For week 8 of #TeacherTuesday we are in New South Wales, Australia. This is now where I live, along the northern coast area, just below the Queensland border, below Brisbane - see the map below. In physical terms the school featured this week is relatively close to where I live - see the red marker on the map for the school location.
The teacher is Russell, and the school, Ross Hill Public School, is in
Inverell in the northwest. It is
a New South Wales country town. It has a population of about 680
students from kindergarten to year 6. 5 – 12/13 year olds.
Out of the 680 students there are 125 Aboriginal students. The school is situated on Traditional Aboriginal land and this is acknowledged at all school functions and meetings. Russell is Gamilori (Aboriginal) person as well. Out of the 30 teachers, there are 4 Aboriginal teachers and also 2 Aboriginal education officers at the school as well.
Russell teaches Grade 6. He describes his school and students:
At my school they are all English speaking and we currently
we have a new curriculum coming which should have Indigenous language in it
which means we’ll have to teach it to our kids at school. Last year I had one
boy in my class who could speak five languages. But we predominantly teach in
English.
We have 18% Aboriginal
students at our school.
Poverty draws a line in the sand. You’re on one side or the
other. It’s hard. That’s why I don’t set homework on a computer as I know some
still don’t have computers at home, and that’s disadvantaging them. I accept it
on a piece of paper. I don’t mind how it comes back as long as it comes back!
Aboriginal kids don’t
necessarily live in more poverty than Non-Aboriginal kids. It depends where you
live I think. These all tie into what the union was fighting for – an education
review to get all schools to be funded to the minimum level with extras added
on for low socio economic kids, children with disabilities, Aboriginal
children. That’s started and is being built into our schools at the moment. The
battle’s still going though. The money doesn’t always come. It’s supposed to be
over a six year period. I am actively involved in lobbying for this. I am an
Aboriginal Councilor on the New South Wales Teachers Federation. It was the
biggest educational review we’ve had for an age.
A lot of the class sizes are big – kindergarten should be 20
students - it’s big! You learn not to sit down! You don’t have a chance to sit
down! And as they get older, the classes go up. I can have up to 35 kids in my
classroom.
So you need teaching aids – specialized teachers
who can take a group of kids to give them a boost in literacy or mathematics.
About Aboriginal people he shares:
The challenges Aboriginal people face are still there today
and we need to recognize these as a whole society, we as a people are still
not recognized in or own constitution as the first peoples of this country.
When I was at school it was sometimes difficult going to
school with non-aboriginal people as if I was in a classroom and someone didn’t
want to sit next to me, I could be asked to move place. That was in the 70s. Now,
some of those Aboriginal children have children of their own and in their
mindset, education tormented them, so it’s hard for us to get these parents
into school.
Some aren’t exposed to the written form of English before
they go to school – books and that sort of thing. They hear the spoken language
but they’re three steps behind before they start. They’re playing catch up from
day one.
Some Aboriginal children don’t go to preschools. I’d say
you’d be lucky if 50% of your Aboriginal children had been to preschool.
A lot has changed over the past couple of years a lot of the
teachers have changed even. Their attitudes have changed. A lot of teachers
still find it hard to teach Indigenous children
in the classroom. Not because they don’t know what to teach, it’s that they’re
afraid to do the wrong thing – to teach something incorrectly when it comes to
the Aboriginal perspective on something. They’re nervous. They want to do the
right thing but they don’t want to offend someone. If they describe a country
or a land and name it wrongly or the history of the country, for example. When
it comes up in the media it’s actually really hard in the classroom. Because
the kids know the media half the time faster than I do. They’re linked into
everything! So as a teacher we need to keep up with all events and technology.
A lot of Aboriginal
students don’t even finish high school. They get side tracked. I was the first
person in my family ever to do a university degree. In my state, you cannot
leave high school until you are 17 years old and you have to have a job or
apprenticeship if you’re going to leave before then. They’ve upped that age
limit from 16 years. And the high school syllabus has changed to incorporate
trades in it and stuff. High school 2 days, tech school for 2 days and work for
one day. So they’re working and training while finishing their schooling. Quite
a good move.
About teaching he says:
The way it works for teachers is if you work in certain places
you build up points and the more points you get it puts you higher up the
transfer ladder so when you teach at the more remote schools you get 8 points
per year, compared to 1 point on the coast, so it’s worth 8 years for a job on
the coast! You can get a rent subsidy in some western areas. There’s an
imaginary line so if you’re on one side of that you get an extra week’s holiday
because of the heat too!
A lot of the western schools have a lot of beginner teachers.
A lot of teachers come out here because of the incentives but leave after three
years, some not all. They come straight from uni. After the 3 years out here
they go to teach on the coast instead and live and retire there for the rest of
their lives! So there’s a high turn around in these areas.
In my last school I was there for three years and had done
relieving work before then, and I was the third longest serving teacher in the
school. There’s such a high turnover so the kids don’t learn to trust you. It takes
at least 12 months for them to trust you.
There are scholarships now as well so you have to agree to
stay for 3 to 5 years or give back your scholarship money.
I wanted to be a teacher when I was at school
because I wanted to prove people wrong and show I could do it. It took me a
long time. I was accepted into university but turned it down. I was a lifeguard
for 16 years. Then I was a teacher. I’m in my seventh year now. I should have
done it 15 years ago. I love it! When I was doing my lifeguarding stuff I was
still doing stuff for schools – teaching swimming and first aid. Still involved
but not a classroom teacher.
Aboriginal education is compulsory in teacher training, but
we can chose electives which are special interests. I choose a couple of Indigenous
ones there. I did a double weighted project to raise literacy standards of Indigenous
boys in a small coastal town in New South Wales. It was confrontational as I pulled apart the
syllabus to say that I didn’t think it was working for those kids – they were
falling further and further behind because what was being taught wasn’t interesting
to them. The syllabus didn’t suit their needs. It was too regimented. These
boys were more creative, not just mind wise. I got them to learn English
through drama and role plays. They got up and acted it out as they didn’t like
to be still. The new syllabus has better cultural references in it I’m pleased
to say. It has compulsory Aboriginal perspectives in it. You don’t have to
write in words, you can write in paintings now, for example. I’ve had my
students pull a story apart about the drought of the basin – a big river system
here – and I got them to paint it with Indigenous symbols rather than write it.
They’re using a lot of terminology out of there.
We have to teach music as part of our syllabus so I try to
teach a mixture of indigenous music woven into rap music. As an example I use a
didgeridoo artist that plays rap through a didgeridoo! I interweave Aboriginal with
modern, and I do that with dance as well, incorporating both. It is important
that our children don’t lose their cultural heritage.
A recent UNSECO report highlights the learning gaps that persist between indigenous and non-indigenous students.
On a more global basis, this graph from UNESCO highlights the learning disparities. A recent factsheet from UNESCO tells us:
"The difficulty indigenous children face is one reason for the wide gaps in learning between rich and poor students in Australia and New Zealand. Though these gaps are clearly visible in student assessments, they have not received sufficient policy attention, and so have persisted for a decade and a half. In Australia, around two-thirds of indigenous students achieved the minimum benchmark in mathematics in grade 8 between 1994/95 and 2011, compared with almost 90% of their non-indigenous peer"
Russell shares a real account of issues confronting education in Australia:
- Equality of education for rural students and indigenous students compared with urban and coastal areas
- Access to resources - and how schools that have a lower socioeconomic clientele need more teaching resources - human and physical
- Access to technology - similar to resources - but there are serious inequalities regarding access to online resources through inadequate levels of Internet access across Australia
- Teacher training - The need to include indigenous subjects and raise awareness.
Providing incentived for indigienous teachers is also essential - Teacher incentives - as mentioned in past #TeacherTuesday posts, providing incentives for teachers to be in a rural area, and to feel comfortable teaching there, is a challenge. Russell is teaching in his 'home territory' therefore feels comfortable. Many teachers in Australia will not, unless forced, teach in the country - a familiar story in many countries.
- What to teach! We have the Australian Curriculum being implemented from Foundation to Grade 12. This is a major step in helping to unify the country (a state-based education system also engenders inequality) and provide a common core curriculum. It also focuses on the capabilities of 'Intercultural Understanding' and 'Information and Communication Technology'. However Russell shares essential objectives to integrate different cultures into how and what you teach, taking a broader rather than a narrower approach.
One of the most powerful statements by Russell,
"Aboriginal kids don’t necessarily live in more poverty than Non-Aboriginal kids."
"Aboriginal kids don’t necessarily live in more poverty than Non-Aboriginal kids."
reminds us that we need positive action not only for indigenous students, but also for all students across Australia who are living in poverty and statistically are not achieveing as well.
This blog post is a contribution to Week 8 of #TeacherTuesday, a UNESCO and EFA initiative.
I invite you to also read from my blog:
- Week 7 - Bangladesh: Learning on water with solar powered technology
- Week 6 - The Netherlands: Teacher preparation means higher learning outcomes
- Week 5 - Kenya: Working to break the poverty-education cycle
- Week 4 - Syria: Displaced learners in Zaatari refugee camp
- Week 3 - Afghanistan: An issue of Gender Equity the World Should Take Notice
- Week 2 - Honduras: Teach Students in the Language of their thoughts
- Week 1 - Malawi: The Struggle for Literacy
- #TeacherTuesday - background information
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