Unit rationale, description and aim
For primary school teachers, planning and delivering interdisciplinary teaching and learning is both common and complex. This unit builds upon the first interdisciplinary curriculum unit in this course, to expand specific knowledge across the curriculum areas of Humanities and Social Sciences, Health and Physical Education, Arts Education and Technologies in upper primary years (3-6) and develop a comprehensive understanding of a range of theories and approaches for integrating curriculum into planning, teaching, and assessment. Pre-service teachers investigate, synthesise and apply multiple aspects of interdisciplinary curriculum, pedagogy and assessment into the development and teaching of units. As part of an employment-based course, this unit emphasises teaching, learning and assessment that is informed by and applied to pre-service teachers’ unique professional experiences. Leveraging professional context and experience, pre-service teachers expand upon the previous units’ emphasis on professional learning through peer coaching to emphasise additional models and approaches of professional engagement, including collaborative planning and teaching, as a means of fostering improvement in teaching and learning. The overall aim of this unit, building on its precursor, to develop a thorough understanding curriculum, pedagogy and assessment practices across multiple learning areas through the full range of primary year levels, to enable participates to utilise multiple approaches to integrating curriculum into cohesive, effective, and relevant teaching and learning experiences for primary-aged students, and to support pre-service teachers to have the knowledge, skills, and dispositions to effectively engage professionally to support effective integrated curriculum in primary schools.
Campus offering
No unit offerings are currently available for this unitLearning outcomes
To successfully complete this unit you will be able to demonstrate you have achieved the learning outcomes (LO) detailed in the below table.
Each outcome is informed by a number of graduate capabilities (GC) to ensure your work in this, and every unit, is part of a larger goal of graduating from ACU with the attributes of insight, empathy, imagination and impact.
Explore the graduate capabilities.
Investigate, synthesise, develop and evaluate peda...
Learning Outcome 01
Research, evaluate and critically analyse a range ...
Learning Outcome 02
Design, implement and critically evaluate learning...
Learning Outcome 03
Critically reflect on professional engagement with...
Learning Outcome 04
Content
Topics will include:
- the nature of pedagogical practice and role of the teacher in structuring learning in the arts, humanities, physical education and health in the classroom, with particular emphasis on grades 3-6
- theoretical underpinnings of integrated curriculum and multiple models of interdisciplinary planning, teaching, and assessment including problem/project-based, negotiated curriculum, service learning, parallel disciplines, fusion
- the exploration of culture and how it connects with art, physical movement, health, and technology. systems with a focus on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures and expressions.
- teaching strategies that explore and acknowledge curriculum areas from diverse linguistic, cultural, religious and socio-economic perspectives and contexts.
- identification of a range of resources, including ICT, that can be used to enhance teaching and foster student learning across the curriculum.
- the skills, values, attitudes and behaviours central to living as members of society such as cultural and social literacy
- indigenous perspectives about the past, present and future & Indigenous peoples and cultures and notions of shared histories
- ICT rich and partnering pedagogies across curriculum areas
- mental Health and wellbeing, drawing upon culture and community-based resources.
- exploring the importance of Food and nutrition (FN), Health benefits of physical activity (HBPA), Active play and minor games (AP), Challenge and adventure activities (CA), Fundamental movement skills (FMS), Games and sports (GS), Lifelong physical activities (LLPA).
- the Australian Curriculum, including the general capabilities, and programming issues – lesson planning, sequencing of activities, units of work, assessment and evaluation, integration of cross curriculum perspectives.
Assessment strategy and rationale
A range of assessment procedures are used to meet the unit learning outcomes and develop graduate attributes and professional standards and criteria consistent with University assessment requirements. (https://policies.acu.edu.au/student_policies/assessment_policy_and_assessment_procedures)
The assessment tasks and their weightings allow pre-service teachers to progressively demonstrate achievement against the course learning outcomes by demonstrating academic and professional standards. This unit will focus on developing understanding of, and skills across the professional knowledge, practice and engagement needed to meet expectations of the Graduate Attributes and the APST: Graduate level. The first assessment task establishes and demonstrates the theoretical and practical knowledge of multidisciplinary curriculum as well as multiple interdisciplinary approaches for planning and delivering curriculum learning outcomes. With this knowledge, the second task requires a shift towards adapting and applying this knowledge in the professional context of planning and teaching in their school context, additionally drawing upon enhanced knowledge of the multiple areas of curriculum, pedagogy, and assessment specified in the unit. The final assessment task provides a cumulative opportunity for pre-service teachers to identify, create, evaluate and reflect upon the use of a range of resources that reflect their diverse knowledge across multiple curricular areas as well as expertise in interdisciplinary teaching and learning, with an emphasis on undertaking, evidencing and critically reflecting on professional engagement.
Overview of assessments
Assessment Task 1 Report or Presentation on Inte...
Assessment Task 1
Report or Presentation on Interdisciplinary Approaches
Provide a presentation or report that examines multiple theories and approaches to integrating curriculum, including addressing general capabilities for learners. The presentation should compare and contrast at least three approaches, one of which must be inquiry-based.
30%
Assessment Task 2 Development of an Interdiscipl...
Assessment Task 2
Development of an Interdisciplinary Unit
Students may choose to either revise and expand upon the unit of study designed for the first interdisciplinary unit or develop a new unit of study that builds upon learning outcomes from the unit designed for the interdisciplinary unit. The unit must:
a) Address learning outcomes across all of the following curriculum areas: social studies/humanities, the arts, health and physical education, and technologies.
b) be relevant and applicable to learners and curriculum standards that fall within the later years of primary schooling (Years 3 –
c) Incorporate digital resources
d) Include at least two annotated lesson plans and supporting resources from the unit.
e) Incorporate and analyse the use of multiple theories and approaches to curriculum integration.
40%
Assessment Task 3 Resource Portfolio (CTITE 5) ...
Assessment Task 3
Resource Portfolio (CTITE 5)
Identify, create, and evaluate a set of high-quality resources that support effective interdisciplinary teaching and learning across the following curriculum areas: social studies/humanities, the arts, health and physical education, and technologies. Critically reflect on the use of these resources in past, present, or future professional experience, discussing engagement with professional networks and/or communities and implications for future teaching and professional development.
30%
Learning and teaching strategy and rationale
The learning and teaching strategies in this unit include (1) lectures which may be delivered as online workshops to encourage active learning and high level of engagement, (2) tutorials to consolidate learning content and apply knowledge in problem solving tasks and develop analytical and evaluating skills and possible independent online learning tasks to develop GA7. The learning and teaching strategy is based on a Constructivist approach in a sociocultural context and aligns strongly with the employment-based model of the overall course. Professional experience thus sits at the centre of this unit and forms the basis for application of new knowledge within the unit as well as critical reflection and evaluation, informed by attempts to situate theory and practice within authentic contexts.
Pre-service teachers in this unit will first build upon prior knowledge acquired from the first interdisciplinary curriculum unit, in order to develop an enhanced understanding across specified areas of curriculum, pedagogy, and assessment particularly relevant to students in the upper primary years of schooling (3-6.) They will simultaneously build upon their existing understanding of inquiry-based learning as a key approach to integrating curriculum by exploring a range of additional new theoretical and practical models and approaches for integrating curriculum. They will have the opportunity to reflect and act upon prior experiences within their professional experience to integrate curriculum and apply their ongoing teaching and learning within the unit towards their own classrooms, with a focus on developing an evidence-informed, balanced repertoire of additional approaches and strategies for integrating curriculum along with the tools for evaluating teaching and learning in these particular aspects of their programming. As pre-service teachers progress through the unit, the emphasis shifts towards professional engagement as a key mechanism for improving teacher knowledge, skills, and dispositions in service of enhanced interdisciplinary teaching and learning. This is a 10-credit point unit and has been designed to ensure that the time needed to complete the required volume of learning to the requisite standard is approximately 150 hours in total across the semester.
AUSTRALIAN PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS FOR TEACHERS - GRADUATE LEVEL
On successful completion of this unit, pre-service teachers should be able to: