Educators engaged in curriculum work: Encounters with relationally responsive curriculum practices

Greg Vass, David Coombs, Annette Woods, Kevin Lowe
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Abstract

Abstract The Culturally Nourishing Schooling (CNS) project is focused on whole‐of‐learning community efforts that aim to improve the educational experiences and achievements of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander learners. The project supports school‐based professional learning strategies, broad school or system‐level initiatives and deep engagement with local community, including students and their families. One of the professional learning strategies in the project is a 2‐day intensive curriculum‐focused workshop, which ran for the first time in 2021 within urban, regional, and remote school settings across New South Wales, Australia. The first day of the curriculum workshop introduces teachers and local Cultural Mentors to three analytic frameworks that they utilise to appraise curriculum resources available in the public domain. The curriculum resources appraised are all examples of curriculum designed to support educators with embedding an Indigenous knowledges focused National Cross‐Curriculum Priority into their curriculum. On the second day of the workshop, teachers are tasked with appraising and revising a curriculum unit of work that they or colleagues have planned for the upcoming teaching semester. The curriculum workshop culminates with the revised teaching and learning resources being presented to the full group of workshop participants, and subsequently each teacher is asked to write a reflection about the curriculum work that they have engaged in. For this paper, data analysis draws on ‘three sensibilities’ that invite enacting a form of onto‐epistemic heterogeneity. These sensibilities are multiplicity, horizontality and dialogicality. This analytic undertaking simultaneously explores the entanglements, and grapples with the possibilities, of re‐imagining curriculum and related pedagogical practices that seek to ‘delink from the colonial matrices of power’.
从事课程工作的教育工作者:与关系响应课程实践的接触
文化滋养学校教育(CNS)项目侧重于整体学习社区的努力,旨在改善土著和托雷斯海峡岛民学习者的教育经验和成就。该项目支持以学校为基础的专业学习策略、广泛的学校或系统层面的举措以及与当地社区(包括学生及其家庭)的深入接触。该项目的专业学习策略之一是为期两天的强化课程研讨会,该研讨会于2021年首次在澳大利亚新南威尔士州的城市、地区和偏远学校举办。课程研讨会的第一天向教师和当地文化导师介绍了他们用来评估公共领域可用课程资源的三个分析框架。评估的课程资源都是课程设计的例子,旨在支持教育工作者将以土著知识为重点的国家交叉课程优先级嵌入到他们的课程中。在研讨会的第二天,教师的任务是评估和修改他们或同事为即将到来的教学学期计划的课程单元。课程研讨会以向全体研讨会参与者展示修订后的教学和学习资源为高潮,随后每位教师被要求写一篇关于他们所从事的课程工作的反思。在本文中,数据分析利用了“三种敏感性”,这些敏感性导致了认知异质性的形成。这些情感是多重性、横向性和对话性。这一分析工作同时探索了重新想象课程和相关教学实践的纠缠和可能性,这些课程和教学实践寻求“与权力的殖民矩阵脱钩”。
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