Synopsis
Podcast by Teacher Magazine (ACER)
Episodes
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The Research Files Episode 33: Teacher stress intervention programs
29/08/2017 Duration: 18minWhen we ask readers and listeners about the professional learning topics that interest them and what they’d like more support on, teacher wellbeing is always right up there. We're here today at the University of Queensland in Brisbane to find out about a teacher wellbeing study, looking at the impact of two stress interventions.
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Behaviour Management Episode 2: Phil Beadle on de-escalation techniques
16/08/2017 Duration: 17minOur guest for the second episode in our Behaviour Management podcast series is Phil Beadle – a teacher, education consultant, public speaker, author and broadsheet columnist. Phil was once named Secondary Teacher of the Year in the UK and is considered an expert in the areas of literacy and behaviour management. In today’s podcast he joins us on the line from the UK to discuss behaviour management, but in particular the different de-escalation techniques that educators can use to manage challenging behaviours in their classrooms.
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School Improvement Episode 11: Out-of-field teaching
02/08/2017 Duration: 15minThree Deakin University academics – Dr Linda Hobbs, Associate Professor Coral Campbell and Associate Professor Colleen Vale – recently visited ACER to share their research on out-of-field teaching. In today’s School Improvement podcast, we share some highlights from their presentation.
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The Research Files Episode 32: Investigating the aspirations of Indigenous students
19/07/2017 Duration: 17minProfessor Jenny Gore joins The Research Files to discuss the findings of a new Australian study by academics from the University of Newcastle and Western Sydney University investigating the occupational and career aspirations of Indigenous school students.
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The Research Files Episode 31: Data with Professor Amanda Datnow
28/06/2017 Duration: 11minOur guest on The Research Files today is Amanda Datnow, a Professor in the Department of Education Studies and Associate Dean of the Division of Social Sciences at the University of California, San Diego. Her current research explores best practice in relation to data-informed teaching and learning, including how to build educator capacity. In August, Professor Datnow will be in Melbourne for Research Conference 2017, hosted by the Australian Council for Educational Research, where she’ll deliver a keynote titled ‘Opening or closing doors for students? Equity and data-driven decision-making’.
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Podcast Special: The hidden qualities of quality teaching
06/06/2017 Duration: 15minProfessor Nan Bahr delivered the closing keynote address at last month’s Excellence in Professional Practice Conference on the Gold Coast. Her keynote, titled ‘Personal attributes: Developing the hidden qualities in quality teaching’ examined the concept of quality in teaching and the personal attributes of teachers that are central to the teacher-learner relationship. In this special episode, we’ll be sharing the highlights from Nan’s keynote address at EPPC.
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The Research Files Episode 30: The highs and lows of practicum
22/05/2017 Duration: 12minThe practicum component of pre-service teacher education courses is an important part of preparing students for the profession. A recent Australian study shines a spotlight on the highs and lows of the practicum experience from the perspective of pre-service drama teachers. The findings have been published in the Australian Journal of Teacher Education and lead author Dr Christina Gray, from Edith Cowan University, is our guest in this episode of The Research Files.
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The Research Files Episode 29: Student self-regulation skills
10/05/2017 Duration: 08minA new study from academics at Queensland University of Technology has found there’s a gender gap when it comes to the behaviourial skills of children starting school. Professor Sue Walker joins me in this episode of The Research Files to discuss the study findings and the implications for educators and parents.
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School Improvement Episode 10: Effective professional learning communities
26/04/2017 Duration: 12minBy building strong professional learning communities (PLCs) school leaders can improve not only the quality of teaching, but also student outcomes. So, what does an effective PLC look like and how do you go about building one? My guest is Dr Lawrence Ingvarson, a Principal Research Fellow at the Australian Council for Educational Research (ACER). He’s developed ACER’s Professional Learning Community Framework (PLCF). The framework covers five key domains: professional culture; leadership; a focus on student learning, wellbeing and engagement; a focus on improving professional knowledge and practice; and teachers who think systematically about their practice and learn from experience.
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Podcast Special: Excellence In Professional Practice
19/04/2017 Duration: 11minTo whet the appetite for the 2017 Excellence in Professional Practice Conference, we speak to both keynote speakers – Professor Stephen Dinham and Professor Nan Bahr – and revisit the EPPC archive to share our favourite snippets from interviews with previous presenters.
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Global Education Episode 13: Entrepreneurship education in Finland
12/04/2017 Duration: 11minTiina-Maija Toivola joins us from Helsinki to talk about the award-winning Me & MyCity program that gives 6th Graders a chance to spend a day in their chosen profession and learn more about being a consumer and citizen.
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The Research Files Episode 28: Storytelling And Early Literacy Practices
28/03/2017 Duration: 12minIn this month’s Research Files we discuss the findings of a three-year project in New Zealand that included analysis of pretend play – where students give voices to toys, objects and digital characters – and early literacy practices.
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School Improvement Episode 9: Using literacy data to inform strategic planning
22/03/2017 Duration: 10minMy guest today is Cath Apanah, Acting Assistant Principal and Head of senior school at Montrose Bay High in Hobart, Tasmania. She joins me today to discuss how her school has been using data to inform their strategic plan, the process they undertook to improve student writing and how they went about upskilling staff to use data effectively. By using data, the staff t Montrose have not only been able to track student strengths and weaknesses, but it has become a powerful tool for teachers to better understand their impact on student learning.
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The Research Files Episode 27: Improve learning and behaviour by engaging students
01/03/2017 Duration: 12minThe Grattan Institute released a report that says as many as 40 per cent of school students are unproductive in a given year. Teacher magazine sat down with the report’s co-author Julie Sonnemann to discuss the four school level recommendations that came out of this research.
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Teaching Methods: Building presence and rapport via videoconferencing
14/02/2017 Duration: 11minVideoconferencing technology has changed the face of distance education, but teaching to a camera rather than face-to-face requires additional skills. In this episode, Teacher magazine is joined by Nicky Rehn, Assistant Professor of Education at Ambrose University in Calgary, Canada. Rehn and colleagues Dorit Maor and Andrew McConney, from Murdoch University in Australia, have studied how educators delivering school lessons by videoconference can best build a classroom presence and rapport with their remote students.
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The Research Files Episode 26: The five types of school leaders
08/02/2017 Duration: 18minWhat kind of leader are you, and is your leadership style truly effective? After looking the UK’s performance in the 2012 Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) study and comparing it to other countries, Dr Alex Hill and his research team decided to find an answer to the question: Why does the UK still lag behind its peers, despite investing more than them? In the process of this research, the team studied over 400 leaders from schools in the UK – the results of which have been published in the Harvard Business Review. In doing so, the team identified that there are five different types of leaders: surgeons, soldiers, accountants, philosophers and architects. Dr Alex Hill, Co-Founder and Director of The Centre for High Performance, joined me on the line from the UK, to discuss why there are five different types of leaders, but only one type that is truly effective.
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Behaviour Management Episode 1 - Dr Bill Rogers on starting the new year
30/01/2017 Duration: 20minOur guest for this first episode of our new series on Behaviour Management is teacher, education consultant and author Dr Bill Rogers. An Honorary Fellow of Melbourne University, he shares his expertise on behaviour management, effective teaching, stress management, colleague support and teacher welfare around the globe through lectures, seminars, professional development courses and, of course, with teachers in the classroom.
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The Research Files Episode 25: Why young people are easily fooled by fake news
15/01/2017 Duration: 10minMany people believe that because young people are digital natives, they are also digital-savvy. But a new report from researchers at Stanford University’s Graduate School of Education has found that young people do experience difficulties when it comes to evaluating information they find online. In fact, this research, which tested middle school, high school and college level students, found that 80 per cent of participants thought that sponsored articles were actual articles, and had a hard time distinguishing where this information actually came from. One of the co-authors of the report, Sarah McGrew from the Stanford History Education Group, joined me on the line from California to discuss her team’s findings.
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Rewind: Teacher’s podcast highlights for 2016
18/12/2016 Duration: 07minTo mark the end of another fantastic year, the Teacher editorial team have taken a walk down memory lane to share some snippets from their favourite podcasts for 2016.
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Global Education Episode 12: Dr Sue Thomson discusses PISA 2015
06/12/2016 Duration: 06minThe Programme for International Student Assessment, more popularly referred to as PISA, measures how well 15-year-olds are prepared to use their science, reading and mathematics skills in real-life situations. More than half a million students from 72 countries and partner economies took part in the 2015 test cycle and the results have just been released. The Australian report, PISA 2015: A first look at Australia’s results, from the Australian Council for Educational Research, doesn’t make for pleasant reading. Dr Sue Thomson, ACER Director of Educational Monitoring and Research and lead author of the report, joins me to discuss the results.