Friday, May 25, 2012

How can I become a primary school teacher in Australia

How can I become a primary school teacher in Australia?
Hey guys, I'm a 20 year old female and am currently studying at Victoria University of Wellington in New Zealand (my homeland) and hope to have my Bachelors degree finished by mid next year. My boyfriend and I are then planning on making the move to Melbourne, Australia where we will start our next big adventure. Although my majors will be in criminology and sociology, I have recently started to think about what I REALLY want to do in life, and primary school teaching is one of the things that has really stuck in my mind. I love children, I'm patient and love to teach as well as learn and I think I would make a fantastic teacher. The only thing is, is that I'm not too sure about prerequisites for primary teaching in Australia and where I would have to study, for how long etc etc. I have looked all over the internet but havent really found much information so was wondering if anyone knew about teacher training in Australia (because I have a feeling it may be quite a bit different from NZ). I hope you can help it would be very much appreciated!! Kind regards, Amy
Teaching - 3 Answers
Random Answers, Critics, Comments, Opinions :
1 :
http://www.australian-universities.com/schools/teaching/ This might be what you are looking for.
2 :
Hello my fellow kiwi :-D I am currently studying to be a primary school teacher through Massey University. When I started the course here, it was a 3 year course, but has gone up to a 4 year course now (in which the student teachers will come out on a higher qualification than I will). However, there is the option to do an additional year (post-grad) to gain the same qualifications as them. Anyway ~ I have been doing some searching of the web for you, and it seems that in Australia, they have the "Masters of Teaching (Primary)" which is a 2 year course (with some admission requirements) here's the link (it's in Melbourne too)- http://www.latrobe.edu.au/handbook/2007/postgraduate/education/coursework/rmt.htm You may find that the 2 year course is no where near as intense as the NZ course, and therefore if you do become qualified, if you decide to come back to NZ and teach, you may be required to sit an additional year or 2 to get the Bachelor of Education (Teaching Primary). Good luck with your ventures :-)
3 :
Each state has its own department of education, who may have slightly different requirements. I teach in Sydney, so I work under the New South Wales Department of Education and Training. If you have an existing bachelor's degree, then you will probably only need one year of full time study to get a Diploma of Education or Master of Teaching. Starting from scratch, you would complete a Bachelor of Education, or double degree like a Bachelor of Arts/Bachelor of Teaching, which is a 4 or 5 year degree (full time). You should look for something with as much student teaching time as possible. Once you get yourself a qualification, you apply to the DET for approval to teach. You have an interview with them to assess your suitability, and from what i gather, as long as you don't bork the child protection question, you'll get an approval number. Then it's just a matter of casual teaching until someone offers you a long term block or teaching (i'm on my fourth year-long block in a row) or better still, permanency. (As a sidenote, one of the teachers on my grade did a bachelor in forensics or criminology or something - we use him to scare some of our more sneaky perpetrators :P - then a one year Diploma, and has been teaching with us for a bit over a year now.)
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Thursday, May 17, 2012

what is a normal school day like in australi

what is a normal school day like in australia?
like when does school start , and when does it end . how much homework is usually given , stuff like that please answer
Primary & Secondary Education - 1 Answers
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1 :
There is a lot of variation from school to school but i will give you some examples. School (1) starts at 8:50 and finishes at 3:20. It has 8 x 40 minute periods with a recess of 20 minutes and lunch of 40 minutes. Sport is on Wednesday afternoon and is for 3 x periods. Homework varies by teacher and subject, much the same as your school. School (2) starts at 8:30 and finishes at 2:48. It has 4 x 72 minute periods with recess of 20 minutes, lunch of 40 minutes and another short break. Homeworh is as stated above. There are too many variables to give you a more concise answer.
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Wednesday, May 9, 2012

UNIVERSITY: BEST BUSINESS SCHOOL? Coming from Australia!

UNIVERSITY: BEST BUSINESS SCHOOL? Coming from Australia!?
I am currently in Australia doing Bachelors of Commerce, I'm in my first year and I'd like to look at the UK for my second year starting 2011 Jan, and I would like to do a study abroad for a year. I have choices from these universities in the UK Kings College Lancaster University Nottingham Trent Uni Uni of Bradford Uni of East Anglia Uni of Essex Uni of Leeds Uni of Liverpool Uni of Nottingham Uni of Reading Uni of Sheffield Uni of Sussex ANYY help at all would be much appreciated, I'm looking for a university with a good reputation and a good Business school. THANK YOU!
Higher Education (University +) - 1 Answers
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1 :
There are many online web sites that offer you a list of colleges and universities, but most of them are paid. Here is one company that offer you to browse schools around the world for free (no catches) . Just complete their questions and they will accept you. Go to http://TopEducationFinder.info Hope that will help
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Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Hey School aged students in Canada and the USA, uniform question

Hey School aged students in Canada and the USA, uniform question:?
Hey, I am an Australian, completed all my schooling in Australia, I see alot of sitcoms about your two countries and wondering, why since you both were also ex-british colonies, that you don't have uniforms like both Australia and New Zealand do? what was the story behind being able not to wear them? please explain? I was talking about the government/public ones, obviously the private ones.
Other - Canada - 8 Answers
Random Answers, Critics, Comments, Opinions :
1 :
Parents voted against it. However, uniforms are making a comeback. In Canada, it has absolutely nothing to do with being a British colony or not. It was whether the school wanted them or not.
2 :
the parents voted against it. it is cheaper to wear your regular clothes than a prescribed unform. being a british thing will be the biggest reason why canadians or anericans will not want it. believe it or not, canadians try to be different from the brits as much as they can.
3 :
I grew up in a city of 165000 people and we had 8 high schools and 1 catholic high school. Only the catholic high school had uniforms (gray pants/skirts, white shirts/blouses, maroon sweaters with a small monogram). It was no big deal. If you went there you wore the uniform, if you went to a public high school you wore what you wanted.
4 :
Well ya, as you know, some of them do... like private boarding ones, etc. I think it's just.. never really been a big thing here. I'm from Alberta, Canada. Back in the day I know they made kids wear uniforms (like 1900's - 1930's). But after that it just seemed to stop. I'm sure somewhere along the line there was a vote. I can't really answer for the US or other Canadian provinces though.
5 :
Like the previous posts said, it depends of the province/state. In Quebec, every school decides if their students have to wear a uniform or not. We used to all have uniforms when the catholic church was in charge of education (before 1960s) but it slowly disappeared. In the last 5-10 years, some public schools started to bring back the uniforms because they realised it could reduce violence (showing whitch gang/trend they belong) and intimidation (rich with nice clothes vs poor). I'm not sure about that but in Canada, it might also have something to do with the Canadian charter of rights and freedom. I in the 80s, 90s schools were scared about being sued beacuse they wouldn't let people wear whatever they want, but since there's been a judgement saying it's leagal for a schools/employers to impose a uniform as long as it's reasonable, it's getting more popular.
6 :
I have no idea about what they do in the usa, some schools in Canada wear uniforms and some don't
7 :
Catholic schools usually have uniforms... public school don't generally but they made have a dress code ie. no hats, no belly buttons showing, finger tip skirt/short length, no gang colour etc.
8 :
most public schools dont provide uniforms because its either not in the budget or theyre just not needed, you can wear pretty much anything to most public schools but some schools have dress codes such as no tank tops, no hats and stuff like that
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