Course Coordinator:Craig Johnston (cjohnston1@usc.edu.au) School:School of Education and Tertiary Access
UniSC Sunshine CoastUniSC Moreton Bay |
Blended learning | Most of your course is on campus but you may be able to do some components of this course online. |
Please go to usc.edu.au for up to date information on the
teaching sessions and campuses where this course is usually offered.
The course builds your capacity to design inquiry-based pedagogy and assessment for Years 7 -10 Geography. You will organise, plan, and explain engaging lessons based on the Australian Curriculum and justify teaching, learning, assessment, feedback and reporting strategies. In addition, you will identify and explain ways to integrate Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander perspectives into learning activities and reflect on your developing teaching practice and teacher identity.
Activity | Hours | Beginning Week | Frequency |
Blended learning | |||
Learning materials – You are required to engage and interact with asynchronous materials and activities accessed through Canvas modules, course readings and required texts. | 2hrs | Week 1 | 9 times |
Tutorial/Workshop 1 – The workshop involves on-campus activities using technology to engage with and apply course content and outcomes. | 2hrs | Week 1 | 10 times |
300 Level (Graduate)
12 units
Course Learning Outcomes On successful completion of this course, you should be able to... | Graduate Qualities Mapping Completing these tasks successfully will contribute to you becoming... | Professional Standard Mapping * Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership | |
1 | Identify and apply geography content and curriculum Geography to years 7-10 geography teaching. |
Knowledgeable Empowered |
2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.6, 3.2 |
2 | Identify and apply a range of teaching and learning strategies, literacy, numeracy, and ICT to engage students' diversity in junior geography. |
Knowledgeable Creative and critical thinker Empowered |
2.5, 2.6, 3.1, 3.2, 3.3, 3.4, 4.1, 4.5 |
3 | Plan and explain learning activities that use geographical inquiry to support student participation in achievable challenges. |
Knowledgeable Empowered |
2.2, 3.1, 3.2, 3.3, 3.4, 3.5, 4.1, 4.2 |
4 | Create and justify assessment tools to measure student learning and provide feedback on progress for teaching, learning and reporting. |
Creative and critical thinker Empowered |
2.3, 5.1, 5.2, 5.3, 5.4 |
5 | Identify and explain your developing identity as junior secondary geography teacher. |
Knowledgeable Empowered |
2.1, 3.2, 4.1, 5.4 |
CODE | COMPETENCY |
Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership | |
2.1 | Content and teaching strategies of the teaching area: Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of the concepts, substance and structure of the content and teaching strategies of the teaching area |
2.2 | Content selection and organisation: Organise content into an effective learning and teaching sequence. |
2.3 | Curriculum, assessment and reporting: Use curriculum, assessment and reporting knowledge to design learning sequences and lesson plans. |
2.4 | Understand and respect Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people to promote reconciliation between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians: Demonstrate broad knowledge of, understanding of and respect for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander histories, cultures and languages. |
2.5 | Literacy and numeracy strategies: Know and understand literacy and numeracy teaching strategies and their application in teaching areas. |
2.6 | Information and Communication Technology (ICT): Implement teaching strategies for using ICT to expand curriculum learning opportunities for students. |
3.1 | Establish challenging learning goals: Set learning goals that provide achievable challenges for students of varying abilities and characteristics. |
3.2 | Plan, structure and sequence learning programs: Plan lesson sequences using knowledge of student learning, content and effective teaching strategies. |
3.3 | Use teaching strategies: Include a range of teaching strategies. |
3.4 | Select and use resources: Demonstrate knowledge of a range of resources, including ICT, that engage students in their learning. |
3.5 | Use effective classroom communication: Demonstrate a range of verbal and non-verbal communication strategies to support student engagement |
4.1 | Support student participation: Identify strategies to support inclusive student participation and engagement in classroom activities. |
4.2 | Manage classroom activities: Demonstrate the capacity to organise classroom activities and provide clear directions |
4.5 | Use ICT safely, responsibly and ethically: Demonstrate an understanding of the relevant issues and the strategies available to support the safe, responsible and ethical use of ICT in learning and teaching. |
5.1 | Assess student learning: Demonstrate understanding of assessment strategies, including informal and formal, diagnostic, formative and summative approaches to assess student learning. |
5.2 | Provide feedback to students on their learning: Demonstrate an understanding of the purpose of providing timely and appropriate feedback to students about their learning |
5.3 | Make consistent and comparable judgements: Demonstrate understanding of assessment moderation and its application to support consistent and comparable judgements of student learning. |
5.4 | Interpret student data: Demonstrate the capacity to interpret student assessment data to evaluate student learning and modify teaching practice. |
Refer to the UniSC Glossary of terms for definitions of “pre-requisites, co-requisites and anti-requisites”.
Enrolled in Program (AE304 and a Geography Major or Geographical Sciences Extended Minor) or (SE303 and a Geographical Sciences Extended Minor) or (ED315 and a Geographical Studies Minor)
Not applicable
Not applicable
It is expected that you will engage in this course when you have undertaken tertiary geography content courses. You will be required to draw upon geography content knowledge to complete this course
Standard Grading (GRD)
High Distinction (HD), Distinction (DN), Credit (CR), Pass (PS), Fail (FL). |
Delivery mode | Task No. | Assessment Product | Individual or Group | Weighting % | What is the duration / length? | When should I submit? | Where should I submit it? |
All | 1 | Oral and Written Piece | Group | 20% | Written - 70 minute lesson plan Oral - 15 minute lesson segment |
Refer to Format | Online Assignment Submission with plagiarism check and in class |
All | 2 | Portfolio | Individual | 40% | 2000 words |
Week 7 | Online Assignment Submission with plagiarism check |
All | 3 | Artefact - Professional, and Written Piece | Individual | 40% | 2000 words |
Week 10 | Online Assignment Submission with plagiarism check |
All - Assessment Task 1:Teach a lesson | |
Goal: | The goal of this task is to work as a teaching team to develop a lesson plan and present a lesson segment that explores a specific pedagogical choice moment when teaching Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander histories and culture relevant for the year 9/10 geography classroom. |
Product: | Oral and Written Piece |
Format: | Submission - Written: Monday, week 4, 9 am – online with plagiarism check Oral: Week 4 lesson segment presentation – in class You will be allocated a topic and inquiry question connected with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander culture and history relevant to the year 9/10 geography classroom, as part of a small group, in the first tutorial. Each team member will contribute to developing a 70-minute lesson plan that identifies and applies the junior geography curriculum and content. The lesson will use inquiry pedagogy and teaching strategies to engage diverse students with achievable learning goals. The team will role-play a 5-minute segment of the lesson that provides an opportunity to discuss the next pedagogical move the teacher could make. All group members should then facilitate a 10 minutes class discussion to explore the range of possible next moves in the lesson and their justification in the context of decolonising pedagogy. The presentation needs to: a) provide an opportunity for all group members to take the lead during the facilitated discussion, b) demonstrate oral communication skills and respect for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander histories and culture. |
Criteria: |
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All - Assessment Task 2:Fieldwork assessment task and reporting | |
Goal: | The goal of this task is to demonstrate your ability to apply and explain curriculum, assessment and reporting in junior secondary geography fieldwork. |
Product: | Portfolio |
Format: | Create an inquiry-based summative fieldwork assessment task and rubric for a selected year 7-10 junior geography class at a specific school. 1. Identify a school and justify the choice of a fieldwork site. Describe how your choice relates to the junior geography curriculum and students. 2. Create an assessment task and explain how it engages with geographical inquiry and represents an achievable challenge for students. 3. Describe how you will mark and moderate the task and how your marking will be used for reporting to parents/careers and in your future teaching of these students. |
Criteria: |
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All - Assessment Task 3:Inquiry lesson sequences – connecting to curriculum, students and assessment | |
Goal: | The goal of this task is to demonstrate your application and justification of curriculum, pedagogy and assessment in junior secondary geography. |
Product: | Artefact - Professional, and Written Piece |
Format: | Create an inquiry-based lesson sequence that would be required to be covered before the assessment task you created for task 2 can be provided to students. You will: 1. Create an inquiry-based sequence of three lessons and describe a) how the curriculum and assessment task connects to the lesson sequence content, b) how a variety of teaching strategies and resources, including literacy, numeracy and ICT, c) how learning goals support the assessment task and create an achievable challenge, e) student engagement and participation are enacted f) how geographical inquiry is evidenced. 2. Identify and explain the challenges you might face as a beginning teacher planning, teaching, marking, and reporting the fieldwork and ways you might improve your teaching practice as an explanation of your reflection on your developing identity as a junior secondary geography teacher. |
Criteria: |
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A 12-unit course will have total of 150 learning hours which will include directed study hours (including online if required), self-directed learning and completion of assessable tasks. Student workload is calculated at 12.5 learning hours per one unit.
Please note: Course information, including specific information of recommended readings, learning activities, resources, weekly readings, etc. are available on the course Canvas site– Please log in as soon as possible.
Please note that you need to have regular access to the resource(s) listed below. Resources may be required or recommended.
Required? | Author | Year | Title | Edition | Publisher |
Required | Malcolm McInerney,Susan Caldis,Stephen Cranby,John Butler,Alaric Maude,Susanne Jones,Michael Patrick Law,Rebecca Nicholas | 2021 | Teaching Secondary Geography | 1 | Cambridge University Press |
It is expected that you will require Internet access and a personal computer. Recommendations from information and technology services are available via the Student Portal if you search for computer specifications. Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) is necessary for each class session. Access to a mobile device with a camera and microphone is recommended for participation in online sessions.
Academic integrity is the ethical standard of university participation. It ensures that students graduate as a result of proving they are competent in their discipline. This is integral in maintaining the value of academic qualifications. Each industry has expectations and standards of the skills and knowledge within that discipline and these are reflected in assessment.
Academic integrity means that you do not engage in any activity that is considered to be academic fraud; including plagiarism, collusion or outsourcing any part of any assessment item to any other person. You are expected to be honest and ethical by completing all work yourself and indicating in your work which ideas and information were developed by you and which were taken from others. You cannot provide your assessment work to others. You are also expected to provide evidence of wide and critical reading, usually by using appropriate academic references.
In order to minimise incidents of academic fraud, this course may require that some of its assessment tasks, when submitted to Canvas, are electronically checked through Turnitin. This software allows for text comparisons to be made between your submitted assessment item and all other work to which Turnitin has access.
Eligibility for Supplementary Assessment Your eligibility for supplementary assessment in a course is dependent of the following conditions applying: The final mark is in the percentage range 47% to 49.4% The course is graded using the Standard Grading scale You have not failed an assessment task in the course due to academic misconduct
Late submission of assessment tasks may be penalised at the following maximum rate: - 5% (of the assessment task's identified value) per day for the first two days from the date identified as the due date for the assessment task. - 10% (of the assessment task's identified value) for the third day - 20% (of the assessment task's identified value) for the fourth day and subsequent days up to and including seven days from the date identified as the due date for the assessment task. - A result of zero is awarded for an assessment task submitted after seven days from the date identified as the due date for the assessment task. Weekdays and weekends are included in the calculation of days late. To request an extension you must contact your course coordinator to negotiate an outcome.
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