Being a lead teacher of languages means being a person who knows, uses, and teaches languages in an ethical and reflective way. It involves a continuous engagement with and commitment to learning, as a life-long learner, a teacher, a colleague, and a mentor. A lead teacher of languages has a reflective, theorised and evidenced view of languages education and engages with current debates and developments. Lead teachers use their knowledge and insights to engage with the profession both in and out of schools, to support the professional learning of their colleagues and to work towards improving language education as a field.
The Professional Standards for lead teachers have been developed using the dimensions of the AFMLTA’s Professional Standards for the accomplished teaching of languages, so that the parallels between each set of Standards can be preserved and enhanced.
Being a lead teacher of languages means being a person who knows, uses, and teaches languages in an ethical and reflective way. It involves a continuous engagement with and commitment to learning, as a life-long learner, a teacher, a colleague, and a mentor. A lead teacher of languages has a reflective, theorised and evidenced view of languages education and engages with current debates and developments. Lead teachers use their knowledge and insights to engage with the profession both in and out of schools, to support the professional learning of their colleagues and to work towards improving language education as a field.
The Professional Standards for lead teachers of languages are articulated through the following dimensions:
These Standards are designed to be read in conjunction with the AFMLTA’s Professional Standards for the accomplished teaching of languages. The Standards for accomplished teaching of languages were designed as aspirational standards that reflect the on-going professional knowledge and conduct of teachers over their entire professional life. The Standards for lead teachers grow from these Standards and reflect a different way of engaging in the profession. Being a lead teacher of languages involves collaborative practice and working with others to promote one’s own or others’ needs, rather than a concentration on one’s own practice or career trajectory. It is through the exercise of leadership in the profession that lead teachers contribute to the ongoing development of the teaching and learning of languages across professional contexts.
These discipline-specific Standards work in combination with the Australian Professional Standards for Teachers.
These Standards are part of a suite of materials available on the AFMLTA website (afmlta.asn.au) including:
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Educational theory and practice
Lead teachers of languages have demonstrated consistent and innovative practice over time.
They:
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Language and culture
Lead teachers of languages have a sustained practice of maintaining their knowledge of the language and culture they teach, of intercultural communication, and of general principles of language, culture, and learning, and their interrelationship.
They:
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Language Pedagogy
Lead teachers of languages have a strong knowledge of contemporary theory, research, and practice in education generally, and languages education more specifically, in areas including teaching, learning, curriculum, assessment, and evaluation, and have a commitment to applying innovations in their own practice and sharing this with others.
They:
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Ethics and responsibility
Lead teachers of languages take responsibility for the teaching and learning relationship, and for social and cultural relationships in their teaching, and lead others to understand and accept this responsibility.
They:
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Professional relationships
Lead teachers of languages provide leadership in their professional communities through informal and formal relationships in their schools, the profession, and the wider community
They:
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Active engagement with wider context
Lead teachers of languages actively engage with social, political, economic, and technological contexts relevant to the field and lead others to similar engagement.
They:
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Advocacy
Lead teachers of languages initiate and foster action to advocate for language learning, intercultural communication and intercultural sensitivity, and linguistic and cultural diversity.
They:
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Personal characteristics
Lead teachers of languages actively promote the value of their profession and foster in others commitment to teaching and learning languages.
They:
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Lead teachers of languages recognise that accomplished languages teaching and learning can only occur in appropriate and supportive contexts.
They:
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Effective languages programs are visible and actively valued within the school culture. Languages teaching and learning are valued explicitly in schools’ statements and implicitly in the schools’ planning and review and processes, timetabling and resourcing for languages. Schools actively acknowledge and foster connections between languages and other curriculum areas.
Effective language programs:
Suggested questions for reflection