A sweeping review of the teaching of writing in schools found it has been widely neglected in the secondary years, leaving thousands of students struggling | JordsBaker
A sweeping review of the teaching of writing in NSW schools found it has been widely neglected in the secondary years, leaving thousands of students struggling with crucial skills such as writing clear sentences or expressing complex ideas.
The report found year 9 students in NSW in 2019 were the equivalent of five months behind the level of year 9 students in 2011. On average, one in six of those students was below the minimum standard required to succeed in their final years of school. That compared with one in 20 below the standard in reading and in numeracy."The minimum standard isn't high to begin with," said education consultant Peter Goss.
In primary school, the class teacher teaches writing, but in high school it is shared across disciplines so no single teacher is responsible. Jenny Donovan, director of the newly established National Evidence Institute for education, said writing skills not only enabled students to demonstrate their knowledge but also involved a cognitive process that enhanced their learning.
NESA endorsed all six of the report's recommendations, including that it declare writing a priority area, improve the quality of teacher training in writing, develop requirements for teaching degrees, strengthen writing content in syllabuses and create resources that give teachers clear guidance.
Australia Latest News, Australia Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
John Barilaro asked to 'consider his position' following NSW Coalition's koala policy clashSenior NSW Liberal MPs call for Nationals Leader John Barilaro to consider his position in the wake of last week's stoush that threatened to destroy the Coalition.
Read more »
Alert for Sydney KFC outlet, as NSW records nine new coronavirus infectionsNSW has recorded nine new COVID-19 cases including two linked to the Eastern Suburbs Legion Club and two connected to St Paul's Catholic College Greystanes.
Read more »
NSW records nine new cases; Queensland doctors defend funeral decisionNSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian said the Queensland border closure was hurting people on both sides as the number of cases of community transmission remained low | rachelclun LydiaLynch101
Read more »
Contentious koala protection policy sends NSW govt into a state of 'madness' | Sky News AustraliaSky News Political Editor Andrew Clennell says there was 'madness' in the NSW government this week at a time when they “smashed the public health response”.\n\nNew South Wales Nationals leader John Barilaro backed down over a contentious koala protection policy. \n\nThe state's National Party earlier this week threatened to sit on the crossbench over the law, which members of the party argued would have huge ramifications for landowners. \n\n“No-one in the Nationals looks like they want to roll Barilaro and so there are concerns the same threat will hang over the government,” Mr Clennell said.\n\n“A Nationals source has told me Adam Marshall looked at mounting a challenge but elected against it.\n\n“From the Liberal perspective it was not about koalas, it was about standing up to Barilaro after multiple threats.”\n\nImage: News Corp Australia
Read more »
NSW coronavirus statistic could force Qld borders to reopenAs Queensland’s chief medical officer hits back at criticism over keeping the border closed, NSW has recorded a promising reason why it should open.
Read more »
Live: NSW Now: UTS teachers told to censor lessons to keep China at easeMORNING BRIEFING: The University of Technology Sydney advises staff to stop teaching topics that may be politically sensitive to China, while a resident of the Newmarch aged care home records a false positive COVID-19 test result.
Read more »