Report from WAALC conference 2012

This year the theme of the annual Western Australian Adult Literacy (WAALC) Conference was At the heart of the matter – identity and trust in adult learning.  The intention was to place people – teachers and learners – at the heart of educational quality and ask the question: what makes learning work for people?

The WAALC Conference Committee chose to address  the factors that make the difference between accessible, effective literacy services, and those which, for adult literacy learners, just replicate what didn’t work well enough in the first place.

This theme opened up discussion about the human element, and how what happens during initial schooling almost always impacts on, and must be acknowledged and addressed in literacy learning.  Conference delegates focused on what learners have told us, and showed us, and proved to us over and over again – that understanding, trust and commitment between teacher and learner is central to successful adult literacy learning.  Sixteen workshops were delivered at the conference to explore and renew our focus on the heart of the matter: ways of working that meet the needs of learners and, as a natural result, achieve better outcomes for the wider society as well.

The keynote speakers were Ruth Wallace, from Charles Darwin University in the Northern Territory, and Susan Bates, recently returned to Western Australia from working in adult literacies in Scotland. Both provided practical advice about how identity and trust could be built to contribute towards literacy development, despite the conflicting demands on teachers and learners.

The response from adult literacy teachers across WA was brilliant, with wholehearted support for the opportunity to explore in depth what is At the heart of the matter – identity and trust in adult learning. 102 delegates attended the 2012 Conference over two days.  One delegate described the experience:

This year the theme was close to what I feel, what we often forget in the game of outcomes, certificates, reporting and paperwork – that at the heart of the matter we are dealing with human beings who are most often disempowered, and our role above all is to help them build confidence and empower them, help them to see and work from their own strength (Delegate, WAALC Conference 2012).

 

 

 

 

Certificate IV qualification for the delivery and assessment of foundation skills – update

Throughout June Innovation & Business Skills Australia (IBSA) conducted a consultation process to scope a proposed certificate IV qualification that would equip VET practitioners with the skills and knowledge to address the foundation skills needs of learners.

 Scoping process and findings

Targeted consultations were held in a number of locations and more than 50 written responses to the scoping discussion paper were received from individuals and organisations representing a wide range of stakeholders.

Key findings from the scoping process were:

  •  widespread acknowledgement of a gap in VET workforce capability, but little support for a new certificate IV qualification as an appropriate workforce development solution
  • many suggestions for a more narrowly focussed product, such as a skill set or qualification stream, to extend the skills and knowledge of vocational practitioners
  • questions about the fitness for purpose of the current TAE certificate IV and diploma qualifications in relation to equipping VET practitioners with the ability to address the foundation skills needs of their learners.

Recommendations for development

Findings from the scoping process were considered by IBSA’s National Project Reference Group (NPRG) at a meeting on 16 July 2012. After considering a number of options, the NPRG recommended that IBSA should:

  • develop a new skill set within the TAE10 Training Package comprising the existing units TAELLN401 and TAELLN501 and new units focused on sourcing specialist expertise and resources, working collaboratively with LLN specialists and effective instructional strategies for building foundation skills within a vocational training context. Units developed for the new skill set will be made available as electives in both the TAE40110 Certificate IV in Training and Assessment and the TAE50111 Diploma of VET providing a developmental pathway between the two qualifications.
  • continue to monitor the fitness for purpose of the TAE40110 and the TAE50111 to ensure that they meet the needs of the VET workforce. The NPRG noted that the structure of both of these qualifications will be changed in 2014 to move current LLN elective units into the core – TAELLN401 into the core of the TAE40110, and TAELLLN501 into the core of the TAE50111.

Development work on the new skill set will be conducted between August and November 2012.

Further information about the project will be added to the IBSA website as the project progresses.

Thanks to all the members of the WA Adult Literacy and Numeracy (ALaN) Network that contributed to this result. This was the most popular topic on the CGEA Network Google Group this year.

‘Literacy and Numeracy Studies’ free journal

Literacy and Numeracy Studies  is a free journal published by the University of Technology Sydney.

The  latest issue  Vol 20, No 1 (2012) includes:

  • Editorial – Keiko Yasukawa, Stephen Black
  • Developing Social Capital In ‘Learning Borderlands’: Has the Federal Government’s budget delivered for low-paid Australian workers? – Maree Keating
  • Health Literacy as a Complex Practice – Judy Hunter, Margaret Franken
  • Methadone, Counselling and Literacy: A health literacy partnership for Aboriginal clients – Stephen Black, Anne Ndaba, Christine Kerr, Brian Doyle
  • ‘Passivity’ or ‘Potential’?: Teacher responses to learner identity in the low-level ESL classroom – Sue Ollerhead
  • Book Review – Phonetics for Phonics by Ross Forman

You can subscribe to the journal here

Certificates in General Education for Adults Review

The Certificates in General Education for Adults are being reaccredited during 2012/2013. The reaccreditation will take into account any impact of the Foundation Skills Training Package, currently under development.

Phase 1 of the reaccreditation process focused on research and consultation with key stakeholders and was completed in June.

The project is now entering phase 2 which will involve the redevelopment of the curriculum. The reaccredited curriculum is scheduled for publication on the Training Support Network website in April 2013. A focus group was held in Melbourne on 9 August to consult on potential changes to the curriculum.

For more information contact the Curriculum Maintenance Manager (CMM) Service General Studies and Further Education at sicmm.generalstudies@vu.edu.au or by phone on 99195300/5302.

Watch the CGEA Network Google Group for opportunities to contribute to the Western Australian input.

LLNP Innovative and Research Project Funding round

The Department of Industry, Innovation, Science, Research and Tertiary Education (DIISRTE) through the Language, Literacy and Numeracy Program (LLNP) is seeking submissions for grant funding to undertake innovative pilots or demonstration models and/or research based projects that lead to an enhanced delivery of language, literacy and numeracy (LLN) training for adults.

If you are interested in increasing the English language, literacy and numeracy skills of adult Australians, have experience in the field of adult literacy, or would like to pilot projects that can be replicated and sustainable then your submission is welcome.

Submissions for the LLNP Innovative and Research Project funding close COB 31 August 2012.

2012 NSW ALNC Conference 10 December, 2012

Reading the digital word, to read the digital world?

2012 NSW Adult Literacy and Numeracy Council  (NSWALNC) Conference 10 December, 2012

The theme of the 2012 NSWALNC conference is: Reading the digital word, to read the digital world. The conference will work with a ‘twist’ of Paulo Freire’s idea of literacy – that we read the word in order to read the world we live in.  Conference participants will consider what this means in our contemporary context, as forms of reading have expanded dramatically with the introduction of new media and technologies. What has changed about literacy, what hasn’t? What does this mean for literacy teaching? (And of course,what does this mean for numeracy?)

The conference will feature keynote addresses by Professor Robyn Jorgensen on numeracy, and Helen De Silva Joyce on visual literacy.

For further information, email nswlanc@gmail.com

Reading during the International Year of Reading!

How better to celebrate the International Year of Reading than with something to read?

Pauline O’Maley, Victorian Adult Literacy and Basic Education Council (VALBEC) committee member and avid reader has been  posting articles about reading each month on the VALBEC website. This month’s offering is about multiliteracies.

Add your suggestions about things to read that are relevant to the Year of Reading in the comments section. 

 

Adult Learners’ Week 2012 – Short Story Competition

“It’s never too late … to learn to read” writing competition

$30,000 in prizes for Australian writers. Competition closed 6 August 2012

The National Year of Reading 2012, in partnership with the Tasmanian Writers’ Centre, has been given a grant by the Australian Government Department of Industry, Innovation, Science, Research and Tertiary Education, to run a writing competition as part of Adult Learners’ Week 2012 (ALW).

“It’s never too late… to learn to read” is a short story competition for unpublished, new, emerging and established Australian writers. For some, it will be the chance to tell their own stories; for others, it will be the opportunity to imagine the experiences of an adult learning to read. Our aim is for the creation of exciting, inspiring and challenging stories to support and encourage adult learning, and to highlight the fact that “it’s never too late… to learn to read”.

Published writers will have the opportunity to win a $3,000 cash prize for their work, and unpublished, emerging writers, $1,000. The judges will be looking for stories that excite, inspire and challenge audiences. Fourteen stories (8 from published authors, 6 from unpublished) will be chosen as winners, and these will be announced during The Reading Hour 2012

People’s Choice voting

There is an additional component to the competition this year – People’s Choice voting. Everyone can participate in Adult Learners’ Week by asking them to vote for a winning entry of their choice. This will be in addition to the judges’ voting. People’s Choice voting will launched at The Reading Hour 2012 on the 25 August 2012.

Why not get your students involved in deciding which story they think should win?

Project Based Learning for Youth – CGEA II or III

At Central Institute of Technology, Community Learning and Partnerships Portfolio, we have a growing group of young people who have disengaged from the school education system and joined us in the TAFE system to continue their education.

This cohort has challenged our staff to come up with ways of engaging these students, managing behavioural problems and focussing energy in a way to promote a positive learning experience.

Our students are aged between 14 and 18 with the average age of 15 years.  All students have left the school system for one of many reasons.  Some of these are:

  • Depression and anxiety (this group is the largest)
  • Family issues which have resulted in lost school time
  • Bullying (either as the bully or the bullied) and
  • Drug and alcohol issues (either their own or in their family)

Given the wide range of negative experiences these students have typically faced, we work hard to try to make their experience with us here at Central, a positive one.

Our programmes are learner focussed and learner led, based around projects the students identify as a group.  The focus is on positive involvement and the empowerment of the individual, encouraging each student to take responsibility for his or her own learning.

This is challenging our lecturers to come up with a range of engaging ways of deliver the curriculum.

One of the first of our project based learning activities was based around the “pop up” idea.  This involves creating a “pop up” whatever for a one off use.  Some examples of pop ups are a pop up restaurant, that appears, is set up, delivers a meal and then disappears again, a pop up market that creates a market place for a day and then disappears, a pop up concert etc.The first pop up one of our Youth classes undertook in Term 1 2012 was to organise and run an Easter Fair at a local kindergarten.

This project covered up the units listed below.

VBQU143 Implement & review a project

PUATEA001B Work in a team

VBQU152 Investigate and interpret measurements & related formula for everyday purposes (part)

VBQU153 Investigate, interpret and produce measurements & statistical information (part)

The project involved the students working through a number of steps over about six weeks to achieve the final outcome which was to run a two hour Easter Fair for 3 year olds at a local kindergarten.  These steps were:

  • Organising themselves into a project team, selecting and nominating roles of Project Manager, Finance Controller, Marketing Team and small Activity based teams.
  • Producing marketing materials including requests for donations towards a raffle to generate funds for the materials needed for the activities they were going to run at the kindergarten.
  • Organising and conducting a series of meetings with the Manager and Class teacher of the kindergarten to discuss and finalise dates, times, activities etc.
  • Researching costings and materials needed for activities
  • Managing donations and money as it came in to the project
  • Organising and running the raffle to raise funds
  • Purchasing the materials needed for the activities
  • Conducting risk analysis and contingency planning
  • Preparing the activities
  • Running the Easter Fair
  • Reflecting on the success of the fair and each individual student’s input to the project.

The process of the project was the most important part, as it was through each of the steps listed above that the lecturers covered off the competencies around which the project had been built.  The students understood the process and were active participants not only in the learning process but also in the assessment process.  This was done through using self reflection and peer assessment and feedback techniques, as well as the lecturer’s assessment methods and tools.

The six weeks were fairly intensive work for the students because in the process we were dealing with team work activities and skills development, maths skills development and guidance, project based work requirements etc.

In order to model some of the process, our lecturers used clips from “The Australian Apprentice”.  The students really clicked with this and could see how various skills were useful and implemented before they had to replicate them in their project.

The day of the Fair there was both excitement and nervousness in the air, but the overall feeling was confidence and control.  It was great to see and to be involved.  The students ran a number of fun activities including face painting, biscuit decorating, Easter Basket decorating and Bunny ears making!!The students loved both the process, the feeling of empowerment they felt in carrying the project, and the final Fair.  The children at the Kindergarten loved the afternoon too.  All in all, the project was interesting and engaging and a pretty seamless way of clustering a group of units together for this target group of students.

The beauty of it is that you can use various units at both Cert II and Cert III level when working with project based learning.  We have tried to ensure that from planning and choosing the project (sometimes with our guidance of course!) through to cleaning up afterwards and reflecting on the successes, difficulties and changes they would make, all was in the hands of the students.

It took a lot of work by our lecturers, both before the term began in planning and preparing assessment tools, mapping tools to ensure all elements, performance criteria, etc were covered, and then in guiding students through the project steps.  It also took a lot of effort by the lecturers to work together for a common final outcome.  All in all it was a great project –  one we will repeat.

Our other teams worked on other projects and I am happy to write on some of them at another time.

If you wish to know further details about how we went about specific parts of the process I am happy to answer questions through the Google Groups CGEA Network.

Sue Brennan

 

CGEA Curriculum changes

CGEA review

CGEA accreditation expires at the end of 2012.  We are now awaiting the results of course concept proposal.

CGEA Version 4 Implementation July

The Adult Literacy and Numeracy Network in WA will hold webinars via Elluminate to share implementation issues in first week of July. There will be an updated assessment overview by that time to allow easy comparison of units in the same stream, including all changes to elements highlighted down to performance criteria level.

This Version change affects the numeracy and Mathematics stream most.

Download the new version from the Training Support Network in Victoria.

WA Implementation

The new Numeracy and Maths Units have now been assigned WA subject index numbers (SIN) and the new course structures are now available on VETinfoNet

Transition

Students enrolled before July 1 2012 are able to complete the numeracy units in which they are enrolled. However RTOs are encouraged to make the revised numeracy units available to students prior to July 1 2012. Students enrolled on or after July 1 2012 must complete the revised numeracy units.

Please comment here as you decide how to respond to changes in this revised curriculum.