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Discovery Area of Study

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Page 1: Discovery Area of Study. The Experience of Discovery for First Peoples (globally) How might this reflection shape the ways students and teachers see the

Discovery

Area of Study

Page 2: Discovery Area of Study. The Experience of Discovery for First Peoples (globally) How might this reflection shape the ways students and teachers see the

The Experience of Discovery for First Peoples (globally)

How might this reflection shape the ways students and teachers see the potential of a broad range of texts produced by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as related texts?

http://diylol.com/meme-generator/dont-like-immigration/memes/dont-like-immigration-when-you-leavin

Page 3: Discovery Area of Study. The Experience of Discovery for First Peoples (globally) How might this reflection shape the ways students and teachers see the

The teacher’s role

“The art of teaching is the art of assisting discovery.”- Mark Van Doren

http://www.librarian-image.net/img07/search_engine_web.jpg

Page 4: Discovery Area of Study. The Experience of Discovery for First Peoples (globally) How might this reflection shape the ways students and teachers see the

Discovery is metaphor

Etymology: discover

discovrir (Old French): to unroof or unveil

Image: http://onsophiastreet.com/2013/08/29/unveiling/

Page 5: Discovery Area of Study. The Experience of Discovery for First Peoples (globally) How might this reflection shape the ways students and teachers see the

The complexity of defining Discovery (semantic exploration)

Discovery: an act or the process of finding somebody/something, or learning about something that was not known about before

Discovery as a person or a process in a legal trial

Page 6: Discovery Area of Study. The Experience of Discovery for First Peoples (globally) How might this reflection shape the ways students and teachers see the

Rubric for Area of Study: the new Discovery rubric gently reminds us of its nature

Higher order thinking: the Syllabus rubric requires students to ‘explore’, ‘analyse’, ‘question’, ‘articulate’, ‘synthesise’, ‘clarify’, ‘develop’, ‘assess’ (or evaluate) and ‘experiment’.

Importance of synthesis: move beyond analysing Connections between and among texts (question e of

reading task and Area of Study) Students’ responses to texts are supported by their

own composition of, and experimentation with, imaginative and other texts: not just imaginative writing for Section 2 and Section 3 of Paper One e.g. graphically represent understanding of discovery

Page 7: Discovery Area of Study. The Experience of Discovery for First Peoples (globally) How might this reflection shape the ways students and teachers see the

Key English concept: representation

Page 8: Discovery Area of Study. The Experience of Discovery for First Peoples (globally) How might this reflection shape the ways students and teachers see the

Rubric for Area of Study: Discovery

“This Area of Study requires students to explore the ways in which the concept of discovery is represented in and through texts.”

http://www.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/syllabus_hsc/pdf_doc/english-prescriptions-2015-20.pdf

NB: focuses on representation BEFORE it identifies the concept or subject matter

rebooting or re-emphasis of what is an Area of Study

Page 9: Discovery Area of Study. The Experience of Discovery for First Peoples (globally) How might this reflection shape the ways students and teachers see the

Reflections on the Discovery rubric

Key verb is explore: and points to adventurous learning and an individual process determined by student’s context and perspective

Explore: the text as a vehicle for discovery- not just a means to convey ideas about discovery

Key English concept: representation “in and through texts”: discovery through composing

and discovery through responding, not just text as a means for transmitting ideas, dynamic model of discovery

Page 10: Discovery Area of Study. The Experience of Discovery for First Peoples (globally) How might this reflection shape the ways students and teachers see the

Reflections on the Discovery rubric: modality

What is high modality? Students are “required”/

“must” “In their responses and

compositions, students examine, question, and reflect and speculate on”:

sense of possibility, individual inquiry and questioning

What is low modality? extensive repetition of

“can” and “may” lists of adjectives suggests possibility and

room for individual exploration by student, a less formulaic, mechanistic process of study

Page 11: Discovery Area of Study. The Experience of Discovery for First Peoples (globally) How might this reflection shape the ways students and teachers see the

Rubric for Area of Study: Discovery

“Students consider the ways composers may invite them to experience discovery through their texts and explore how the process of discovering is represented using a variety of language modes, forms and features.”

Note parallel to Belonging rubric: inclusion and exclusion from texts

active process of discovery and

engagement with texts

Page 12: Discovery Area of Study. The Experience of Discovery for First Peoples (globally) How might this reflection shape the ways students and teachers see the

The Impossible Hamster: animation from the new economics foundation

http://www.neweconomics.org/press/entry/economic-growth-no-longer-possible-for-rich-countries-says-new-research

http://www.impossiblehamster.org/

Page 13: Discovery Area of Study. The Experience of Discovery for First Peoples (globally) How might this reflection shape the ways students and teachers see the

Available for free on Youtube and Vimeo

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sqwd_u6HkMo

http://vimeo.com/

8947526

Page 14: Discovery Area of Study. The Experience of Discovery for First Peoples (globally) How might this reflection shape the ways students and teachers see the

Balancing the Prescriptions list with related texts:

contemporary Australian, British and US drama

contemporary poetry, particularly from Australia

contemporary short stories

graphic novels (particularly memoir)

television texts (short form, fiction and non fiction)

short film as opposed to feature film

gaming as text websites and social

media

Page 15: Discovery Area of Study. The Experience of Discovery for First Peoples (globally) How might this reflection shape the ways students and teachers see the

Imaginative writing is a “syllabus requirement”

Most students model narrative on the novel or the feature film (Disney animation model)- not the “short short fiction” that can be achieved in 40 mins allocated

Page 16: Discovery Area of Study. The Experience of Discovery for First Peoples (globally) How might this reflection shape the ways students and teachers see the

“Short short stories”

title limited number of

characters limited plot limited number of ideas

explored “explodes a moment” framed and deliberately

structured narrative

Stimulus:

opening line of a piece of imaginative writing about Discovery:

“Teach me a food of your country…”

Page 17: Discovery Area of Study. The Experience of Discovery for First Peoples (globally) How might this reflection shape the ways students and teachers see the

Discovery through The Disappearing

a free app based public poetry project from The Red Room Company that geo-locates hundreds of contemporary Australian poems to the place that inspired them

See the App stores for Apple and Android

http://redroomcompany.org/projects/disappearing/