Introduction

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Publicado en:Australian Journal of English Education vol. 59, no. 2 (2024), p. 62-67
Autor principal: Anonymous
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Australian Association for the Teaching of English
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100 1 |a Anonymous 
245 1 |a Introduction 
260 |b Australian Association for the Teaching of English  |c 2024 
513 |a General Information 
520 3 |a Among other things, Applebee noted that there was "a need to reconceptualise the "literary heritage" and its implications for patterns of teaching'; that any such rethinking had to involve "prior assumptions about the nature and purpose of education'; and that a proper relation between learning about literature and acquiring certain communicative skills, such as grammar, was hard to establish because 'we know too little about fostering the kind of development we seem to cherish"! [...]the resulting pattern of change may well be unclear to many a practising teacher, preoccupied with more than enough urgent day-to-day matters, From all the research, the reflection, the trial and error of experimentation, what now emerges? In my own teaching - whether of five-yearolds, of postgraduates, or of students at any intervening stage between those poles of our formal education system - 1 have found that very similar pedagogic issues arise right through the scale. 1 do not believe that leading a discussion with first-graders of Munro Leafs The Stary of Ferdinand is a fundamentally different experience from annotating a draft chapter of a Ph.D thesis on Wordsworth's Prelude. For the most part this interconnectedness is not based on suppositions about sequential or 'spiral' learning; to study literature is not, in any substantial sense, to acquire a body of knowledge - either step by step or turning and turning in a widening gyre - as in French or mathematics· More and more information, to be sure, is progressively brought to each exchange of meanings, but this is seldom the kind of information that can be transmitted piecemeal in the classroom and consolidated in formal increments, No - fundamentally, a literary education remains, even at postgraduate level, the same kind of thing it was in infant school: a collaborative enterprise of creating significance through language, as reader and as writer, as speaker and as listener. 
653 |a Teaching 
653 |a Literary studies 
653 |a Curricula 
653 |a Verbal communication 
653 |a Books 
653 |a Learning 
653 |a Teachers 
653 |a Education 
653 |a Conferences (Gatherings) 
653 |a Secondary Education 
653 |a Course Descriptions 
653 |a Sequential Approach 
653 |a Spiral Curriculum 
653 |a World Problems 
653 |a Educational Objectives 
653 |a Teaching (Occupation) 
653 |a Curriculum Development 
653 |a Classrooms 
653 |a Cultural Background 
653 |a Educational Change 
653 |a Educational Theories 
773 0 |t Australian Journal of English Education  |g vol. 59, no. 2 (2024), p. 62-67 
786 0 |d ProQuest  |t Education Database 
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