Exploring the Role Children’s Literature Plays in Preservice Teachers’ Curriculum-Making Capabilities: Designing Meaningful Lesson Sequences to Teach Writing
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Curriculum-Making
3. Preservice Teachers and Learning to Be Curriculum-Makers
4. Reforming the New South Wales Curriculum
5. Writing Instruction Using Children’s Literature
6. Preservice Teachers’ Learning About Children’s Literature in Initial Teacher Education
7. Conceptual Framework
8. Research Design
9. Data Analysis
10. Findings and Discussion
10.1. Children’s Literature: Focussing on the Interplay Between Teacher Choices, Student Experience, and the Subject
It was very strategic in choosing The Bad Guys [mentor text]. We, when looking, when thinking about creating a sequence of learning, we analysed our student work first in just kind of understanding what the needs were, like specifically figuring out that all students needed support in modal language use and what kind of text would engage them and show them examples of that too.
We wanted to match the language used, or the sort of writing style used in The Glim with what we identified as the students’ biggest needs, so that throughout the unit of work, we could use them to model how they might improve, so for example, help them focus on sentence structure.
We wanted to find something that they would enjoy as well as be good for the specific content needs…so in our mentor text across the whole sequence, we were able to go ‘this is what high modality looks like, this is how it’s used in the text, and this is how you can use this sort of language too’.
I think the main strength was helping probably with the overall flow of the lesson sequence, then also thinking about the use of drawing and drama strategies to facilitate some kind of collaboration. I think that gave like a chance for the grammar focus to be a bit more embodied and give a bit more meaning to it before we really went into analysing sentence structure and practising that.
Without it [the mentor text], it would lack consistency, like it would lack a unifying element for the content and skills we were looking at…like, it absolutely supports their learning, even just the fact of having some sort of consistency in the way they are learning new concepts.
10.2. Building Strong Perceptions of the Educational Significance of Mentor Texts
I think, using a mentor text is like evidence for students that what they are learning about is purposeful and useful. Without that example, I don’t know where the meaning is coming from for them.
If…I am using a mentor text consistently, and they know they have an understanding of the characters, they have an understanding of the way the story is written, they’d be more confident in approaching the content that you want to teach them.
I think that [the sequence] would be quite dry…just the explicit grammar focus…and I don’t think that would be meaningful to students.
11. Implications for Initial Teacher Education
12. Limitations
13. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 | Year 4 |
---|---|---|---|
Literary Texts (narrative, literary recount) | Literary Texts (narrative) | Factual Texts (inform, instruct, persuade) | Literary Texts (narrative, plays, poems) |
The first English unit introduces language and literacy development for young children. It aims to deepen understanding and appreciation of quality children’s picture books, using them as resources to support narrative language knowledge and skills. | The second English unit introduces reading and writing strategies while building pedagogical and metalinguistic knowledge. It incorporates cross-curricular, multimodal, digital, and media texts. | The third English unit identifies the language and literacy demands of factual and multimodal texts. It provides opportunities to design high-quality lessons with explicit, staged teaching using the Gradual Release of Responsibility model. | The final English unit explores literary texts, including picture books, novels, plays, poetry, and popular culture, to teach the English curriculum. The focus is on developing children’s critical understanding and imaginative writing through strategies that encourage creative responses. |
Category | Teacher Choices | Student Experience | The Subject |
---|---|---|---|
Scope of content and pedagogical choices | We’ve got role play, there’s drama strategies, there’s a little bit of written work but it’s normally paired with something creative, which was hoping to act as bit of a scaffold (Andrea) | One of our strengths [in the lesson] were the drama elements. I think that they really would have enhanced the engagement for the students (Emma) | We looked at some model sentences from The Glim, and analysed how Emily Rodda had constructed those sentences and their impact on the reader, and then did some practice writing sentences, following her models (Alice) |
Responsivity to student need and engagement | We wanted something that they would enjoy as well as be good for the specific needs (Nina) | We analysed our student work first in just kind of understanding what the needs were…. specifically figuring out that all students needed support in like modal language (Andrea) | We were still using examples from the text and linking it back to students’ knowledge of the content (Alice) |
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Poulton, P.; Brosseuk, D. Exploring the Role Children’s Literature Plays in Preservice Teachers’ Curriculum-Making Capabilities: Designing Meaningful Lesson Sequences to Teach Writing. Educ. Sci. 2025, 15, 549. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15050549
Poulton P, Brosseuk D. Exploring the Role Children’s Literature Plays in Preservice Teachers’ Curriculum-Making Capabilities: Designing Meaningful Lesson Sequences to Teach Writing. Education Sciences. 2025; 15(5):549. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15050549
Chicago/Turabian StylePoulton, Phillip, and Deb Brosseuk. 2025. "Exploring the Role Children’s Literature Plays in Preservice Teachers’ Curriculum-Making Capabilities: Designing Meaningful Lesson Sequences to Teach Writing" Education Sciences 15, no. 5: 549. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15050549
APA StylePoulton, P., & Brosseuk, D. (2025). Exploring the Role Children’s Literature Plays in Preservice Teachers’ Curriculum-Making Capabilities: Designing Meaningful Lesson Sequences to Teach Writing. Education Sciences, 15(5), 549. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15050549