1830s to early 1900s
Schools for the wealthy
Based on geographical parish system
The King’s School (Anglican) in Parramatta in 1832
St Mary’s Seminary (Catholic) in 1837
Scots School (Presbyterian) in 1838.
The Dame schools (Working class)
Run by women in their own homes
Students were young
Dames weren't always trained teachers, they were often old spinsters or widows
Paid small amount directly from families
Taught basic literacy, numeracy, the bible (moral education) and general household chores
Individual teaching method used
students of diffrent ages present
Public Schools
Resulted from the need to systematise schooling
caused rise of formal teaching education, mandated curriculum, school timetables
Inspectors travelled to check paperwork, attendance, watch teachers and assess student's learning
Public examination were put in place for students intrested in uni
schooling became normalised for all children but subjects depended on gender
Sir Henry Parkes
His ministry introduced the Public Instruction Act of 1880
Opened a variety of free education for children (<14 old)
Schooling was compulsary
Withdrew government funding to Catholic schools in 1882 but was re-instated in 1964
Promoted and set up secular schools
1900s - current (progressive education)
Professor Francis Anderson thought teachers should be free of oppressive rules and ditch rote learning and memorisation
Teachers started playing games, excurtions, and science ecpirements
emertion of practical, worksheets, projects and group work
Later on introduction of creative and performing arts, and welling being and health
1951 the alice springs school of the air
started from Miss Adelaide Miethke's idea ( Royal flying doctors), only had one teacher
Students would have get togethers
Now school has a princable, 16 teachers, 7 support staff and 125 students
Comprehensive high schools
Pathways decided by curriculum choices
All students had to stay till they were 15
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children required to attened school from 1967
The differention of schools
schools were selective (streamed) eg girls secretaria school)
Some designed for uni entry and others for trades
often differentiated along class and gender lines
1950s - 1960s considered thing of the past
Can be seen starting to come back in currently
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