australian languages and the australian curriculum - an overview of the panel session

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Convenor: Michael Walsh AIATSIS/Linguistics, University of Sydney 18th Biennial Australian Federation of Modern Language Teachers Associations National Conference, 7 July 2011, Darwin.

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Australian Languages and the Australian Curriculum - an overview of the panel session. Convenor: Michael Walsh AIATSIS/Linguistics, University of Sydney 18th Biennial Australian Federation of Modern Language Teachers Associations National Conference, 7 July 2011, Darwin. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Australian Languages and the  Australian Curriculum  - an overview of the panel session

Convenor: Michael WalshAIATSIS/Linguistics, University of Sydney

18th Biennial Australian Federation of Modern Language Teachers Associations National Conference, 7 July 2011, Darwin.

Page 2: Australian Languages and the  Australian Curriculum  - an overview of the panel session

In this panel session we open up a discussion about the place of Australian Languages in the evolving Australian Curriculum for languages. The process has produced a document which sets out a broad conceptual background and guidelines for the development of specific language curricula: Shape of the Australian Curriculum: Languages. The first three presentations will describe the process generally with Scarino focusing on the role of achievements in curriculum design and Troy and Walsh addressing some of the issues specifically dealing with the development of a framework for Australian languages. The other two presentations will deal with matters of particular relevance to the Northern Territory: on the one hand Devlin on the contentious issue of bilingual education, and, on the other hand Guyula, McMahon, Sebbens and Yunupingu on the delivery of Australian languages in schools.

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1. Angela Scarino - The Australian Curriculum, the role of achievements in the curriculum design and their relevance to a framework for Australian languages

2. Michael Walsh - Australian languages in the Australian Curriculum process: from shape to framework - Part 1 focus on the Northern Territory

3. Jaky Troy - Australian languages in the Australian Curriculum process: from shape to framework - Part 2 Australia-wide

4. Brian Devlin - The place of bilingual education in an Australian Curriculum for the Northern Territory 5. Yingiya Guyula, Kathy McMahon, Annarella Sebbens & Yalmay Yunupingu - Languages in schools - the city and the bush

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Brian Devlin - Associate Professor, Bilingual Education & Applied Linguistics, Charles Darwin University.

Yingiya Guyula - Yolngu Lecturer for the Yolngu Studies course at Charles Darwin University. Kathy McMahon - wide experience in Indigenous school-based and adult education across the Northern Territory; currently a PhD candidate at Charles Darwin University.

Angela Scarino - Associate Professor, School of Communication, International Studies & Languages.Director, Research Centre for Languages & Cultures, University of South Australia Lead writer for the Shape Paper on the Australian Curriculum for Languages

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Jaky TroyDirector of Research, Indigenous Social and Cultural WellbeingAustralian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies [AIATSIS]Companion writer for the Shape Paper on the Australian Curriculum for Languages, with special responsibility for Australian Languages

Michael WalshAIATSIS/Linguistics, University of Sydney [more to come!]

Annarella Sebbens Aboriginal Islander Education Worker, Palmerston Senior College Yalmay YunupinguArtist, activist and teacher of Yolngu matha for over 30 years

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AFMLTA ConferenceDarwin6 - 9 July 2011

Angela ScarinoResearch Centre for Languages and CulturesUniversity of South AustraliaEmail: [email protected]

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Recognises the unique status of Australian Languages as the languages of the first peoples of Australia.

Includes and values the learning of these languages, as they are the languages of this country and the property of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities of Australia.

Recognises the right of young Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians to learn their own languages within the framework of the Australian Curriculum.

Recognises that these languages are part of the heritage of all Australians and the opportunity to learn Australian languages is important to all students in Australian schools.

Draft Shape of the Australian Curriculum: Languages

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Purposes:

learning particular languages

developing the skills both of language learning and of undertaking linguistic work (e.g. collecting, describing and recording language), in the context of language maintenance and development and, in many cases, language reclamation

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Program-types include:

second language learninghome user language maintenance and development language revival (including language revitalisation, language renewal and language reclamation)languages ecology (learning about the target language, learning about the languages in the region, and learning about Australian Languages)

(building on the Australian Indigenous Languages Framework, SSABSA 1996)

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Curriculum content: what teachers are expected to teach and students are expected to learn… includes knowledge, skills and understanding that students are expected to learn and will be described for a particular learning area at a particular year level or bands of years ‘content descriptions’

Achievement standards: describe the quality of learning students should typically demonstrate by a particular point in their schooling (that is, the depth of their understanding, the extent of their understanding, the extent of their knowledge and the sophistication of other skills) a description of the quality of expected learning and a set of

annotated work samples(ACARA. Curriculum Design V.2.1)

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Languages Learning Area – development

Learning Area Shape

paper

Languages Shape paper

Languages Shape paper

Subject curricula

Procedures and

guidelines

Language-specific curricula

Framework for Australian Languages

Some examples of how this is realised in

specific languages for each program-

type

Language specific

curriculum development by

state/territory/

jurisdictions

All ACARA learning areas

Languages

Australian Languages

For all program-typesaims, rationale, content descriptions, achievement standards

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Provide a distinctive lens on learning what is it important to learn? (domains, concepts, processes, actions,

judgments) how well?

indicative/not prescriptive (need to remove the generalising tendency that is typical of these developments)

can influence how we imagine the learning of Australian Languages can begin a process of describing richness/depth of learning

To be developed for each program-type, bearing in mind learners, K-12

To be exemplified note the distinction between program-type and program has the potential to add another dimension to the development of curricula to date

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A workshopping approach (developmental workshops)

Sourcing current examples from diverse programs in different contexts

Maximising the trialling process

Ongoing consultation/refinement

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Principles, protocols and descriptions of program-types have been developed and now may need to be fine-tuned.

How do the curriculum constructs proposed for the Australian Curriculum best serve Australian languages? Can we focus on developing statements of achievements?

Will this dimension of development actually add value?

these questions need to remain open throughout the process

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Michael WalshAIATSIS/Linguistics, University of Sydney

18th Biennial Australian Federation of Modern Language Teachers Associations National

Conference, 7 July 2011, Darwin.

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1972-4 - periods of linguistic fieldwork at Port Keats [now called Wadeye], mainly on Murrinh-Patha but also some study of Ami, Djamindjung, Kamu, Larrakia, Limilngan, Magatige, Marridjabin, Marringarr and Wuna1999-2000 NSW ATSIC-sponsored survey of NSW languagesc. 2002 one of the writing team for the NSW Aboriginal Languages K-10 SyllabusStrong interest in language revival and in documenting lesser known domains of language use e.g. the Wadeye Song Language Project 2004-2010

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West of Arnhem Land - around 2 dozen languages including Bininj Gun-wok, Jaminjung, Larrakia, Murrinh-Patha, Tiwi, Arnhem Land area - Anindilyakwa, Burarra, Jawoyn, Mawng, Nakkara, Wubuy [aka Nunggubuyu], Yanyuwa, Yiwadja, Yolngu-matha varietiesCentral NT and Central Australia - Alywarra, Arrernte (Including varieties), Gurindji, Kaytej, Pitjantjatjara, Warlpiri20 language names listed here but perhaps double that Kriol, Aboriginal Englishes and other contact varieties including: Areyonga teenage Pitjantjatjara, Gurindji Kriol, Light WarlpiriA complex language situation ranging from ‘strong’ languages like Murrinh-Patha and Yolngu through to languages that have languished like Jaminjung, Larrakia and YanyuwaPerhaps less activity in language revitalization compared to the south-east of Australia over the last 20 years

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Page 21: Australian Languages and the  Australian Curriculum  - an overview of the panel session

21Updated 27 January 2010

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• Shape paper all but finalised• Expressions of interests received for the next Advisory panel

for Australian Languages• Expressions of interests received for Writers for the Australian

Languages Framework………….

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Dr Jaky TroyDirector of Research Indigenous Social and Cultural Wellbeing AIATSIS [email protected]

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I am a Ngarigu woman and my country is the Snowy Mountains in the Monaro district of NSW.

My language is sleeping, it has few speakers but its people want it to wake up.

I want it to wake up so that I can teach it to my daughter and she can learn it in her school. We now live in Canberra which is on country my ancestors shared with other groups at different times of the year, including the Ngunawal and Ngembri peoples.

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Original research interest was language contact – what happened when non-Aboriginal people and Aboriginal people attempted to communicate in the late C18 and early C19. Development of NSW Pidgin.

My research led me to look closely at the languages of NSW and to reconstruct the language of the Sydney area, often called Dharug or Iyora.

Became very interested in ‘reconstructing’ and revitalising languages that are ‘sleeping’ using old records and community knowledge.

1999-2000 with Michael Walsh and Tony Lonsdale did AIATSIS survey ‘Strong Language Strong Culture’. Could see the huge potential for language work in NSW.

2000 managed the National Languages Program for ATSIC 2001-2 as Senior Education Officer, Aboriginal Curriculum Unit, Board of Studies, developed the

idea for a NSW Aboriginal Languages Curriculum and saw this through to the development of the NSW Aboriginal Languages Syllabus K-10.

2003-6, Director, NSW Aboriginal Languages Research and Resource Centre, focused on language revitalisation and maintenance programs in NSW.

2010 Assistant Professor in Education Uni of Canberra teaching Indigenous education, including developing ways to teach Australian languages in schools.

2010 to now working with ACARA to develop the Australian Curriculum Languages, focussing particularly on the Australian languages content.

2011 became Research Director at AIATSIS and manage a strong Languages Unit that is funded by the Commonwealth Government to do many things in the field of Australian languages including research about languages, provide workshops for communities on how to do language work and to develop and undertake the next National Indigenous Languages Survey.

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Large number of languages in Australia – at least 250

Ecology of each language is different but broadly there are: - Languages that are still spoken right through and are used for

everyday communication in all domains Languages that have some speakers and some level of

community use Languages that are no longer used for everyday communication

but are in the processes of being revitalised; and Languages that are ‘sleeping’ for which there may be some

community knowledge but which now largely exist in the corpus of historical records (AIATSIS is a treasure trove for these languages)

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All languages are valued and loved by their owners and any initiative of ACARA to develop a Framework for teaching our languages in schools needs to take that high cultural value into account.

Therefore, we need to have various programs for these languages that will cater for all of them.

The Framework is called this because it is virtually impossible to develop one curriculum type to meet all the needs of these diverse languages.

Program types put forward in the Shape of the Curriculum languages are: - Second language learning Home user language maintenance and development Language revival (including language revitalisation, language renewal and language

reclamation) Languages ecology (learning about the target language, learning about the languages in the

region, and learning about Australian languages)

The diversity of languages and program types will create challenges for the writers and there may need to be some individual sample curricula written for languages in each of the program types.

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This is mandated in the Shape of the Curriculum Languages paper. Australian school children who have had the chance to learn an

Australian language feel very happy about that experience.

For example, in western NSW ‘through the experience of learning Wiradjuri, the Student Representative Council at Parkes East Public School wrote a letter to the local government council about erecting Welcome to Country signs. In the letter the students argued that it was important to respect Wiradjuri people as the traditional custodians of the country, and to raise the awareness of non-Aboriginal people. The Parkes Shire Council has taken the students’ advice, and the signs are now in production. They will be 5 feet high, 2 feet wide and seen by an estimated 5000 cars per day on the Newell Highway.’ http://www.curriculumsupport.education.nsw.gov.au/secondary/languages/languages/aboriginal/assets/pdf/ablang_bul13.pdf p 4

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Every jurisdiction in Australia has a set of documents that develops the thinking for schools around teaching Australian languages.

Writers will have these to draw on in creating the Framework for

Australian Languages.

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Australian Capital TerritoryACT Department of Education and Training, ACT (website), ‘Every chance to learn:Curriculum framework for ACT schools Preschool to Year 10’,activated.act.edu.au/ectl/index.htmBoard of Senior Secondary Studies (BSSS), Australian Capital Territory (website), LanguagesCourse Framework 2007 and Languages courses developed from the Course Framework,www.bsss.act.edu.au/curriculum/courses

New South WalesBoard of Studies New South Wales, (website), K-10 Languages Syllabuses and Stage 6 andHSC Languages Syllabuses, www.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/syllabus_sc/

Northern TerritoryNorthern Territory Government Department of Education and Training (website),Northern Territory Curriculum Framework Languages Learning Area,www.det.nt.gov.au/teachers-educators/curriculum-ntbos/ntcf

QueenslandQueensland Studies Authority (website), Essential Learning and Standards Years 1-9,www.qsa.qld.edu.au/574.htmlQueensland Studies Authority (website), Languages Senior Subjects syllabus documents,www.qsa.qld.edu.au/1823.htmlQueensland Studies Authority (website), Languages Learning Area Year 10 guidelines, June2009, www.qsa.qld.edu.au/downloads/senior/yr10_guide_learning_areas_lang.pdfDraft Shape of the Australian Curriculum: Languages39

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South AustraliaSACE Board of South Australia, South Australian Certificate of Education (website), Stage 1and Stage 2 Languages Subject Outlines, www.sace.sa.edu.au/subjectsSouth Australian Curriculum Standards and Accountability Framework (website), SACSALanguages Learning Area, www.sacsa.sa.edu.au/splash.asp

TasmaniaDepartment of Education Tasmanian Curriculum (website), LOTE– Languages Other ThanEnglish, K-10 LOTE syllabus and support materials,www.education.tas.gov.au/curriculum/standards/englishTasmanian Qualifications Authority (website), Accredited courses in the AustralianStandard Classification of Education (ASCED) sector Society & Culture, sub-set Languages,www.tqa.tas.gov.au/2597

VictoriaVictorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority (VCAA) (website) Victorian Certificate ofEducation Study Designs for LOTE, www.vcaa.vic.edu.au/vce/studies/index.htmlVictorian Essential Learning Standards, October 2009, (website), Discipline-based LearningStrand Languages other than English, Revised Edition, vels.vcaa.vic.edu.au/

Western AustraliaCurriculum Council of Western Australia (website), Curriculum Framework K-10 LearningStatement for Languages Other than English,www.curriculum.wa.edu.au/internet/Years_K10/Curriculum_FrameworkCurriculum Council of Western Australia (website), Western Australian Certificate ofEducation (WACE) course syllabuses in LOTE,www.curriculum.wa.edu.au/internet/Senior_Secondary/Courses

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Dr Brian DevlinAssociate Professor, Bilingual Education & Applied [email protected] Darwin University

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Ideology Accountability

Official

Unofficial

Effectiveness Value

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PreambleThe Melbourne Declaration on Educational Goals for all Young Australians recognises languages learning as an integral part of the educational experience of all Australian students.

Success in developing students’ bilingual capability through languages learning in schools depends on: policy settings; curriculum; and program conditions.

The Melbourne Declaration provides the policy framework for languages learning, ACARA takes responsibility for curriculum design. In developing the Australian Curriculum: Languages assumptions will necessarily be made about time allocation. School authorities need to consider their responsibility in relation to program conditions (i.e. number of hours, regularity and continuity) to ensure quality and sustained languages program provision.

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Ideology Accountability

Official

Unofficial

Effectiveness Value

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Arguments for and against dual literacy programsArguments for and against dual literacy programs

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On p. 5 there is also an acknowledgement of “the value of bilingual programs”. That’s it!

Bilingual capability and bilingual programs are not mentioned again.