Teacher education for rural communities : A focus on ‘incentives’
In Australia we face a national crisis in attracting and retaining teachers and other professionals with regard to rural areas. In response to this difficulty in ‘staffing the empty schoolhouse’ (Roberts 2004), the majority of state education departments have initiated some form of rural incentive s...
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Format: | Conference Object |
Language: | unknown |
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Australian Teacher Education Association
2008
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Online Access: | http://researchonline.federation.edu.au/vital/access/HandleResolver/1959.17/42527 |
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author | White, Simone Green, Bill Reid, Joanne Lock, Graeme Hastings, Wendy Cooper, Maxine |
author_facet | White, Simone Green, Bill Reid, Joanne Lock, Graeme Hastings, Wendy Cooper, Maxine |
author_sort | White, Simone |
collection | Federation University Australia: Federation ResearchOnline |
description | In Australia we face a national crisis in attracting and retaining teachers and other professionals with regard to rural areas. In response to this difficulty in ‘staffing the empty schoolhouse’ (Roberts 2004), the majority of state education departments have initiated some form of rural incentive scheme designed to attract teachers to rural schools. This paper argues that such schemes have little chance of success unless teachers taking up such incentives have actually been prepared for teaching in nonmetropolitan schools. Although many universities claim to prioritise rural and regional education and community development as part of their vision statements, in reality relatively few education providers reflect this rhetoric in their practice and only a handful have made direct links to such state-based schemes in pre-service teacher education, or initiated their own rural incentives. A preliminary study into pre-service preparation and rural incentive schemes, as part of a three-year ARC Discovery Grant, indicates that, nationally, the majority of Faculties and Schools of Education have no easily accessible or advertised incentive programs to encourage students to undertake a rural practicum. Nor do many reflect rural education in their course-work. This paper will introduce the ‘TERRAnova’ project, and then discuss findings of the preliminary work to date that has focussed on identifying incentives and their significance. Drawing on evidence collected from websites from Australian Universities representing all pre-service teacher education programs in the nation, we argue that few Faculties and Schools appear to see it necessary or desirable to provide students with links to information about particular state-based rural funding opportunities. We show how some, either directly or indirectly, imply the importance of a rural practicum, and that a few teacher education programs provide written advice to students who are considering taking up a rural practicum. It is unclear, however, whether follow-up advice is ... |
format | Conference Object |
genre | Terranova |
genre_facet | Terranova |
id | ftfederationuniv:vital:2593 |
institution | Open Polar |
language | unknown |
op_collection_id | ftfederationuniv |
op_relation | Paper presented at 2008 Australian Teacher Education Association National Conference: Teacher Educators at Work: What works and where is the evidence?, Novotel Twin Waters, Sunshine Coast, Queensland : 8th-11th July 2008 p. 381-390 http://researchonline.federation.edu.au/vital/access/HandleResolver/1959.17/42527 vital:2593 ISBN 0 9775685 1 2 |
op_rights | Open Access Copyright ATEA This metadata is freely available under a CCO license |
publishDate | 2008 |
publisher | Australian Teacher Education Association |
record_format | openpolar |
spelling | ftfederationuniv:vital:2593 2025-05-04T14:38:06+00:00 Teacher education for rural communities : A focus on ‘incentives’ White, Simone Green, Bill Reid, Joanne Lock, Graeme Hastings, Wendy Cooper, Maxine 2008 http://researchonline.federation.edu.au/vital/access/HandleResolver/1959.17/42527 unknown Australian Teacher Education Association Paper presented at 2008 Australian Teacher Education Association National Conference: Teacher Educators at Work: What works and where is the evidence?, Novotel Twin Waters, Sunshine Coast, Queensland : 8th-11th July 2008 p. 381-390 http://researchonline.federation.edu.au/vital/access/HandleResolver/1959.17/42527 vital:2593 ISBN 0 9775685 1 2 Open Access Copyright ATEA This metadata is freely available under a CCO license Teacher education Rural education Professional experience Incentives Conference paper 2008 ftfederationuniv 2025-04-10T03:37:06Z In Australia we face a national crisis in attracting and retaining teachers and other professionals with regard to rural areas. In response to this difficulty in ‘staffing the empty schoolhouse’ (Roberts 2004), the majority of state education departments have initiated some form of rural incentive scheme designed to attract teachers to rural schools. This paper argues that such schemes have little chance of success unless teachers taking up such incentives have actually been prepared for teaching in nonmetropolitan schools. Although many universities claim to prioritise rural and regional education and community development as part of their vision statements, in reality relatively few education providers reflect this rhetoric in their practice and only a handful have made direct links to such state-based schemes in pre-service teacher education, or initiated their own rural incentives. A preliminary study into pre-service preparation and rural incentive schemes, as part of a three-year ARC Discovery Grant, indicates that, nationally, the majority of Faculties and Schools of Education have no easily accessible or advertised incentive programs to encourage students to undertake a rural practicum. Nor do many reflect rural education in their course-work. This paper will introduce the ‘TERRAnova’ project, and then discuss findings of the preliminary work to date that has focussed on identifying incentives and their significance. Drawing on evidence collected from websites from Australian Universities representing all pre-service teacher education programs in the nation, we argue that few Faculties and Schools appear to see it necessary or desirable to provide students with links to information about particular state-based rural funding opportunities. We show how some, either directly or indirectly, imply the importance of a rural practicum, and that a few teacher education programs provide written advice to students who are considering taking up a rural practicum. It is unclear, however, whether follow-up advice is ... Conference Object Terranova Federation University Australia: Federation ResearchOnline |
spellingShingle | Teacher education Rural education Professional experience Incentives White, Simone Green, Bill Reid, Joanne Lock, Graeme Hastings, Wendy Cooper, Maxine Teacher education for rural communities : A focus on ‘incentives’ |
title | Teacher education for rural communities : A focus on ‘incentives’ |
title_full | Teacher education for rural communities : A focus on ‘incentives’ |
title_fullStr | Teacher education for rural communities : A focus on ‘incentives’ |
title_full_unstemmed | Teacher education for rural communities : A focus on ‘incentives’ |
title_short | Teacher education for rural communities : A focus on ‘incentives’ |
title_sort | teacher education for rural communities : a focus on ‘incentives’ |
topic | Teacher education Rural education Professional experience Incentives |
topic_facet | Teacher education Rural education Professional experience Incentives |
url | http://researchonline.federation.edu.au/vital/access/HandleResolver/1959.17/42527 |