Literacy Practices and Diverse Learners (EDUC90685)
Graduate courseworkPoints: 12.5On Campus (Parkville)
Overview
Availability | September |
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Fees | Look up fees |
This subject focuses on the importance of planning effective literacy approaches and strategies to meet the needs of diverse learners. It will highlight how teachers cater for diversity through drawing on clinical approaches to meeting the literacy learning needs of diverse learners. Informing this subject will be an examination of the interface between literacy and social context, taking into account considerations of gender, EAL/D, socio-economic status, Indigenous status. Attention will be given to interventionist approaches that address the needs of exceptional learners. Turn around pedagogies and the need to counter deficit discourses in relation to diverse learners will be addressed in this subject.
Intended learning outcomes
On completion of the subject students will be able to:
- demonstrate an understanding of how to meet the learning needs of diverse learners through effective assessment, curriculum design and teaching;
- analyse, critique and discuss some of the most salient findings from research into issues of literacy and diversity.
Generic skills
Students undertaking this subject will develop the following key transferable skills:
- Problem-solving skills, including identifying and researching strategies to solve unfamiliar problems.
- Analytical skills and the ability to construct and express logical arguments.
- Collaborative and teamwork skills through working with fellow students and with work-based colleagues.
- Skills to investigate critically, implement, adapt and modify new ideas and approaches.
- The capacity to plan effectively and to meet deadlines.
- Oral and written communication skills.
- Interpersonal skills including teamwork and staff mentoring.
- The capacity to use information and communication technology for a range of purposes.
- The ability to develop, critique and use appropriately a range of evidence and data.
Last updated: 10 February 2024