University of Tasmania
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Using systems perspectives to develop underlying principles for educational reform

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-21, 07:35 authored by John KennyJohn Kenny, Constance CirkonyConstance Cirkony

One of the enduring problems in the education system is the gap between theory and practice, where the research to improve teaching and learning is not fully realised in the classroom. This has impacted the effectiveness of education reform. We take a systems thinking approach to better understand the complexity of an education system, which involves multiple stakeholders, each with different levels of power, purposes, and perspectives about what is important. Drawing on an extensive body of research we propose a set of six foundational and five enabling principles that support systemic educational reform. These 11 principles are put forward to provide guidance for decision-makers, researchers and practitioners on how a given educational reform might be more effectively implemented.

 

History

Publication title

Australian Journal of Teacher Education

Volume

47

Issue

1

Pagination

80-99

ISSN

1835-517X

Department/School

Education, Medicine

Publisher

Social Science Press

Publication status

  • Published

Place of publication

Australia

Rights statement

Copyright 2022 Social Science Press.

Socio-economic Objectives

160205 Policies and development, 160303 Teacher and instructor development

UN Sustainable Development Goals

4 Quality Education