Pyne tackles 'bias' in classrooms with national curriculum review

nero_bolt
Community Member

ABOUT TIME... The lefties and the greens will hate this and the left teachers and unions will hate it as well..... GOOD hope they do as its about time the left and labor and the unions and teachers stoped brain washing our children with their twisted left views and we got back to values and teaching our kids properly...... 

 

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THE Abbott government has moved to reshape school education by appointing strong critics of the national curriculum to review what children are taught, amid fears a "cultural Left" agenda is failing students.

 

The Education Minister, Christopher Pyne, is seeking a blueprint by mid-year to overhaul the curriculum, warning that the rise of "remedial" classes at universities proves the depths of the problem in Australian classrooms.

 

Vowing to restore an "orthodox" curriculum, Mr Pyne named author and former teacher Kevin Donnelly and business professor Ken Wiltshire this morning to lead the review.

 

 

The appointments clear the way for reforms that could expunge parts of the history syllabus that Tony Abbott has blasted for favouring Labor and the unions but glossing over the work of Coalition prime ministers.

 

Mr Donnelly is a fierce critic of the "relativism" in the teaching program, while Professor Wiltshire has rejected the emphasis on "competencies" and urged a sharper focus on knowledge and assessment.

 

The looming changes could spark another "culture war", given past brawls, including John Howard's criticism in 2007 of the "shameful" neglect of Australian history and the disputes over Julia Gillard's introduction of the national curriculum in 2010.

 

Writing in The Australian today, Mr Pyne declares that parents want a curriculum that is "free of partisan bias" and deals with real-world issues.

 

Concerns about the teaching program have deepened in recent years as the nation lost ground in global assessments of reading, maths and science, putting Australian students behind their counterparts in Vietnam, Poland and Estonia.  (all under Julia and labor and the billions they threw at the system only to fail) 

 

 

Canberra and the states agreed on changes to the curriculum last year but the new review throws open the debate to the public, allowing for wider consultation and possibly the holding of open hearings.

 

Mr Pyne said he expected the states to accept the need for change, given signs of the problems with the current curriculum

 

I think the fact that universities are teaching maths and English remedial courses is a symptom of an education system that isn't meeting the needs of students who go on to university, and that's something the reviewers will be taking a close look at," Mr Pyne said. "The term 'remedial' implies a remedy for a problem and one of the priorities for all governments should be removing the problem."

 

 

A key complaint about the curriculum is its emphasis on seven "general capabilities" rather than essential knowledge in fields such as maths, English and history.

 

Former History Teachers Association president Paul Kiem has warned that this led to a "tick a box" approach to teaching a subject. A similar view was put by NSW Board of Studies president Tom Alegounarias.

 

Mr Donnelly, a regular contributor to The Australian, has warned against a "subjective" view of culture that neglects the Judeo-Christian values at the core of Australian institutions.

 

He has also savaged a civics curriculum that teaches that "citizenship means different things to different people at different times", rather than preparing students for an understanding of their responsibilities. "The civics curriculum argues in favour of a postmodern, deconstructed definition of citizenship," he wrote last year.

 

"The flaws are manifest. What right do Australians have to expect migrants to accept our laws, institutions and way of life?

 

"Such a subjective view of citizenship allows Islamic fundamentalists to justify mistreating women and carrying out jihad against non-believers."

 

Mandating a "cultural left national curriculum" would fail students, he wrote.

 

Professor Wiltshire branded the curriculum a "failure" last January - prior to changes that were put in place last year.

 

"A school curriculum should be based on a set of values, yet it is almost impossible to determine what values have been explicitly used to design the proposed model," he wrote of the changes under the Gillard government.

 

"Curriculum should also be knowledge-based, yet we are faced with an experiment that focuses on process or competencies."

Professor Wiltshire also attacked the "astounding devaluation of the book" in modern teaching.

 

In his outline of the changes, Mr Pyne points to complaints that history classes are not recognising the legacy of Western civilisation and not giving enough prominence to big events in Australian history such as Anzac Day.

 

Mr Pyne told The Australian yesterday he "most definitely" stood by his past criticisms of the curriculum, including its neglect of business and commerce in the country's history.

 

"I believe the curriculum should be orthodox and should tell students about where we've come from and why we are the country we are today, so we can shape our future appropriately," he said.

 

He said he supported the "unvarnished truth" in the curriculum on everything from the treatment of indigenous Australians to political history. "There is little place in a curriculum for elevating relativism over the truth."

 

Deals with the states are a key factor in the plan after The Australian reported last month that some state education ministers had challenged Mr Pyne over his "command-and-control" approach to the teaching program.

 

The ministerial talks were held amid the heated debate over the government's shifting position on a $1.2 billion outlay on the Gonski education reforms.

 

Mr Pyne told The Australian there was a "moral suasion" to improving the teaching program.

 

"The states, I am sure, would want to implement the best curriculum without a financial incentive to do so," he said.

 

The current curriculum has three priorities across subjects - indigenous culture, Asia and sustainability - but Mr Pyne questioned their merits.

 

"It's difficult to see in maths and science how those three themes are necessarily relevant," he said in an interview. "Themes should not be elevated above a robust curriculum."

 

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/pyne-tackles-bias-in-classrooms-with-national-curri...

 

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Re: Pyne tackles 'bias' in classrooms with national curriculum review


@am*3 wrote:

@crikey*mate wrote:

 

LOL at it being written by experts. Experts in what, and with what goal?


a national curriculum, in five years, by academic experts from all around Australia working collaboratively.

 

That has got to be better than this:

 

in six months - by  two individuals 

 

One of the two people appointed to lead the review, the conservative education commentator Kevin Donnelly, recently attacked the curriculum for “uncritically promoting diversity” and undervaluing western civilisation and “the significance of Judeo-Christian values to our institutions and way of life”. Donnelly, a former chief of staff to the Liberal minister Kevin Andrews, wrote Why Our Schools are Failing in 2004 and established a think-tank,the Education Standards Institute, in 2008.

 

The other appointee, the public policy academic Ken Wiltshire, is the JD Story professor of public administration at the University of Queensland business school. He previously oversaw a review of the Queensland curriculum for the Goss Labor government in the mid-1990s.

 


I had the opportunity to have a fair bit to do with Tom Calma at the time. Not one person ever contacted the ATSI, not even a phone call and asked, "what do you need", what kinds of things does your societal structure need, both to be taught and also to access this curriculum.

 

Under NAPLAN and this new curriculum, we have kids, who can speak 4 different languages fluently, who have never heard English, or who get an English speaking teacher for 1 lesson a week being classified as intellectually deficient. They addressed it by sending in a teacher who could speak English, for two lessons a week.

 

Science curriculum, that is all well and good, but these schools had neither the teachers or the equipment needed to teach and learn that kind of science.

 

I don't believe that any overarching policy document written by academics belonging to a dominant socialogical class will ever be able to write a curriculum for all children, only one that suits children who are members of the same sociological class.

 

I dfo believe the last curriculum was bad, I do believe that this one is an improvement in as far as the interstate transfer of education, but that's all, and I believe that whilstever we remain focfused on a horizontal curriculum that any curriculum will be as equally ineffective, regardless of the changes.

 

We need to throw the lot out, look at what kind of curriculum the leading countries are using (a vertical system) and start agains from scratch. Just rip the stitches and bite the bullet.

 

Our curriculum structure was created to suit an agricultural and industrial society. We're a different kind of society now, we need a suitable curriculum. Not just a bandaid for an extinct dinosaur.

 

soapbox.gif

 

 

But here's the thing AM, neither yours or my children will be affected by this or any curriculum, so in reality, I don't really care. I can't help it if the general public believe that this will make any difference to their child's outcomes.


Some people can go their whole lives and never really live for a single minute.
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Re: Pyne tackles 'bias' in classrooms with national curriculum review


@am*3 wrote:

Crikey:

 

Donnelly has previously argued it is wrong for teachers in the classroom “to introduce students to sensitive sexual matters about which most parents might be concerned and that the wider community might find unacceptable”.

“Welcome to the gender wars! Since the mid- to late '70s, much of the education debate has centred on the supposed disadvantage suffered by migrants, working-class kids and women. More recently, gays, lesbians, bisexual and transgender (GLBT) people have become the new victim group,” he wrote in March 2005.

 

“Forgotten is that many parents would consider the sexual practices of GLBT people unnatural and that most parents would prefer their children to form a relationship with somebody of the opposite sex,” he wrote.


I don't understand the point here?


Some people can go their whole lives and never really live for a single minute.
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Re: Pyne tackles 'bias' in classrooms with national curriculum review


@lakeland27 wrote:

 will they need to be baptised to go to school now ? will they say grace at recess ? 

will learnin' about jesus replace learnin' altogether ?


they will where your kids are going LOL

 

But I doubt it in the public system.

 

My guess is that it will be taught in maybe one or two specific classes much the same as Personal Development is taught, and in a way, but more depth than we are taught about other religions.

 

I'll be right there with you objecting if a crucifix appears above the clock on every classroom wall and the recitation of prayers occurs for purposes other than exam questions.Or the teachers start ending their classes or correspondence with "God Bless".

 

But if Christianity is the dominant religion in Australia, it is that religion which forms the foundations for our cutoms and our laws, then I have no problem with it being the focus religion.

 

 


Some people can go their whole lives and never really live for a single minute.
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Re: Pyne tackles 'bias' in classrooms with national curriculum review

Where have all these children been studying under the National Curriculum?  

 

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Re: Pyne tackles 'bias' in classrooms with national curriculum review

It's been being rolled out for three years.

 

Qld had to be compliant in Math and English by start of 2012? with History being rolled out a semester later. We had to be completely compliant by start of 2013. As did any O/S schools that were using the Qld curriculum.


Some people can go their whole lives and never really live for a single minute.
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Re: Pyne tackles 'bias' in classrooms with national curriculum review


@crikey*mate wrote:

It's been being rolled out for three years.

 

Qld had to be compliant in Math and English by start of 2012? with History being rolled out a semester later. We had to be completely compliant by start of 2013. As did any O/S schools that were using the Qld curriculum.


Hardly long enough or comprehensively enough to pass judgement then.

Certainly not long enough to scrap it as a failure.

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Re: Pyne tackles 'bias' in classrooms with national curriculum review


@freakiness wrote:

@crikey*mate wrote:

It's been being rolled out for three years.

 

Qld had to be compliant in Math and English by start of 2012? with History being rolled out a semester later. We had to be completely compliant by start of 2013. As did any O/S schools that were using the Qld curriculum.


Hardly long enough or comprehensively enough to pass judgement then.

Certainly not long enough to scrap it as a failure.


The statement I responded to was one which claimed it had only been used in ACT.

 

That was inaccurate.

 

But it will fail, and it has already failed, at least some students, simply because they don't have the resources to access and implement it effectively, nor derive the outcomes desired by a bunch of suits removed from the realities of the diversities of Australian Pupils and thier differing sociological environments.


Some people can go their whole lives and never really live for a single minute.
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Re: Pyne tackles 'bias' in classrooms with national curriculum review

So you've made up your mind that it will fail, based on your own bias or perceptions. 

It was not devised by a bunch of suits out of touch.

 

Shape of the Australian Curriculum

The first version of the shape paper was published in 2009 to guide the development of the Australian Curriculum for English, mathematics, science and history. Revised versions provide a background for the implementation of approved curriculum and the context for further development of the Australian Curriculum.

The Shape of the Australian Curriculum v4.0 was approved by the ACARA Board in late 2012. Annual consultation on the Shape paper promotes ongoing discussion about the shape of the Australian Curriculum as a whole.

In line with the Shape of the Australian Curriculum, the development of the Australian Curriculum has been guided by two other documents – the Curriculum Development Process detailing the process for curriculum development from Foundation to Year 10 (F–10) and the Curriculum Design Paper detailing the specifications for the F–12 Australian Curriculum.

The curriculum development process involves four interrelated phases:  

Shaping

A broad outline of the Foundation to Year 12 (F–12) curriculum for a learning area/subject firstly as an Initial Advice Paper and then as the Shape of the Australian Curriculum: are developed. This paper, developed with expert advice, provides broad direction on the purpose, structure and organisation of the learning area. Along with the Curriculum Design Paper (PDF 383 KB), it is intended to guide writers of the curriculum. It also provides a reference for judging the quality of the final curriculum documents for the learning area. This phase includes key periods of consultation including open public consultation as well as targeted consultation with key stakeholders.

Writing

Teams of writers, supported by expert advisory panels and ACARA curriculum staff, develop the Australian Curriculum. This includes the development of content descriptions and achievement standards. Writers are guided by ACARA’s Curriculum Design Paper (PDF 383 KB) and advice from the ACARA Board. Writers also refer to national and international curriculum and assessment research, state and territory curriculum materials, and research on the general capabilities and cross-curriculum priorities. The draft Australian Curriculum for the learning area/subject is released for public consultation and subsequent modification in the light of feedback.

The writing phase incorporates the process for validation of achievement standards and culminates in publication of the Australian Curriculum for the learning area/subject.

Implementation

The curriculum is delivered to school authorities and to schools in an online environment in time for school authorities, schools and teachers to prepare for implementation. Implementation and support are the responsibilities of state and territory school and curriculum authorities. ACARA works with state and territory curriculum and school authorities to support their ongoing implementation planning.

Monitoring and evaluation

Processes are put in place to monitor and review the Australian Curriculum. Monitoring will be coordinated by ACARA and will include partnerships with state and territory curriculum and school authorities where relevant data gathering is required.

 

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Re: Pyne tackles 'bias' in classrooms with national curriculum review

Go your way and we will be like the Americans, who teach nothing outside of their own history (and a selective view of that), know nothing about the world outside their own borders, are terrified of 'furriners', think only their own country is free and to hear them, the only democracy in the world;.

 

They actually think that, because they are taught about nothing else.

Is that how you want your kids to be taught?

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Re: Pyne tackles 'bias' in classrooms with national curriculum review

I think Christopher Pyne is out to prove the Gonski findings wrong...does he believe all that is needed is

more Christian teaching (they have had Religious Ed  in public schools at least as long as I have been a primary school child)

and the Rewriting/removing Australians strong Labor/union HISTORY 

He either doesn't seem to know what children are taught in primary school these days...or wants others who don't know to believe that our shool children don't learn about Anzac day etc....it is bs

 

He got two people to review the curriculum didn't he ...one of the two being an ex liberal staffer 

 

_________________________________________________________________________________________

 

 

National curriculum

 

 

The Australian Curriculum

The development of the Australian Curriculum is guided by the Melbourne Declaration on Educational Goals for Young Australians, adopted by the Ministerial Council in December 2008. The Melbourne Declaration emphasises the importance of knowledge, skills and understandings of learning areas, general capabilities and cross-curriculum priorities as the basis for a curriculum designed to support 21st century learning.

The Australian Curriculum sets out the core knowledge, understanding, skills and general capabilities important for all Australian students. It describes the learning entitlement of students as a foundation for their future learning, growth and active participation in the Australian community. It makes clear what all young Australians should learn as they progress through schooling. It is the foundation for high quality teaching to meet the needs of all Australian students.

ACARA has developed the Australian Curriculum in consultation with states and territories. Education Authorities in each state and territory have responsibility for implementation of the Australian Curriculum and for supporting schools and teachers.

Detail of changes made to previous versions and those that are now evident in the Australian Curriculum can be viewed on the website under site map and ‘curriculum version history’.

http://www.australiancurriculum.edu.au/

 

_______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

 

Christopher Pyne's plans reminds me of Winston Smith in the novel 1984 who  re-wrote past newspaper articles so that the historical record  supported the current party line.

 

 

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