The Cairns Post

A-Team to swoop in and help teachers

- LAUREN MARTYN-JONES

TRAVELLING squads of elite teachers who are experts in their subject areas would be deployed across Queensland schools to mentor staff and boost teacher confidence, under a new proposal to improve student results.

The Grattan Institute has released a report which recommends Australia follow the lead of Shanghai and Singapore and form elite teams of specialist teachers and use them across state schooling networks.

The proposal from the think tank would see specialist units of teachers work directly for the Department of Education or other bodies such as Catholic Education Queensland, who would send them on secondment­s to schools which needed to boost their maths, science or literacy results.

“In high-performing systems, such as Shanghai and Singapore, an elite cohort of specialist teachers sets the direction for effective practice and spreads the message via cross-school networks,” the report says.

“Master Teachers should work across schools, leading subject-specific cross-school networks that provide practical guidance in classrooms.”

The report also echoes the Gonski 2.0 report into improving the standard of schooling in Australia, by warning classroom teachers often spend too much time on “low-impact” activities and duplicatin­g work, such as creating teaching resources, when similar, better quality resources may already exist.

Like the Gonski review – which proposed employing casual administra­tive staff to cover lunch duty and sports supervisio­n – the Grattan Institute recommends relieving teachers of much of the daily administra­tive work they do, so they can focus on their core role of teaching.

It also says teachers need more support to deal with classroom discipline issues, with Australian schools scoring significan­tly worse than other OECD nations when it comes to classroom management practices.

“As many as 40 per cent of students in Australia are unproducti­ve in a given year,” the report says, “Teachers find this very stressful and are calling out for more support.”

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