Abstract
Keywords
Introduction—A History of the Present (the Context)
“Turf wars” (Evans, 1998, 2000) in social studies have been going on for many decades (Marsh & Hart, 2011). There are many schools of thought on a social view of curriculum as opposed to academic disciplines, and reference will be made to these debates as a history of the present is outlined to provide the context for this study in Queensland, Australia.
The
Queensland already had the
Although there were many advocates for SOSE (Gilbert, 2004; Henderson, 2005; Johnston, 1989; Kennedy, 2008; Marsh, 2005; Tudball, 2007), divisions were still apparent in how SOSE was viewed (Reynolds, 2009). Furthermore, the move toward using strands rather than traditional disciplines was controversial as it necessitated changes in curriculum structure and teachers’ pedagogy (Marsh & Hart, 2011). The emphasis (in SOSE) was on the teaching of concepts as opposed to content knowledge, an approach that was deemed to afford flexibility, particularly in the primary setting. SOSE, however, had its critics particularly in terms of the body of knowledge that it offered (Taylor, 2007). Specifically, there was a perceived crisis for history, civics and citizenship education and the loss of national identity. In the same year as Taylor’s criticisms, the outgoing Prime Minister John Howard referred to new fads in education such as SOSE as “incomprehensible sludge” (Maiden, 2007). In another editorial, he said, “There is something both deadening and saccharine in curriculum documents where history is replaced by ‘Time, Continuity and Change’ and geography now becomes ‘Place, Space and Environment’” (Topsfield, 2007). The debates and discourses of derision continued but with the release of
The next section of this article outlines our interpretation of Foucauldian archeological analysis. In previous work, the current authors have explicated this methodology in detail (Bourke & Lidstone, in press) to analyze academic literature, policy documents, and interview transcripts. Here, we extend the method by showing how we traced bibliographic references from the academic literature to set up an online survey. Then, using this methodology, the
Method
Construction of the Online Survey
Foucault (1991) was insistent that he did not construct “a general method of definitive value,” asserting that “what I write does not prescribe anything, neither to myself nor to others” (p. 29). However, he did delight in others borrowing his “gadgets” of approach or method. As already mentioned, the current authors have distilled this method through multiple publications culminating in a detailed methodological paper outlining how to analyze academic literature, policy documents, and interview transcripts archeologically. Here, we extend this methodology from analyzing a policy document and interview transcripts to examining responses from an online survey in the context of the current curriculum policy document.
The first step involved retrieving relevant academic journal articles on the form and function of geographical education and examining these for archeological isomorphism or “sameness” in the statements. According to Foucault, statements are the atoms or elementary units of discourse, so it is important to map when statements emerged and when new statements began to function (surfaces of emergence). Foucault (1972) refers to this as the “attribution of innovation.” By this, he is talking about not only “original affirmations” (p. 145) but also statements that have been borrowed or even copied from predecessors. He refers to original affirmations as “creative statements” and those borrowed as “imitative” (p. 145). It became clear that certain groups of statements formed the starting point from which other statements were derived.
For the purpose of this study, Questions 1 to 4 and Questions 6 and 7 were closed questions designed to obtain demographic data about the participants (see the appendix for questionnaire survey). Question 5 was a creative question (statement) included because of the SOSE context as outlined in the History of the Present section earlier. Questions 8 to 12 were also creative questions designed to build on the thoughts of Morley (2012) as to how the participants feel about the subject of geography. Questions 13, 14, and 15 were imitative questions based on investigations of formal education experiences of pre-service primary teachers, which can be traced back through the studies conducted by Preston (2014), Morley (2012), Catling (2004), Martin (2000), and Walford (1996). In 1996, Walford published a paper on how his specialist geography teacher training students between 1990 and 1994 defined geography using word analysis as the methodology. He used previous scholars’ classifications (Acheson, 1994; Livingstone, 1992; McNee, 1967; Pattison, 1964) to compile his categories, namely, interactionists, synthesizers, spatialists, and placeists. In 2004, Catling drew on this study, investigating English primary school teachers’ conceptions of geography and revised Walford’s categories as follows: globalists, earthists, interactionists, placeists, and environmentalists. Morley (2012) revised the categories yet again to include global fact finder, global processor, interactionists, facilitators, placeists, and synthesizers, and Preston’s (2014) study in Australia to a greater extent supported previous categories by the U.K. researchers. Therefore, it is obvious that some of these categories are imitative statements and some are creative, revealing the changes in the discourse. Catling (2004) added a second line of inquiry to his 2004 work drawing on ideas from Martin (2000) and Barratt-Hacking (1996) about the purposes of geography education. This involved adding four extra (creative) categories, namely, global personalists, localists, locationists, and map lovers. This relates to our Question 15 specifically but for the purposes of this article has not been reported here. Other writers have conducted similar studies across the globe (Alkis, 2009; Bradbeer, Healey & Kneale, 2004), but to our knowledge, none has used Foucauldian archeological analysis as their investigative tool. Figure 1 reveals the tree of enunciative derivation (Foucault, 1972, p. 147) of the academic geography education discourse, which is one of the principal tenets of archeology.

Bibliographic reference tracing.
Delivery of the Online Survey
The survey was disseminated through the online learning site at a university in Queensland where students in their second year of a bachelor of education (primary) were asked to complete the survey as part of a class exercise and thus given the authority to speak. The survey, constructed using Key Survey™, consisted of the 15 questions described above. One hundred twelve Queensland pre-service teachers were invited to engage in this pre-course pilot project to ascertain prior experiences and current knowledge and skills in geography by submitting online anonymously. There are obvious limitations to the use of one online survey instrument in one location, and indeed some of the statements were limited for the purposes of analysis, but the aim of the exercise was to capture as quickly as possible the views of a large number of participants (Catling, 2004). Other studies have also encountered this problem (see Bradbeer et al., 2004; Martin, 2000; Morley, 2012; Preston, 2014) where participants wrote very little or mere lists. In his original study, Walford (1996) rejected word and phrase characterization, claiming that it gave atomistic rather than coherent views on the subject of geography. Our approach, which is underpinned with the theoretical insights of Michel Foucault, adopts some of the characteristics of which Walford was critical, but here we present our interpretation of Foucauldian archeology as a rigorous and innovative research tool.
Document and Survey Analysis
For this part of the analysis, first we paid particular attention to the continuities between statements as well as counting the frequency of terms and words (repeatability) and examining their arrangement and co-location within statements. We also uncovered irruptions, discontinuities, contradictions, or distances between statements (fields of initial differentiation) in both the curriculum policy document and the online responses. Foucault (1972) refers to this as the analysis of “contradictions” (p. 149). He maintains that contradictions should be described, “they are not appearances to be overcome, nor secret principles to be uncovered” (p. 151). A coding mechanism was established that consisted of numbering the repeatable terms/words/overlapping themes (frequency/analysis of terminology) running through the curriculum document and online responses. Generative collaboration between the researchers working independently noted and numbered identified themes before cross-referencing to look for comparability. This process was conducted with the aid of NVivo™ allowing for a high degree of openness to new interpretations; it was a strongly iterative and comparative process of sorting and resorting data (Akerlind, 2002). The themes were continually reworked and refined until the final set was determined. These themes (core repeatable claims) represented the “discourses” of geography in the
Foucault (1972) maintains that archeology is a comparative analysis that is not intended to reduce the diversity of discourses. Rather, the intention is to have a diversifying effect. To accomplish this, the third step in analysis was to look for simultaneous exchanges between different discourses. In this step, we conducted an extensive literature review of the history of geographical and social education in the Australian educational landscape. This has already been outlined in the “Introduction—A History of the Present (the Context)” section of this article. This part of the analysis also included cross-analyzing the discourses that emerged from the academic literature, examination of the curriculum policy document and the responses from the online survey. For clarity, we have used Catling’s (2004) category list from the academic literature as he is an influential international voice in the geography education global community with a respectable track record in publications, thus speaking with authority.
Finally, the analysis of transformations reveals the gaps between pre-service teachers’ knowledge and skills to enact and deliver a curriculum, the academic literature, and what the government-mandated deliverables are. This obviously has implications for universities and teacher educators and will be used to inform the content for new university courses in primary education: geography.
Findings From the Document Analysis
As part of Foucauldian analysis, it is necessary to determine the authority behind the writing of this document. Table 1 summarizes the voices of authority used at various stages of the process with only the state of Tasmania not represented.
Voices of Authority in the Development of the
From the beginning of the project in September 2009, various consultations, validation phases, workshops, and forums were held nationally. For example, in response to the draft
The
The rationale introduces geography as “a structured way of exploring, analysing and understanding the characteristics of the places that make up our world” (ACARA, 2014). The word
The organization section differentiates geographical knowledge (and understanding) and geographical inquiry (and skills). The first strand, “Knowledge,” is defined as the “facts, generalisations, principles, theories and models developed in geography,” and understanding is the application of that knowledge. The second strand, “Inquiry,” is described as a process with five distinct stages, namely observing, questioning, and planning; collecting, recording, evaluating, and representing; interpreting, analyzing, and concluding; communicating; and reflecting and responding. This inquiry process is explicitly articulated at every year level after the content descriptors, thus constituting an independent discourse.
Further analysis of the curriculum policy document reveals a dominant “discourse of place” running through the detailed sections for F-6 with a minor discourse appearing in Year 1 (space) and one in Year 2 (scale). In Year 4, “place” loses its dominance and is replaced by the “discourse of environment.” For this year level, a minor “discourse of sustainability” is also present. In Year 6, the “discourse of place” shares its dominance with the “discourse of interconnection.” These discourses, their repeatability, co-location, and lexical linking are outlined in detail in Table 2 below.
Summary of the Dominant Discourses in the
In summary, the “discourse of place” mentioned 119 times is revealed as the dominant discourse in the Australian primary curriculum, explored through a “discourse of inquiry.”
In accordance with the Foucauldian archeological method, contradictions or spaces between statements should also be uncovered. However, a thorough examination of this document does not illuminate any. This is noteworthy as it means that the document clearly prescribes what needs to be learned in geography. The document also highlights what needs to be taught and, by implication, the knowledge and skill set of teachers required to teach it. However, whether Queensland teachers are ready and able to maintain the ideals inherent in the document is another question. As far back as 1976, Parlett and Hamilton identified “an idealised specification of the scheme: a set of elements arranged to a coherent plan” (p. 89). They acknowledged that the elements could be “emphasised or de-emphasised, expanded or truncated, as teachers . . . interpret or re-interpret the instructional system for their particular setting” (p. 90). In other words, to switch from discussing the instructional system in abstract to describing the details of its implementation is to cross into another realm. Hence, it is necessary to examine the discourses in the pre-service teachers’ responses to the online survey to ascertain whether they do have the knowledge and skill set to enact this curriculum.
Findings From Analysis of the Pre-Service Teachers’ Online Responses
As part of the online survey, demographic data were collected to identify the geographical educational experiences of the participants. This is now reported before the discourses present in the pre-service teachers’ statements are discussed.
Of the 112 participants, approximately 42% identified having studied geographical themes at primary school (F-7). This ranged from only 15% in Year 1 but increased to 68% by Year 7. Secondary schooling figures were a little higher with an average of 57% identifying themes that were geographical in nature. Closer analysis paints a more detailed picture with 74% identifying geographical themes in Years 8 and 9, with the figures dropping to 59% for Year 10. Year 9 in Australian schools is usually when students elect their specialist subjects for senior (Years 11 and 12). The figures for senior dropped even further to 27%. When asked whether they studied a discreet subject called geography, 12% claimed to have done so in primary and 45% in secondary with only 25% taking the subject to the senior level. When asked whether they liked the subject of geography, 21% said that they did not, 43% were not taught by a specialist geography teacher (24% did not know), and 80% were not taught in a specialist geography room. For those who did not study a subject called geography, SOSE was most commonly named as the subject where they thought there was geographical content. Other names included humanities, social science, community and living, social studies, Earth science, HSIE, environmental systems and societies, tourism, society and culture, and social and environmental studies.
There are seven main discourses evident from the online responses: a “discourse of mapping,” a “discourse of history,” a “discourse of globalists,” a “discourse of earthists,” a “discourse of sustainability,” a “discourse of excursions,” and a “discourse of negativity towards geography.” Other human geography themes emerged, such as cultures, population, food, language, poverty, and diseases, but their repetition was insufficient to identify a discreet “discourse of human geography.”
The first main discourse is the most dominant one: a “discourse of mapping.” The word
However, the second most dominant discourse, a “discourse of history,” could sit as a contradiction to the first discourse. The following statements reveal this—“we used to have to mark on maps where landings occurred,” “federation and the formation of the state boundaries,” “where the first fleet landed, how they got here, where they came from, the route they took,” “we looked at the pathways that were taken by European explorers,” “ANZAC histories, Australian colonisation,” “settlement of Australia,” and “we had to explore Germany and Berlin, therefore that required us to find out where they were on the map.” The lexical linking across these statements could be interpreted that even though the participants as students were “doing geography,” they were in fact doing it through history. This may be indicative of the integrated approach to social studies where pre-service teachers remember geography because they did so in a historical context. Other statements in response to questions about geographical experiences, however, reveal that the pre-service teachers in this study might not really understand the difference between geography and history—“we went to visit a Ned Kelly place,” “we performed a play on the history of Australia—the convicts in Australia and where Captain Cook came from,” “studying the explorers of Australia, Sturt, Flinders, Blaxland, Lawson and Wentworth,” “WW1 and 2—the locations of countries involved in the war,” “I remember doing an assignment on the pharaohs,” and “I think we did something about the Gold Rush and we had to research a popular gold mining town in Australia.” However, as already mentioned, the geographic understanding in these cases cannot be directly linked to the previous use of an interdisciplinary approach.
The “discourse of globalists” (term borrowed from Catling and Walford) encapsulated by the frequent mention (more than 30 times) of the term
Again, borrowing a term from Catling, the fourth discourse present is a “discourse of earthists” with many statements referring to landforms—“geography is the physical landforms that includes mountains, valleys, plains,” “landforms and how they are formed” and “different landforms like coasts, rainforests and weather and climate.” The last statement could be interpreted as a contradiction as rainforests and weather and climate are not landforms. However, another interpretation might be that pre-service teachers as students understood the connection between landforms and climate and how they affect the way people live, an understanding that we would want students to grasp. Many of the statements for this discourse were not extended statements but merely a list of words or phrases, maybe a limitation of the design of the survey questions; for example, “tectonic plates, volcanoes, natural disasters and ecosystems” and “deserts, mountain ranges.” “Natural disasters” got the most mentions (22 times) with 12 statements each referring to weather and climate and rainforests. Weather and climate statements include “types of climate,” “weather regions,” “weather conditions,” “types of clouds,” and “learning about weather patterns.” Again rather than extended statements, these examples are very list-like and do not necessarily show any understanding of the topics mentioned. One participant stated “deforestation, global warming” but there is no evidence of any elaborate understanding of the link between these processes. Only one other participant referred to “climate change.” Physical/human geography links can be seen in the following two statements: “climate affects food production” and the “effects of logging in the Solomon Islands.” Such statements could possibly fit with Catling’s interactionists category, but with only two mentions and only a few other generic statements such as “how humans impact on it (environment),” “humans and the earth, how they interact,” a discreet “discourse of interactionists” cannot be warranted. Other rainforest statements, such as “going to a rainforest and taking pictures,” “building a rainforest floor,” “learning about the rainforest,” and “we stayed near a rainforest,” once again reveal superficial knowledge of this geographical theme.
The fifth discourse present, if somewhat minor, is a “discourse of sustainability” where participants referred to “renewable and non-renewable resources” “creating their own sustainable town,” “eco-friendly homes,” “school recycling,” and “sustainable living projects.” This discourse is similar to Catling’s environmentalists but once again is quite limited by a narrow interpretation of the word
Although some participants did enjoy school geography, describing the subject as “fun,” “interesting,” “enjoyable,” “fascinating,” “real life,” “educational and relevant,” the next discourse present is a “discourse of negativity towards geography.” Common statements to reveal such negativity include “outdated,” “tedious,” “boring,” “maps . . . zzzzz,” “the geography classroom that I vaguely remember had a boring and depressing feeling about it,” “reminded me of maths,” and “boring mapping activities.” The participants offered reasons for these sentiments—“bombarded with colouring in, filling in worksheets and making posters,” “the lessons were just not interactive,” “chalk and talk,” “transfer of information with discussion discouraged,” “reading textbooks and filling in worksheets was horrible. We did it week in week out,” “rote learning, and not fun activities,” and “what was the point of memorizing countries and capital cities.” These statements are critical of the pedagogical approaches used to teach geography, two participants describing their experiences in more detail: “We had an unenthusiastic geography teacher who would fall asleep in class or read the newspaper, while we completed worksheets” and “I don’t think I was taught geography particularly well.” Another participant recalls that “outstanding experiences in geography are not very memorable; I don’t really remember much of it—either we didn’t do much or it wasn’t very memorable.” However, the next statements pose a contradiction—“I hated timelines, as I was never good at them,” “knowing where the first fleet landed, I can’t recall that being useful,” “I found the historical things to be boring,” and “I didn’t like the ancient Egypt stuff.” These statements beg the question that perhaps the pre-service teachers’ recollections of geography are not really of geography after all.
However, there was one part of geography that appeared to emerge from the data favorably and is revealed in the final discourse, a “discourse of excursions” referred to variously as “field trips,” “gardening experiences,” and “school camps.” Common statements refer to “going on excursions and learning all about caves,” “going camping and sleeping in tents and exploring rainforests,” “bush walks and trips to the creek,” and “I really enjoyed geography in primary school as we got to do a lot of hands on activities and for one of the school camps we went searching for fossils.” However, there does seem to be evidence that school camps which are a popular activity in primary schools are being regarded as geography, which may not have been their prime purpose—“Year 7 camp was to Ewen Maddock Dam. Loved, loved that place and the range of outdoor activities such as canoeing, high/low ropes, abseiling.” Orienteering was also mentioned as a popular activity where “we learnt to use a compass” but also appears to be part of camp activities—“I remember orienteering on Year 5 camp.” The presence of the word
Cross Analysis Between the Academic Literature, Curriculum Document, and the Online Survey Responses
The following tables detail the cross analysis between the curriculum document and the academic literature, specifically using Catling’s categories as the voice of authority. Table 3 reveals that there are many statements throughout the curriculum document that provide evidence for the presence of Catling’s categories. This is not surprising as Catling was mentioned as a voice of authority in the formation of the document.
Cross Analysis of Catling’s Categories From the Academic Literature and the
Table 4 below juxtaposes the discourses that emerged from the examination of the curriculum document and Catling’s categories. As can be seen from the table, there is a considerable overlap with only the “discourse of inquiry” not being found in Catling’s categories. Again, this is not surprising as the aim of Catling’s research was not to find out the method by which geography should be studied. The distinct “discourse of inquiry” inherent in the document suggests to the reader that this is the method for studying geography in Australia.
Cross Analysis of the Discourses From the
Continuing with the cross analysis as shown in Table 5, the academic literature (Catling’s categories) is positioned alongside the pre-service teachers’ discourses on geography. Catling’s “globalists,” “earthists,” and “placeists” align with the discourses of “globalists,” “earthists,” and “mapping” and Catling’s “environmentalists” show continuity with the “discourse of sustainability.” A major discontinuity or gap is, however, evident between the two data sets; that of “interactionists.” In other studies (Alkis, 2009; Bradbeer et al., 2004; Catling, 2004; Morley, 2012), this category featured quite strongly albeit more predominant in studies of pre-service secondary school teachers. A study that does concur with the findings here is that of Preston (2014) in the Australian state of Victoria, a state that had also endorsed SOSE. This reveals that the higher-level relational thinking needed for the teaching of geography (Bradbeer et al., 2004; Preston, 2014) is absent, not only in Queensland but also in other Australian states, which are also responsible for national curriculum implementation. Discourses that emerged superfluous to the academic literature are the discourses of “history,” “excursions,” and “negativity towards the subject.” In 2006, Hutchinson remarked on the demise of geography at the hands of SOSE stating that “the damage to the teaching of geography in Australian schools was considerable” (p. 196). However, the presence of these discourses perhaps highlighting the extent of the damage is unsubstantiated.
Cross Analysis of Catling’s Categories and the Discourses From the Pre-Service Teachers.
What is worrying about the last finding is revealed in the cross analysis between the discourses in the
Cross Analysis of the
The full cross analysis is summarized in Table 7, which reveals that certain transformations have to occur if the current pre-service teacher cohorts at this university are to teach the discipline of geography effectively in the primary setting.
Full Cross Analysis Summary of the Three Data Sets.
Conclusion
This study highlights that transformations in pre-service teacher education (at least at this university) need to occur for the effective teaching of geography in the primary setting. These transformations include changing pre-service teachers’ conception of geography from a narrow information-oriented (Martin, 2000) view to one that encompasses “a structured way of exploring, analysing and understanding the characteristics of the places that make up our world” (ACARA, 2014). Teacher education courses need to be taught by lecturers/tutors who have geographical expertise in the subject discipline as well as pedagogical knowledge. They need to enable a deep understanding of how to think conceptually, for example, knowing the difference between place and space and the importance of the interconnection between the physical and human worlds. Place cannot just be confined to our own locality but should take us to the Asia region and beyond building a much broader mental map of the world. Teacher educators need to role model and teach with passion, innovation, and creativity, diminishing any negativity from previous experiences. This could be done through hands on fieldwork or using the variety of virtual online geospatial technologies available rather than “death by worksheet” or rote learning. These more experiential learning episodes will develop “a sense of wonder, curiosity and respect about places, people, cultures and environments” (ACARA, 2014). Furthermore, it is the teacher educator’s job to develop the capacity of pre-service teachers to be competent, critical, and creative users of the inquiry method, so that they can instill in their primary students the ability to be informed, responsible, and active citizens who can contribute to the development of an environmentally and economically sustainable and socially just world (ACARA, 2014).
Australia now has a mandated curriculum that purports to focus on the discipline of geography but a cohort of emerging teachers (in Queensland) responsible for geography who lack a clear understanding of the nature of the discipline. The implications for schools, teacher education, and university geographical education are widespread. This university has allocated more time to the teaching of geography in the primary courses and has employed discipline-specific personnel who are well versed in the discipline, pedagogy, and conceptual thinking needed for effective practice.
Furthermore, many existing teachers may have the same misconceptions so it is probable that professional learning episodes will be necessary for those already in the field to bring them up to speed as geographers who can interpret the curriculum document for students. Geography teacher educators have to make informed decisions about the content of their courses, particularly for primary. The Australian experience is not unique, so how are other institutions dealing with this crisis?
