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TCHR3001: Early Childhood Matters Summary Title Type Due Date Length Weighting Academic Integrity Submission Unit Learning Outcomes Assessment 2 Position paper Friday, April 12th at 11:59 pm AEST/AEDT (end of Week 6) 1500 words 50% GenAI may NOT be used in this task. Under the Rules - Student Academic and Non-Academic Misconduct Rules (Section 3) students have the right to Appeal against the Academic Integrity Officers academic misconduct Determination, to the Executive Dean, with that determination being final and conclusive, and not subject to further Appeal within the University. Students are not able to appeal against academic misconduct via the Unit Assessor or unit staff. Word document submitted to Turnitin (do NOT submit PDF documents) This assessment task maps to the following ULOs: • ULO1: Identify a range of issues important to early childhood education and care. • ULO2: Analyse a range of positions highlighted in authoritative literature on contemporary issues related to early childhood education and care. • ULO3: Critically reflect on their personal approach/philosophy of learning, development and teaching within early childhood education and care in relation to contemporary issues. • ULO4: Argue a position on current issues in early childhood education and care, in relation to the literature Rationale As an early childhood teacher your beliefs form the basis of your early childhood philosophy. How you implement this philosophy within your teaching practice will be influenced by a range of issues within your local and broader community. Task Description This task requires you to analyse and evaluate the various positions of the contemporary issues presented in Module 4 – 6. Include a personal reflection that explains your own position on a selected issue and critically analyse and justify your personal position in relation to current, scholarly literature. Task Instructions 1 Assessment Brief Drawing on the unit learning materials, unit tutorials and a range of relevant and current scholarly literature, select one issue addressed in Module 4 to 6 of this unit and: • Part 1: Analyse and evaluate the positions put forward on this issue within the unit materials and discussions. (500 words) • Part 2: Reflect on and synthesise your personal position on the issue explaining why and how it is relevant to you personally as a teacher/educator working with children, families, and other relevant stakeholders in the Australian early years sector (500 words). • Part 3: Justify your personal position on the issue using a range of relevant and current scholarly literature. (500 words). Please note: • Part 2 and Part 3 of this task can be written in first (“I” statements) or third person, however you need to be consistent over the task in the tense and person you use. • All areas of your responses to this task need to be supported by relevant and current literature. This means you need to cite relevant and current (within the last 10 years) literature that supports what you are saying throughout your writing. • Please refer to your rubric for the literature that you MUST include in your responses to each part of this task.. • Please remember that you must use scholarly literature in this task. Please refer to the following documents to support you in addressing this task: General: • How to Incorporate Evidence into Your Writing - https://www.scu.edu.au/media/scudep/current-students/learning-zone/quickguides/how_to_incorporate_evidence_into_your_writing.pdf • Summarising and Paraphrasing - https://www.scu.edu.au/media/scu-dep/currentstudents/learning-zone/quick-guides/summarising_and_paraphrasing.pdf Part 1: • You MUST refer to the unit learning materials and discussions in the recorded tutorial session/s that address the issue you select. • Look at the meaning of ‘analyse’ and ‘evaluate’ in the following document https://www.scu.edu.au/media/scu-dep/current-students/learning-zone/quickguides/common_instruction_words.pdf • Part 2: • Read this document about Reflective Writing - https://www.scu.edu.au/media/scudep/current-students/learning-zone/quick-guides/reflective_writing.pdf Part 3: • Look at the meaning of ‘justify’ in the following document https://www.scu.edu.au/media/scu-dep/current-students/learning-zone/quickguides/common_instruction_words.pdf • Writing Paragraphs (PEEL method) - https://www.scu.edu.au/media/scu-dep/currentstudents/learning-zone/quick-guides/writing_paragraphs.pdf • Planning and Writing Body Paragraphs (using the PEEL method) https://www.scu.edu.au/media/scu-dep/current-students/learning-zone/quickguides/planning_and_writing_body_paragraphs.pdf 2 Assessment Brief Formatting and style APA 7 formatting is required for this task. • Include a cover page that contains: o The title of the task in bold o Your name (as author), o Your faculty (Faculty of Education) o The unit code and name (TCHR3001 Early Childhood Matters) o Your unit assessor’s name (Kelly Simpson) o The due date • Include a title or the prompt at the start of each response. • Students may use headings that align with the task instructions to organise their responses. • Indent the first line of each new paragraph. • Use 12-point Arial font. • Double line space your writing and your reference list. Referencing • APA Referencing style is required to be used for this task. • Include one reference list for all responses on a new page at the end of your task. Place the title References in bold in the centre at the top of this page. • At a minimum, your sources for this task will include the EYLF (AGDE, 2022), the NQF (ACECQA, 2023), a range of unit materials, and broader current scholarly literature. • Broader literature may include textbooks, peer reviewed articles, and published newspaper and/or media articles by reputable sources (for example, the ABC, The Conversation, Early Childhood Australia) • You need to include at least 8 scholarly references in your response to this task as well as the unit learning materials and the EYLF (AGDE, 2022) and NQS, (ACECQA, 2023). Resources • • • • • Academic Integrity - https://www.scu.edu.au/about/leadership/executive/academicportfolio-office-apo/academic-integrity-framework/ SCU Student Learning Zone - https://www.scu.edu.au/current-students/learning-zone/ The Early Years Learning Framework - https://www.acecqa.gov.au/sites/default/files/202301/EYLF-2022-V2.0.pdf National Quality Standard - https://www.acecqa.gov.au/nqf/national-quality-standard Guide to the National Quality Framework (including the National Quality Standards) https://www.acecqa.gov.au/nqf/about/guide Referencing Style Resource Please refer to the APA 7th Referencing Guide for this task - https://libguides.scu.edu.au/apa Task Submission • Your task should be submitted using the submission point in the Turnitin folder titled Assessment 2: Position Paper in the Assessments Tasks and Submission section on the Blackboard TCHR3001 site. Only Microsoft Word documents submitted via the Turnitin portal on Blackboard will be accepted. You must label your final submission with your surname and initials and the assessment task's name, e.g. SmithJ_PositionPaper.doc 3 Assessment Brief • • • • You are strongly advised to undertake your own SIMILARITY CHECK via Turnitin, PRIOR to the due date, to identify and resolve any academic integrity issues prior to submitting - see SCU Academic Integrity and Turnitin. You can submit up to three times and receive the similarity match report immediately – after three attempts, you will need to wait 24 hours. It is YOUR responsibility to ensure that you have submitted the correct file and the FINAL version of your assessment for marking BEFORE the due date/time. Turnitin does not generate an automatic email receipt. If you have successfully uploaded your assessment, a green bar will appear at the top of the screen that says: Submission uploaded successfully: Download digital receipt. Use the hyperlink to download your digital receipt and store this with your assignment file. If you have any difficulty submitting your assignment, please contact Technology Services and make sure that you log a job with them, so you have evidence of your attempted submission. To avoid any last-minute problems, make sure you submit well before 11:59pm on the due date. Academic Integrity At Southern Cross University academic integrity means behaving with the values of honesty, fairness, trustworthiness, courage, responsibility, and respect in relation to academic work. The Southern Cross University Academic Integrity Framework aims to develop a holistic, systematic, and consistent approach to addressing academic integrity across the entire University. For more information see the SCU Academic Integrity Framework NOTE: Academic Integrity breaches include poor referencing, not identifying direct quotations correctly, close paraphrasing, plagiarism, recycling, misrepresentation, collusion, cheating, contract cheating, fabricating information. GenAI May Not be Used Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI) tools, such as ChatGPT, must NOT be used for this Assessment Task. You are required to demonstrate if you have developed the unit’s skills and knowledge without the support of GenAI. Grammarly (but NOT GrammarlyGo) may be used to review your task and make changes to grammar or punctuation or to single words however it must NOT be used to re-write sentences or paragraphs. Please note that GenAI tools include a range of translation tools. It is the responsibility of students to ensure that any translation tool they are using is not a GenAI tool. Students are encouraged to write their work without the support of translation tools for this reason. If you use GenAI tools in your assessment task, it may result in an academic integrity breach against you as described in the Student Academic and Non-Academic Misconduct Rules, Section 3. Under the Rules - Student Academic and Non-Academic Misconduct Rules (Section 3) students have the right to Appeal against the Academic Integrity Officers academic misconduct Determination, to the Executive Dean, with that determination being final and conclusive, and not subject to further Appeal within the University. Students are not able to appeal against academic misconduct via the Unit Assessor or unit staff. Special Consideration Please refer to the Special Consideration section of Policy https://policies.scu.edu.au/document/view-current.php?id=140 Late Submissions & Penalties 4 Assessment Brief Please refer to the Late Submission & Penalties section of Policy https://policies.scu.edu.au/view.current.php?id=00255 Grades & Feedback Assessments that have been submitted by the due date will receive an SCU grade. Grades and feedback will be posted to the ‘Grades and Feedback’ section on the Blackboard unit site. Please allow 7 days for marks to be posted. Assessment Criteria See the marking rubric for the marking criteria and grading standards. … continued on next page…. 5 Assessment Brief Assessment Rubric Marking Criteria and % allocation Criterion 1: Part 1, Analysis, and evaluation of positions put forward in the unit learning and tutorials on one issue from Modules 4-6 is supported with reference to the learning materials and recorded tutorial/s. as well as recent scholarly literature 15% High Distinction + 100% Achieves all the criteria for a high distinction to an exemplary standard. Key positions on a chosen issue from Modules 4-6 that were presented in the learning materials and recorded tutorial/s are analysed and evaluated at an exceptional level with exceptional integration the unit materials, recorded tutorials and recent scholarly High Distinction (85–99%) Distinction (75–84%) Credit (65–74%) Pass (50–64%) Marginal Fail (35-49%) Fail (1-34%) Not Addressed (0%) Key positions on a chosen issue from Modules 46 that were presented in the learning materials and recorded tutorial/s are succinctly and clearly analysed and evaluated at an outstanding level with clear integration of the unit materials, recorded tutorial/s and a range of recent scholarly literature. Key positions on a chosen issue from Modules 4-6 that were presented in the learning materials and recorded tutorial/s are succinctly and clearly analysed and evaluated at a very good level with clear support from the unit materials, recorded tutorial/s and a range of recent scholarly literature Key positions on a chosen issue from Modules 4-6 that were presented in the learning materials and recorded tutorial/s are succinctly analysed and evaluated at a good level with clear reference to the unit materials, recorded tutorial/s and a range of recent scholarly literature Key positions on a chosen issues from Modules 4-6 that were presented in the learning materials and recorded tutorial/s are satisfactorily analysed and evaluated with references to some unit materials, recorded tutorial/s and a range of recent scholarly literature evident Key positions on a chosen issue from Modules 4-6 that were presented in the learning materials and recorded tutorial/s are unclearly analysed and evaluated and/or discussed rather than analysed and evaluated with relevant references to the unit materials and/or recorded tutorial/s and/or Key positions on an issue from Modules 4-6 that were presented in the learning materials and recorded tutorial/s is not addressed and/or the analysis/ evaluation/ discussion presented is not relevant to the positions presented in the learning materials and/or tutorial/s and/or the references to scholarly literature Not attempted 6 Assessment Brief literature and no errors. Criterion 2: Part 2, Reflection, and personal position on one issue from Modules 4-6 is supported by references to the EYLF (AGDE, 2022), NQS (ACECQA, 2023) and 4 relevant and current Achieves all the criteria a high distinction, with exemplary discussion of a personal position on one relevant issue and support drawn from the integration of a broad range of relevant and current scholarly An outstanding personal position relevant to an ECEC professional on one chosen issue from Modules 4 - 6 is comprehensively supported through the integration of a range of relevant and current scholarly literature and A very good personal position relevant to an ECEC professional on one chosen issue from Modules 4 - 6 is clearly supported through the integration of 4 or more relevant and current A good personal position relevant to an ECEC professional on one chosen issue from Modules 4 - 6 is supported by clear references to 4 or more relevant and current scholarly A satisfactory personal position relevant to an ECEC professional on one chosen issue from Modules 4 - 6 is presented with references to 4 relevant and current scholarly literature reference to scholarly literature and/or no references to the unit materials and/or recorded tutorial/s are included in an appropriate analysis of an issue from Modules 4-6. provided are not relevant to the learning in the unit and/or to the chosen issue. A personal position relevant to an ECEC professional on one chosen issue from Modules 4 - 6 is presented without references to at least 2 relevant and current scholarly literature The personal position outlined does not address an issue from Modules 4-6 and/or the position presented is generic/not personal and/or relevant to an ECEC professional and/or the Not attempted 7 Assessment Brief scholarly literature. 15% literature and no errors. the EYLF (AGDE, 2022), NQS (ACECQA, 2023). scholarly literature sources as well as the EYLF (AGDE, 2022), NQS (ACECQA, 2023). literature sources as well as the EYLF (AGDE, 2022), NQS (ACECQA, 2023). sources including the EYLF (AGDE, 2022), NQS (ACECQA, 2023). Criterion 3: Part 3, Justification of personal position supported by references to the EYLF (AGDE, 2022), NQS (ACECQA, 2023) and at least 4 relevant and current scholarly literature. Achieves all the criteria for a high distinction, with consistently outstanding integration of a range of very relevant and current scholarly literature sources and unit learning The justification of the personal positions is excellently linked to the personal position presented and reflects deep engagement with a range of scholarly literature with a minimum of 4 relevant and The justification of the personal position is very clearly linked to the personal position presented and reflects clear engagement with a range of scholarly literature with a minimum of 4 relevant and The justification of the personal position is clearly linked to the personal position presented and reflects good engagement with a range of scholarly literature. A minimum of 4 relevant and The justification of one personal position is satisfactorily linked to the personal position presented and supported by scholarly literature. A minimum of 4 relevant and current sources and/or there is no reference to the EYLF (AGDE, 2022), NQS (ACECQA), and/or the personal position only generally relates to one issue from Modules 4-6 and is presented with or without references. The justification presented is only generally linked to the personal position presented and/or a minimum of 3 relevant and current scholarly sources as well as the EYLF literature used is not relevant or is invalid. The justification presented is not relevant to the personal positions presented and/or does not include references to relevant and/or valid sources of current Not attempted. 8 Assessment Brief 15% materials/areas with no errors. current scholarly sources as well as the EYLF (AGDE, 2022) and NQS (ACECQA, 2023) integrated within the justification. current scholarly sources as well as the EYLF (AGDE, 2022) and NQS (ACECQA, 2023) integrated within the justification current scholarly sources as well as the EYLF (AGDE, 2022) and NQS (ACECQA, 2023) provide good support to the justification. scholarly sources as well as the EYLF (AGDE, 2022) and NQS (ACECQA, 2023) are referenced within the justification. (AGDE, 2022) and NQS (ACECQA, 2023) are not referenced in the justification. scholarly literature. Criterion 4: Standard of writing and presentation – spelling, punctuation, grammar, paragraph structure, appropriate word count, APA 7th referencing. 5% Achieves all the criteria for a high distinction to an exemplary standard, without any errors. Excellent standard of writing and presentation with no errors in spelling, punctuation, grammar, paragraph structure, or APA 7th referencing. Word count within +/- 10% of the set word count. Very good standard of writing and presentation with very minor and very inconsistent errors in spelling and punctuation and grammar and paragraph structure and APA 7th referencing. Word count within +/- 10% of the set word count. Good standard of writing and presentation with some minor and inconsistent errors in one or two areas of spelling or punctuation or grammar or paragraph structure, or APA 7th referencing. Word count within +/- 10% of the set word count. Satisfactory standard of writing and presentation with errors in most areas of spelling, punctuation, grammar, paragraph structure, APA 7th referencing or consistent errors in one or two of the above areas and/or word count over/under +/- Poor standard of writing and presentation with consistent errors in most/all areas of spelling, punctuation, grammar, paragraph structure, and APA 7th referencing and/or word count significantly under or over +/- 10% of the set word count for the task Significant improvement needed in writing and presentation with consistent errors in spelling, punctuation, grammar, paragraph structure, and APA 7th referencing Not attempted. 9 Assessment Brief 10% of the set word count. 10 Assessment Brief Description of SCU Grades High Distinction: The student’s performance, in addition to satisfying all of the basic learning requirements, demonstrates distinctive insight and ability in researching, analysing and applying relevant skills and concepts, and shows exceptional ability to synthesise, integrate and evaluate knowledge. The student’s performance could be described as outstanding in relation to the learning requirements specified. Distinction: The student’s performance, in addition to satisfying all of the basic learning requirements, demonstrates distinctive insight and ability in researching, analysing and applying relevant skills and concepts, and shows a well-developed ability to synthesise, integrate and evaluate knowledge. The student’s performance could be described as distinguished in relation to the learning requirements specified. Credit: The student’s performance, in addition to satisfying all of the basic learning requirements specified, demonstrates insight and ability in researching, analysing and applying relevant skills and concepts. The student’s performance could be described as competent in relation to the learning requirements specified. Pass: The student’s performance satisfies all of the basic learning requirements specified and provides a sound basis for proceeding to higher-level studies in the subject area. The student’s performance could be described as satisfactory in relation to the learning requirements specified. Fail: The student’s performance fails to satisfy the learning requirements specified. 11 Assessment Brief
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Assessment 2: Position Paper


Part 1: Inclusion
o Inclusion is one of the topics addressed in module 5 on the ‘Issues of
Importance to the Early Childhood Profession.’
o Inclusion pertains to creating an enabling environment for all children to
participate in the education program where their strengths and interests
are nurtured (EYLF, 2022).
o This child’s rights principle ensures that no child is excluded or
discriminated against in the learning setting because of their cultural
background, disability, gender, and circumstance. Notably, an inclusive
environment in early childhood education promotes positive outcomes and
the well-being of all children amidst diversity.
o The position of inclusion in Australia is that it is a child’s right to education.
o The emphasis on inclusive early childhood services enabled many
children with disabilities and other special needs to enroll in schools within
the country
o The module also highlights the significant role of educators in developing
a favorable environment for children's participation and engagement in
learning.
o According to EYLF (2022), educators are responsible for creating inclusive
learning environments and adopting informed practices.
o Considerably, an inclusive learning environment benefits the children, their
families, and communities.

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o It helps the children to gain a sense of belonging and connection, thus
boosting their self-esteem and confidence.
o Inclusion also enables children to learn from their peers by interacting in
childhood plays and activities.


Part 2: My Position
o Developing an inclusive learning environment is a significant practice that
every educator at the early childhood services needs to adopt and
embrace.
o As an educator in Australia, I recognize and understand the importance of
treating inclusion in ECEC as a children’s right that must be integrated
within and outside the curriculum.
o With the increasing diversity in the classroom, it is imperative for
educators to have prerequisite skills and abilities to create inclusive
learning environments that stimulate learners to be creative and
successful.
o My position is that inclusion is a critical aspect of delivering a high-quality
education to all children across Australia.
o I believe that having an inclusive attitude is not just a moral characteristic
but a knowledge and competency that every educator must hone to
challenge discriminatory practices in our early childhood education
services
o I have also learned that inclusive education is a child-centered learning
approach that prioritizes individual needs.

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o It creates an environment where children feel that they are equal despite
their cultural differences or disabilities.
o Inclusive education focuses on children’s strengths and interests, enabling
them to reach their potential (EYLF, 2022).
o Furthermore, I believe that inclusive education is pivotal to sustainable
community and societal development.
o This practice does not end with children; it extends to families and
communities. When creating an inclusive learning environment, educators
must consider the needs of families and other stakeholders.


Part 3: Justifying My Position
o There are various studies and literature that support my position that
inclusion is an essential skill and ability to have as an educator in the early
childhood education setting.
o Inclusion in the children's ECEC services has been termed as the most
feasible approach to achieving high-quality education (Warren et al.,
2016).
o Turner and Morgan (2019) attribute widespread diversity in the school
system to the country's social, economic, and cultural differences.
o The scholarly literature also supports the idea that inclusive early
childhood education fosters high-quality learning.
o According to EYLF (2022), inclusion helps educators plan, implement, and
assess high-quality...

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