Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1015739 | Futures | 2012 | 10 Pages |
There is much rhetoric in education about the ways in which students are prepared for ‘the future’. The notion of the future in Australian education is dominantly singular, vague and abstract. This paper describes research which investigates changes which occur within teacher practices, enacted curriculum and student learning. The case study at the centre of this research focuses on a primary school south-east of Melbourne, Australia, which is internationally acknowledged as ‘innovative and leading’ in ‘educating for the future’. Initially, it was apparent that this notion of the future was assumed, and these specific teachers had given little thought to what that future looked like, or how that related to students’ learning requirements. As a result of professional learning, the teachers underwent temporal transformation, in integrating explicit futures dimensions within their curriculum. Arising from this research were significant key findings which highlight the need for a reconceptualisation of the ways in which curriculum and pedagogy are enacted in regards to notions of multiple futures. Furthermore, it generates renewed calls for futures perspectives to be addressed explicitly within education. Importantly it highlights a deficit in current teacher thinking about their roles in ‘educating for the future’.
► The notion of the future in Australian education is dominantly singular and abstract. ► Futures in the school curriculum is either implicitly and explicitly articulated. ► Teachers do not make connections between futures and day-to-day classroom practices ► Increased FTP transforms teacher practices, enacted curriculum and student learning. ► Teachers must offer open-ended, relevant and temporally-inclusive learning experiences.