Unit rationale, description and aim
In order to plan and deliver lessons that promote learner engagement and enhance student learning, intending secondary teachers need knowledge and understanding of the senior secondary curriculum, along with theoretical frameworks and pedagogical approaches that are emblematic of teaching in their chosen teaching areas, including teaching/learning that responds to the high-stakes assessment that is a usual feature of senior secondary schooling.
In this unit, pre-service teachers will consider the place of Music Education in contemporary Australian society, and the senior secondary Music Education curriculum, in particular. They will explore a range of evidence-based approaches for curriculum development and alignment and plan for effective teaching and learning, including formative and summative assessment. Pre-service teachers will learn approaches for building knowledge of Music Education and how to provide constructive feedback and reporting. They will learn approaches for engaging senior secondary learners and to meet the learning needs of diverse students in the senior secondary years. They will further develop skills to shape the dialogic talk of the classroom. Pre-service teachers will formulate unit and assessment plans in order to demonstrate a knowledge of curriculum, learning and assessment theory. They will assemble a resource folio to demonstrate the capacity to collect, create and critique resources for effective teaching and learning and to link with the curriculum. They will investigate issues and considerations of curriculum implementation as found in the practical reality of schools.
The aim of this unit is for the pre-service teacher to develop their pedagogical content knowledge through becoming familiar with the knowledge, understanding and skills necessary for teaching Music Education at a senior secondary level.
Campus offering
No unit offerings are currently available for this unit.Learning 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.
Plan, implement and evaluate a range of Music lear...
Learning Outcome 01
Explain, develop and evaluate a variety of classro...
Learning Outcome 02
Examine the relationships between student learning...
Learning Outcome 03
Content
Topics will include:
- factors in the educational context (international, national, state, territory and local levels) including
- curriculum policies and perspectives that shape the identity of Music Education in Years 7-10.
- specific professional practices related to teaching and learning in Music Education (eg. OHS, safe
- practices
- general capabilities and cross-curriculum priorities including the integration of literacy, numeracy
- and ICT and local, state, territory and national perspectives in Music Education
- planning sequences of learning activities in Music Education relative to specific school context and
- identified factors impacting teaching and learning
- the relationship between reflexive learning and effective concept formation to build higher-order
- thinking in Music Education
- catering for a diverse range of learners in music making, music criticism and music history
- discipline-specific teaching strategies and issues related to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
- students in Music Education
- pedagogical strategies to promote problem solving and critical thinking in Music Education
- feedback, assessment and reporting in Music Education
- extending and challenging learners in Music Education.
Assessment strategy and rationale
The assessment tasks and their weightings are designed so that the pre-service teacher can progressively achieve the course learning outcomes and the professional standards. The Curriculum, Pedagogy and Assessment units in this course focus on pre-service teachers acquiring content knowledge and developing the skills to assimilate conceptual knowledge in order for that knowledge to inform skills that will be applied in practice.
The two assessment tasks are sequenced to allow feedback and progressive development. By completing Task 1 the pre-service teacher will apply knowledge of assessment strategies. In Task 2 pre-service teachers develop a program of work for senior students over a period of time.
Overview of assessments
Assessment Task 1: Lesson planning demonstrating...
Assessment Task 1:
Lesson planning demonstrating an understanding of sequencing and nominated pedagogical approaches and resources to engage student learning in a nominated educational setting. This lesson plan must address general capabilities and cross-curriculum priorities, including literacy, numeracy and ICT.
40%
Assessment Task 2: Implementation and evaluation...
Assessment Task 2:
Implementation and evaluation of a sequence of learning and teaching activities within which provision is made for assessment of student learning and feedback.
60%
Learning and teaching strategy and rationale
This unit applies a social constructivist approach to develop the pre-service teacher’s understanding of effective pedagogies through active engagement and collaborative learning. The pre-service teacher will build an understanding of teaching strategies through critical reading, lecturer modelling, discussion, and practice in tutorials. The pre-service teacher’s skills of professional communication and ability to work collaboratively will be practised through group work. The pre-service teacher’s teaching skills of planning and assessing, and his/her ability to locate and synthesise information, will be developed through designing a curriculum appropriate for a Music Education context. The pre-service teacher will continue to gather and reflect upon evidence of attainment of the Australian Professional Standards for Teachers: Graduate.
The teaching and learning strategy described above will use an appropriate selection of approach, including, for example:
- Weekly face-to-face lectures and/or online lectures (synchronous and asynchronous)
- Hands-on tutorials and discussions that promote peer learning
- Microteaching opportunities
- Self-directed reading and research
- Collaborative learning opportunities