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DTSTART;TZID=Australia/Melbourne:20250911T173000
DTEND;TZID=Australia/Melbourne:20250911T193000
DTSTAMP:20260519T121926
CREATED:20250720T231820Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250724T221430Z
UID:40457-1757611800-1757619000@victesol.vic.edu.au
SUMMARY:Transforming TESOL Practice: AI as a Literacy and Learning Partner
DESCRIPTION:Transforming TESOL Practice: AI as a Literacy and Learning Partner\n11 September 5:30pm – 7:30pm AEST\, Online\nThis dynamic two-hour online workshop empowers TESOL educators to harness artificial intelligence as a transformative tool for English language learners. Grounded in sociocultural learning theory and multilingual pedagogies\, participants will explore practical strategies that utilise student linguistic repertoires toward effective English language learning. The session begins with foundational concepts of AI literacy before a focus on practical classroom strategies. Teachers will discover how to employ generative AI for translanguaging activities that validate home languages whilst building English proficiency. Participants will learn to craft effective prompts that generate scaffolded writing exercises\, vocabulary practice\, and grammar support tailored to diverse proficiency levels. Interactive demonstrations showcase AI applications for information literacy\, teaching students to critically evaluate AI generated content and develop research skills. The workshop explores creating multimodal learning materials using AI for visual\, textual and interactive content that supports diverse learning styles and cultural backgrounds. A significant focus addresses real world communication preparation\, demonstrating how AI can simulate authentic speaking scenarios from job interviews to community interactions. Teachers will practise designing conversation prompts that reflect lived experiences of students and their future goals and needs. Throughout the workshop\, ethical considerations and digital citizenship principles guide discussions about responsible AI integration. Participants will leave with immediately implementable strategies. This professional development opportunity is designed to transform traditional TESOL approaches\, positioning educators to confidently integrate AI into existing practices. \nSpeaker\nDr Edwin Creely \nDr Edwin Creely is a senior lecturer in the Faculty of Education at Monash University\, Melbourne\, Australia\, bringing over 25 years of classroom teaching experience to his current role. With an international reputation built on more than 60 publications across academic journals and books\, he leads research in digital technologies\, generative artificial intelligence\, and adult education. His recent publications include Digital Empowerment for Refugee and Migrant Learners (2025) and Enhancing Digital Literacies with Adult English Language Learners (2022)\, which provide practical frameworks for educators working with diverse populations. Dr Creely’s research focuses on how emerging technologies can transform teaching practice\, particularly in language education and teacher training programs. His work examines the pedagogical implications of AI integration in classrooms\, developing assessment strategies that support both educators and learners. Through partnerships with educational institutions globally\, he translates research findings into actionable strategies for improving digital literacy outcomes. Dr Creely regularly presents at international conferences on educational technology\, sharing evidence-based approaches that help educators navigate technological innovation while maintaining focus on student learning outcomes and authentic assessment practices. \nCost\n$10 – VicTESOL members (including members of other state TESOL associations)\n$30 – Non-members\nBecome a member today\, for member prices! \nPlease note: VicTESOL is a not-for-profit organisation. Your registration ensures we can continue to offer high quality professional learning. Registrations are per participant. Purchasing a ticket buys the participant the right to the live online session. Registration is not to be shared with any other person who has not purchased a ticket. 
URL:https://victesol.vic.edu.au/event/transforming-tesol-practice-ai-as-a-literacy-and-learning-partner/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:VicTESOL Professional Learning
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DTSTART;TZID=Australia/Melbourne:20251113T173000
DTEND;TZID=Australia/Melbourne:20251113T183000
DTSTAMP:20260519T121926
CREATED:20250730T094549Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250810T013706Z
UID:40557-1763055000-1763058600@victesol.vic.edu.au
SUMMARY:Teaching Otherwise: Hybrid Professional Becoming in Multilingual English Classrooms
DESCRIPTION:Teaching Otherwise: Hybrid Professional Becoming in Multilingual English Classrooms\nLiza Abad\, Amna Iqbal\, Ashley Starford\, Thanh Huong Hang Le (Jo Le)\, Nashid Nigar \nFaculty of Education\, University of Melbourne \n13 November 5:30pm – 6:30pm AEDT\, Online\nA gathering of stories\, senses\, and solidarities \nWhat does it mean to teach English across multiple languages\, lands\, and life-worlds? \nThis session brings together a diverse group of English educators—teaching in schools\, TAFE\, community programs\, and universities across Australia and beyond—who work daily with learners from both English-first and additional-language backgrounds. The panel members are connected through Dr Nigar’s teaching and research on languages and literacies education at the University of Melbourne\, and as participants and/or co-authors in her related projects. Many have also shared narratives of lived experience and professional insight as part of her broader research collaborations. \nTogether with Dr Nigar—whose award-winning research developed the Hybrid Professional Becoming (HPB) approach\, a fluid and relational way of shaping professional identity across contexts—the panel will invite participants into an artefact-rich\, co-created space of epistemic care. \nPremised on Hybrid Relational Onto-Epistemology (HROE)—which we define as mixing diverse ways of being\, connecting\, and knowing—the session foregrounds the lived\, multilingual\, and affectively charged (encompassing emotion\, feeling\, and embodied sense and their movements) knowledge of teachers working with EAL/D learners\, migrant and refugee students\, and culturally diverse cohorts. \nPanellists will share practical and imaginative curriculum provocations\, including: \n· a phonics remix through students’ home languages\, \n· a migration object-as-poem connecting personal histories with classroom learning\, and \n· a pedagogical moment of rupture that reshaped a lesson around student agency. \nThe artefacts do more than illustrate practice—they speak back to standard English focused monolingual standardisation and technocratic pressures\, reclaiming teacher professional identity as ethical\, embodied\, relational\, and affective. \nThrough translanguaging activities such as a Languages of Care Padlet and small-group storytelling\, participants will surface their own hybrid knowings-cum-becomings—shaping professional identity through lived knowledges—and reimagine literacy\, curriculum\, and assessment. Together\, we ask: \n· What do we know as teachers that cannot be measured? \n· Which professional norms feel unliveable? \n· How might we sustain joy\, solidarity\, and agency amid policy constraints? \nParticipants will leave with a practical resource pack—including zines on linguistically and culturally responsive pedagogy\, phonics remixes using students’ home languages\, artefact templates such as ‘migration object-as-poem’ activities\, and care collages designed to build \nclassroom solidarity—which they can adapt for English lessons\, literacy support\, and intercultural projects in their own classrooms and communities”. \nHere\, teaching is reframed not as compliance with fixed norms\, but as a relational and intercultural act of becoming and cosmopolitan envision—a shared journey towards inclusive\, justice-oriented education. \nSpeakers\nLiza C Abad Liza is a globally experienced multilingual teacher\, currently teaching English at a TAFE in Melbourne. With over a decade of experience across ELICOS\, AMEP\, and community education\, she integrates creative and tech-enhanced pedagogies with culturally responsive strategies that honour learners’ journeys\, linguistic assets\, and aspirations. \nAmna Iqbal Amna is a multilingual English teacher and researcher with experience in both public and independent schools\, where she has worked extensively with multilingual EAL students. With a background in English Literature\, Spanish\, and learning design\, she brings creativity\, cultural awareness\, and relational care to her practice. Entering the profession through Teach for Australia\, she is now completing a Master of Education (Research) at the University of Melbourne\, reimagining English teaching as an ethical and inclusive practice that nurtures belonging and curiosity. \nAshley Starford Ashley is an Academic Teacher and Teaching Associate who supports multilingual and EAL learners across higher education and English language programs. He teaches at the University of Melbourne and Monash University and is also an Academic Adviser and ELICOS teacher at Swinburne College. His work centres on inclusive curriculum design\, teacher–student relationships\, and innovative English for Academic Purposes pedagogies. He holds a Master of Education (TESOL) from the University of Melbourne and a Graduate Certificate in Learning and Teaching (Higher Education). \nThanh Huong Hang Le (Jo Le) Jo is a multilingual English teacher and researcher with experience in community\, adult\, and school-based learning settings. Currently supporting students at Collingwood College and AMES Australia\, Jo brings intercultural curiosity\, community care\, and creative inquiry to her teaching. Grounded in lived migration experience and translingual perspectives\, her practice affirms learner voices and cultural heritage while fostering inclusive education. She holds a Master of Education (TESOL) from the University of Melbourne. \nMartha Heng Xia is an EAL/AMEP teacher at Chisholm Institute TAFE with over a decade of experience in English language teaching across TAFE\, RTOs\, and community education. Currently completing her PhD in Education at Monash University\, her research explores multilingualism\, TESOL\, and teacher identities. She designs culturally responsive resources and learning environments that support employability\, life skills\, and student wellbeing\, drawing on her expertise in translating\, intercultural communication\, and learner-centred pedagogy. \nDr Nashid Nigar Nashid is a Lecturer at the University of Melbourne with over 20 years’ teaching experience across schools\, TAFE\, community education\, and universities in Australia and internationally. Awarded the prestigious Mollie Holman Medal for her PhD\, she has made a significant impact on research and practice in English teacher professional identity\, multilingual pedagogies\, and interculturally responsive academic development. Her work focuses on Hybrid Professional Becoming and designing inclusive\, justice-oriented curricula across diverse contexts. \nCost\n$10 – VicTESOL members (including members of other state TESOL associations)\n$30 – Non-members\nBecome a member today\, for member prices! \nPlease note: VicTESOL is a not-for-profit organisation. Your registration ensures we can continue to offer high quality professional learning. Registrations are per participant. Purchasing a ticket buys the participant the right to the live online session. Registration is not to be shared with any other person who has not purchased a ticket. 
URL:https://victesol.vic.edu.au/event/teaching-otherwise-hybrid-professional-becoming-in-multilingual-english-classrooms/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:VicTESOL Professional Learning
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DTSTART;TZID=Australia/Melbourne:20260311T173000
DTEND;TZID=Australia/Melbourne:20260311T183000
DTSTAMP:20260519T121926
CREATED:20250711T233847Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260121T064220Z
UID:40404-1773250200-1773253800@victesol.vic.edu.au
SUMMARY:Learner Centred Assessment: Portfolio Assessment of the EAL Framework 
DESCRIPTION:Learner Centred Assessment: Portfolio Assessment of the EAL Framework\n11 March 2026 5:30pm – 6:30pm AEDT\, Online\nCome to this session to hear Gordon TAFE share how they use portfolio as the main assessment method in their adult EAL program. Learn some insights into how this way of designing assessment tasks allows for a flexible\, holistic\, and learner centred approach to gathering and capturing assessment evidence for the EAL Framework. \nSpeaker\nAngela Di Sciascio is a passionate EAL teacher who has worked in the adult sector for over 25 years. Angela is actively involved in state-wide networks including the EAL Framework Adult Sector Advisory Group and VicTESOL committee. She is currently the President of VicTESOL. Angela recently completed her Masters of Education where her research focused on analysing the knowledge underpinning the Victorian EAL Framework accredited curriculum. \nCost\n$10 – VicTESOL members (including members of other state TESOL associations)\n$30 – Non-members\nBecome a member today\, for member prices! \nPlease note: VicTESOL is a not-for-profit organisation. Your registration ensures we can continue to offer high quality professional learning. Registrations are per participant. Purchasing a ticket buys the participant the right to the live online session. Registration is not to be shared with any other person who has not purchased a ticket. 
URL:https://victesol.vic.edu.au/event/learner-centred-assessment-portfolio-assessment-of-the-eal-framework/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Affiliated Professional Learning,VicTESOL Professional Learning
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