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Whose History? aims to illustrate how historical novels and their related genres may be used as an engaging teacher/learning strategy for student teachers in pre-service teacher education courses. It does not argue all teaching of History curriculum in pre-service units should be based on the use of historical novels as a stimulus, nor does it argue for a particular percentage of the use of historical novels in such courses. It simply seeks to argue the case for this particular approach, leaving the extent of the use of historical novels used in History curriculum units to the professional expertise of the lecturers responsible for the units.
historical literacy --- alternate histories --- australia --- student teacher education --- school curriculum --- historicity --- historical narratives --- grant rodwell --- history --- student engagement --- counterfactual histories --- historical fiction --- student teachers --- historical agency --- australian history --- compulsory history --- time-slip novels --- education --- pedagogigal dimensions
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Universities are social universes in their own right. They are the site of multiple, complex and diverse social relations, identities, communities, knowledges and practices. At the heart of this book are people enrolling at university for the first time and entering into the broad variety of social relations and contexts entailed in their ‘coming to know’ at, of and through university. By recasting ‘the transition to university’ as simultaneously and necessarily entailing a transition of university — indeed universities — and of their many and varied constitutive relations, structures and practices, the contributors to this book seek to reconceptualise the ‘first-year experience’ in terms of multiple and dynamic processes of dialogue and exchange amongst all participants. They interrogate taken-for-granted understandings of what ‘the university’ is, and consider what universities might yet become.
universities in transition --- transformations on campus --- jade mckay --- the university of adelaide student learning hub: a case study --- university transitions in practice: research-learning, fields and their communities of practice --- bradley review --- reconceptualising: transition and universities --- changing social relations in higher education: the first-year international student and the ‘chinese learner’ in australia --- transition to university --- dee michel --- stephen parker --- marcia devlin --- kendra backstrom --- heather brook --- revaluing: ‘non-traditional’ student groups in higher education classism on campus? --- first year experience --- exploring and extending understandings of social class in the contemporary higher education debate --- realising --- relating experiences: regional and remote students in their first year at university --- trevor gale --- of education co-creation --- deane fergie --- knowing students --- pascale quester --- reframing ‘the problem’: students from low socio-economic status backgrounds transitioning
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