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Adelaide, 9 February 2016 Remote Education Systems project A Red Dirt Journey

A Red Dirt Journey

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Page 1: A Red Dirt Journey

Adelaide, 9 February 2016

Remote Education Systems project

A Red Dirt Journey

Page 2: A Red Dirt Journey

Welcome And Acknowledgements

2

Page 3: A Red Dirt Journey

CRC-REP Remote Education Systems project

3

Page 4: A Red Dirt Journey

The Red Dirt Thinking Journey

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Page 5: A Red Dirt Journey

10 Key Findings

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Document source All sources

All coding references*

Remote Aboriginal

references*Number of

unique participants

Interviews and focus groups 45 2501 523 250

Field notes and observations 12 111 0 0

Secondary sources/reports created by or for RES 10 856 603 ~800†

Butchers papers and whiteboards 20 197 0 0

Total 87 3665 1126

Page 6: A Red Dirt Journey

Finding #1 Remote Indigenous Disadvantage

• A metro-centric construct not supported by those living in remote communities

6

0.0%

0.5%

1.0%

1.5%

2.0%

2.5%

3.0%

3.5%

References to ‘disadvantage’

System responses:reconciliation, equity,race and aboriginality

System responses:poverty and socio-economic status

Cross-cutting theme:context and complexity

Teaching to success:health and well being

PER

CENT

OF

ALL

RESP

ONS

ES

EQUITY ITEMS

Remote Aboriginal references* Non-remote responses

Page 7: A Red Dirt Journey

Finding #2 The No Jobs Myth

• There are ‘jobs aplenty’ in remote parts of Australia.

7

16395

236

27411

-561

1729

8780

-5000

0

5000

10000

15000

20000

25000

30000

Employed Unemployed Total population

27Changes in employment ges in e2006

n e0606-

mploymn e66-2011

Non-Indigenous Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander

Page 8: A Red Dirt Journey

Finding #3 Simple Solutions For Complex Contexts

• There are no quick fixes.

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0.0

10.0

20.0

30.0

40.0

50.0

60.0

70.0

80.0

R1 R2 (blank)

SCHO

OL

ATTE

NDAN

CE R

ATE

RSAS ROUND 1 AND 2, AND NON-RSAS SCHOOLS

20082009201020112012201320142015

Page 9: A Red Dirt Journey

Finding #4 What Is Education For?

• Education should support local aspirations for culture, land, language and identity.

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Language, land and culture

Identity

Strong in both worlds

Employment and economic participation

Meaningful engagement in the world

Community leadership and participation

Learning

Choice and opportunity

HolisticFurther learning and skills Socialisation to schooling

Other

Page 10: A Red Dirt Journey

Finding #5 Successful Remote Schools

• Success is first about parent and community involvement in school.

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Parent involvement and role models in child's

education, 63

Academic outcomes, 42

Community engagement, 27

Attendance, 22Learning outside school, 21

Children choose to engage, 20

Place and space, 17

First language literacy, 14

Meeting student needs, 13

Post school transition, 13

Governance and decision making, 12

Strong, 10

Other, 21

Page 11: A Red Dirt Journey

Finding #6 Qualities, Not Quality

Specific teaching context & Frameworks and Standards • Local Standards - relational• AITSL Teacher Standards, Assistant teacher standards• Cultural competency frameworks

Adapt and implement responsive curriculum• System support

Expertise in teaching, monitoring and assessing English language learning • in specific TESOL/Multilingual learning setting• ATESOL Elaborations of the AITSL Standards

# Teaching in very remote schools is a specialist field, requiring specialist qualities

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Page 12: A Red Dirt Journey

Finding #7 Local Staff Matter

• Schools with higher proportions of non-teaching staff get better results.

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62

64

66

68

70

72

74

76

78

80

0-.5 (n=512) .51-1 (n=266) 1.01-1.5(n=177)

1.51-2 (n=92) 2.01-2.5 (n=22) >2.5 (n=35)

AVER

AGE

PERC

ENTA

GE

SCHO

OL

ATTE

NDAN

CE R

ATE

RATIO OF NON-TEACHING TO TEACHING STAFF

Page 13: A Red Dirt Journey

Finding #8 Boarding Schools

# There is too much we do not know about the effectiveness & impact of boarding for very remote students, their families and communities

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Policy promoting boarding school at Federal, State/Territory levels

• Non-Government-Government partnerships, eg. Australian Indigenous Education Foundation, Yalari, Future Footprints

Anecdotal and derivative data indicate low success of boarding for very remote students, identifies specific issues. Overall,

• No easily available quantitative data • Little empirical research• Growing qualitative research• Development of good practice guidelines to support to enhance

options and opportunities

Page 14: A Red Dirt Journey

Finding #9 Money Matters

• Schools with more resources get better outcomes.

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0

10000

20000

30000

40000

50000

60000

70000

AVER

AGE

RECU

RREN

T IN

COM

E ($

) PER

ST

UDEN

T

SCHOOL ATTENDANCE PERCENTAGE

Page 15: A Red Dirt Journey

Finding #10 Engagement For What?

1. Success, as defined by communities is parents and communities involved in education (‘close and constant voices’)

2. If we take community view seriously, community involvement/power/ownership will be a priority

3. The type of engagement matters: ‘Targeted’ engagement will be unsustainable. (Tjukurpa nganngi-tjara)

4. Create opportunity structures for participatory involvement: governance, local staff, engagement accountability

*‘Power-sensitive’ (Haraway 2004), Incorporating the ‘assets’ (Moll et al. 1992) of the students’ families and communities

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Page 16: A Red Dirt Journey

Strategies For Improved Outcomes

ResourcingEmploy, train and develop local workforceInvest in teacher qualities that matterEstablish local governance structuresExplicit pathways through school to economic participationUnderstand the full impact of boarding options AND provide quality secondary options

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Page 17: A Red Dirt Journey

Concluding Remarks And Thanks

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Page 18: A Red Dirt Journey

More About RES

http://crc-rep.com/remote-education-systems

John Guenther0412 125 [email protected]

Samantha Disbray0437 330 [email protected]

Sam Osborne0408 719 [email protected]

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