Rethinking connectedness: improving access to professional learning for regional and remote teachers

Transformation of Australian education is occurring at a rapid rate through the implementation of a number of initiatives. These initiatives include the Digital Education Revolution, the move to a National Curriculum and the implementation of a National Framework for Professional Standards for Teach...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Broadley, Tania
Other Authors: TBA
Format: Conference Paper
Published: Australian Association for Research in Education 2011
Online Access:http://www.aare.edu.au/data/publications/2011/aarefinal00017.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/23229
_version_ 1848751092586774528
author Broadley, Tania
author2 TBA
author_facet TBA
Broadley, Tania
author_sort Broadley, Tania
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Transformation of Australian education is occurring at a rapid rate through the implementation of a number of initiatives. These initiatives include the Digital Education Revolution, the move to a National Curriculum and the implementation of a National Framework for Professional Standards for Teachers and Principals. As these initiatives are rolled out to schools across Australia, the equitable access to professional learning to support all teachers, regardless of their geographical location, is in question. A number of studies have been conducted in Australia that highlight the importance of professional learning and the difficulty faced by regional and remote teachers with regard to access (Gerard Daniels, 2007; Lysons, Cooksey, Panizzon, Parnell & Pegg 2006; Ministerial Review of Schooling, 1994, Rural and Remote Education Advisory Council, 2000; Vinson, 2002). Along with access to professional learning, has been the discussion of effective modes of delivery. Face to face professional learning, in regional and metropolitan areas, is offered in isolation, or in some cases, is complimented with virtual learning environments. The need for a more sustainable approach to professional learning is highly necessary. A mixed method research approach was utilised in order to answer the primary research question "In what ways might technology be used to support professional learning of regional and remote teachers in Western Australia?"This research paper outlines the findings from the study including the significance of travel time; impact of limited relief teachers; implications for promotion and teacher registration; professional learning communities being valued but often limited by small staff numbers; professional learning conducted in the local context being preferred; professional learning established at the teacher and school level being desirable; teachers being confident in using technology and accessing PD online if required; and social cohesiveness being valued and often limited by isolation. Further, this research has culminated in the development of a "model of rethinking connectedness" that would facilitate improving the amount and variety of professional learning available to regional and remote teachers.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T07:47:14Z
format Conference Paper
id curtin-20.500.11937-23229
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:47:14Z
publishDate 2011
publisher Australian Association for Research in Education
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-232292017-01-30T12:36:07Z Rethinking connectedness: improving access to professional learning for regional and remote teachers Broadley, Tania TBA Transformation of Australian education is occurring at a rapid rate through the implementation of a number of initiatives. These initiatives include the Digital Education Revolution, the move to a National Curriculum and the implementation of a National Framework for Professional Standards for Teachers and Principals. As these initiatives are rolled out to schools across Australia, the equitable access to professional learning to support all teachers, regardless of their geographical location, is in question. A number of studies have been conducted in Australia that highlight the importance of professional learning and the difficulty faced by regional and remote teachers with regard to access (Gerard Daniels, 2007; Lysons, Cooksey, Panizzon, Parnell & Pegg 2006; Ministerial Review of Schooling, 1994, Rural and Remote Education Advisory Council, 2000; Vinson, 2002). Along with access to professional learning, has been the discussion of effective modes of delivery. Face to face professional learning, in regional and metropolitan areas, is offered in isolation, or in some cases, is complimented with virtual learning environments. The need for a more sustainable approach to professional learning is highly necessary. A mixed method research approach was utilised in order to answer the primary research question "In what ways might technology be used to support professional learning of regional and remote teachers in Western Australia?"This research paper outlines the findings from the study including the significance of travel time; impact of limited relief teachers; implications for promotion and teacher registration; professional learning communities being valued but often limited by small staff numbers; professional learning conducted in the local context being preferred; professional learning established at the teacher and school level being desirable; teachers being confident in using technology and accessing PD online if required; and social cohesiveness being valued and often limited by isolation. Further, this research has culminated in the development of a "model of rethinking connectedness" that would facilitate improving the amount and variety of professional learning available to regional and remote teachers. 2011 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/23229 http://www.aare.edu.au/data/publications/2011/aarefinal00017.pdf Australian Association for Research in Education fulltext
spellingShingle Broadley, Tania
Rethinking connectedness: improving access to professional learning for regional and remote teachers
title Rethinking connectedness: improving access to professional learning for regional and remote teachers
title_full Rethinking connectedness: improving access to professional learning for regional and remote teachers
title_fullStr Rethinking connectedness: improving access to professional learning for regional and remote teachers
title_full_unstemmed Rethinking connectedness: improving access to professional learning for regional and remote teachers
title_short Rethinking connectedness: improving access to professional learning for regional and remote teachers
title_sort rethinking connectedness: improving access to professional learning for regional and remote teachers
url http://www.aare.edu.au/data/publications/2011/aarefinal00017.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/23229