aftv/fatfa conference 26 july 2014

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AFTV/FATFA Conference 26 July 2014 Dr David Howes Executive Director, Curriculum Division [email protected] ov.au

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AFTV/FATFA Conference 26 July 2014. Dr David Howes Executive Director, Curriculum Division [email protected]. Le tour. https:// www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Ci8sS6-xWc. So why bother?. See and understand the world through a different lens Broad cognitive benefits - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: AFTV/FATFA Conference 26 July 2014

AFTV/FATFA Conference

26 July 2014

Dr David HowesExecutive Director, Curriculum Division

[email protected]

Page 3: AFTV/FATFA Conference 26 July 2014

So why bother?

• See and understand the world through a different lens

• Broad cognitive benefits• Australia arguably the most difficult country in

the world to achieve/maintain bilingualism – all the more important to maintain the effort

Page 4: AFTV/FATFA Conference 26 July 2014

• Victorian government languages plan:

Victorian context

• By 2015 100% of government schools providing a Foundation level languages program

• By 2025 100% of government schools providing a languages program and awarding the new Certificate of Language Proficiency at Year 10

• By 2025 25% of all students in government and non-government schools include a language in addition to English in their senior secondary program of study

• Introduction of VCE (Baccalaureate)

Page 5: AFTV/FATFA Conference 26 July 2014

Victorian context

• French remains a key language• French one of only 4 languages where there is a

government-to-government MoU• Asian languages a priority to ensure access and

opportunity, European languages remain important• A both-and rather than either-or construct

Page 6: AFTV/FATFA Conference 26 July 2014

French enrolment data in VCE

2010 -

200

400

600

800

1,000

1,200

1,400

1,600

1,800

2,000

Page 7: AFTV/FATFA Conference 26 July 2014

• Commonwealth government review of Australian Curriculum• Given the responsibility of States and Territories for implementation

of the Australian Curriculum, how should we best use the development of the Australian Curriculum for Languages to improve student learning?

• Curriculum only one among many variables– Teacher supply– Teaching and learning resources– School timetabling– Extrinsic and intrinsic motivation

• A necessary but not sufficient condition• But because it is necessary, it is important

Victorian context

Page 8: AFTV/FATFA Conference 26 July 2014

No change

Australian Curriculum and VCE French

Page 9: AFTV/FATFA Conference 26 July 2014

Australian Curriculum and F-10

a solid foundation in skills and knowledge on which further learning and adult life can be built deep knowledge and skills that will enable advanced learning and an ability to create new ideas and translate them into practical applications general capabilities that underpin flexible and critical thinking, a capacity to work with others and an ability to move across subject disciplines to develop new expertise

http://www.curriculum.edu.au/mceetya/melbourne_declaration,25979.html

Promoting world-class curriculum andassessment

Page 11: AFTV/FATFA Conference 26 July 2014

Introduction of the Australian Curriculum provides the opportunity to:1. Focus on the importance of content: what students

should learn as well as how they should be taught?2. The primary importance of language in Languages,

with Intercultural Understanding a general capability

3. The relationship between pedagogy and content4. A new focus on assessment

Languages and the whole curriculum

Page 12: AFTV/FATFA Conference 26 July 2014

The curriculum is the defined and mandated set of knowledge and skills that schools are required to teach and assess.o A democratic entitlement rather than individual

determination of what is required for effective, participatory citizenship.

Languages are no longer an option for Victorian schools – all schools will be required to report on each student every year.

Curriculum content

Page 13: AFTV/FATFA Conference 26 July 2014

AusVELS

LEARNING AREAS GENERAL CAPABILITIES

o Englisho Mathematicso Scienceo Health and physical educationo Languageso Humanities and social sciences

(History, Geography, Civics and citizenship, Business and economics)

o The Artso Technologies (Design and Digital

technologies)

o Critical and creative thinkingo Personal and social capabilityo Intercultural understandingo Ethical understanding

Page 14: AFTV/FATFA Conference 26 July 2014

Curriculum guidelines

http://www.vcaa.vic.edu.au/documents/auscurric/f-10curriculumplanningreporting.pdf

Page 15: AFTV/FATFA Conference 26 July 2014

This shifts the focus of teachers and schoolsIt is no longer an option to say “This stuff is too hard for this student”.Now we need to say “What different approach can we take to help this student learn this stuff?”

Content

Page 16: AFTV/FATFA Conference 26 July 2014

The big questions

• Only 11 languages – what about other 35?

• Use of English• 10 sub-strand model

Page 17: AFTV/FATFA Conference 26 July 2014

ACARA languages• Chinese• Italian• Aboriginal languages• French• Indonesian• Korean• Modern Greek• Spanish• Vietnamese• Arabic• German• Japanese

Page 18: AFTV/FATFA Conference 26 July 2014

Use of EnglishThe role of EnglishLearners are encouraged to use French whenever possible, with the teacher providing rich and supported language input. English is used as a medium of instruction and for explanation and discussion. This allows learners to talk about differences and similarities they notice between French and their first language(s) and culture(s), to ask questions about language and culture, and to consider how they feel when they hear or use French and about how they view different languages and the people who speak them. This introduction to the ‘meta’ dimension of intercultural learning develops the ability to consider different perspectives and ways of being

The role of EnglishEnglish continues to be used for substantive discussion, explanation and analysis. This allows learners to talk in depth and detail about their experience of learning French, and about their thoughts on culture, identity and intercultural experience. English is the language of analysis and critique, supporting discussion of concepts such as ‘stereotypes’, ‘difference’, ‘diversity’ and ‘values’. It allows for a degree of expression and debate that is beyond learners’ communicative capabilities in French.

Page 19: AFTV/FATFA Conference 26 July 2014

Australian Curriculum structureStructure of Australian Curriculum: LanguagesCommunicating strand5 sub-strands:• Socialising • Informing• Creating • Translating• Reflecting Understanding strand3 sub-strands:• Systems of language • Language variation and change• Role of language and culture

Structure of VELS Languages• Communicatin

g in a language other than English

• Intercultural knowledge and language awareness

Page 21: AFTV/FATFA Conference 26 July 2014

• Achievement standards as a continuum of language learning, not an age-determined set of expectations

• Reporting in Victoria to be against achievement standards set in AusVELS but with measures set by individual schools

• Measures can be at the cohort or individual student level• New on-line assessment tool• Using assessment to adjust teaching• Not “dumbing down” to lowest common denominator –

instead, using assessment to set higher goals

Assessment and reporting

Page 23: AFTV/FATFA Conference 26 July 2014

• Languages at the centre not the periphery of the curriculum

• Cognitive benefit of language learning well understood

• New levels of resourcing

Good time to be a languages teacher