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1. How are teacher shortages in hardest-to-staff schools represented in (inter)national policy documents from England and Australia?

2. Towards a praxis of difference: Reimagining intercultural understanding in Australian schools as a challenge of practice.

3. The need for First Nations pedagogical narratives: epistemic inertia and complicity in (re)creating settler-colonial education.

4. The problematization of the (im)possible subject: an analysis of Health and Physical Education policy from Australia, USA and Wales.

5. 'Bulldozers aren't just for boys': respectful relationships education challenges gender bias in early primary students.

6. Conceptualising games and sport teaching in physical education as a culturally responsive curriculum and pedagogy.

7. Positioning Indigenous knowledge systems within the Australian mathematics curriculum: investigating transformative paradigms with Foucault.

8. Deconstructing health and physical education teacher education: a mapping and analysis of programme structure and content in Australia.

9. Constructing the Informal Curriculum of Islamic Schools in Australia: Contribution of Contextual Factors and Stakeholder Experiences.

10. The contemporary challenge of activism as curriculum work.

11. Fractal education inquiry.

12. Parents' perspectives on the inclusion of gender and sexuality diversity in K-12 schooling: results from an Australian national study.

13. 'Nothing about us without us': sex education by and for people with intellectual disability in Australia.

14. Human rights education: developing a theoretical understanding of teachers' responsibilities.

15. Decolonising the curriculum: using graduate qualities to embed Indigenous knowledges at the academic cultural interface.

16. The Efficacy of a Child Protection Training Program on the Historical Welfare Context and Aboriginal Trauma.

17. Education for reconciliation? Understanding and acknowledging the history of teaching First Nations content in Victoria, Australia.

18. Learning about health through 'intergenerational arts-led pedagogies' in health and physical education: exploring pedagogical possibilities.

19. Creativity in Australian health and physical education curriculum and pedagogy.

20. Trends in private higher education in Australia.

21. Scaffolding critical reflection across the curricula of a social welfare degree.

22. Implementing a collaborative medicine and pharmacy educational activity in two countries.

23. Standardised curriculum and hermeneutics: the case of Australian vocational educators.

24. The new meritocracy or over-schooled robots? Public attitudes on Asian–Australian education cultures.

25. Professionalism in vocational education: international perspectives.

26. (Re)defining outsourcing in education.

27. Teachers’ Curriculum Stories: Perceptions and preparedness to enact change.

28. An Aboriginal way towards curriculum reconciliation.

29. (K)now you see it, (k)now you don't: literary knowledge in the Australian Curriculum: English.

30. Inclusion of intimate partner violence-related content within undergraduate health care professional curriculum: mixed methods study of academics' attitudes and beliefs.

31. Nuancing the critique of commercialisation in schools: recognising teacher agency.

32. Sustainability as a cross-curricular priority in the Australian Curriculum: a Tasmanian investigation.

33. The constraints of relevance on prevocational curriculum.

34. The intensification of performativity in early childhood education.

35. National agendas in global times: curriculum reforms in Australia and the USA since the 1980s.

36. Whole Curriculum Mapping of Assessment: Cartographies of Assessment and Learning.

37. Exploring Chinese students’ experience of curriculum internationalisation: a comparative study of Scotland and Australia.

38. Institutional approaches for building intercultural understanding into the curriculum: an Australian perspective.

39. Strategies for leading academics to rethink humanities and social sciences curricula in the context of discipline standards.

40. Gender and sexuality diversity and schooling: progressive mothers speak out.

41. Open access enabling courses: risking academic standards or meeting equity aspirations.

42. Before studying in the humanities, what do students need?

43. Who's steering the ship? National curriculum reform and the re-shaping of Australian federalism.

44. Drama in the Australian national curriculum – the role of advocacy.

45. Practice ~ reflection ~ learning: work experience in planner education.

46. Reconceptualising inclusion as participation: Neoliberal buck-passing or strategic by-passing?

47. Secondary Geography and the Australian Curriculum – directions in school implementation: a comparative study.

48. A lost conduit for intercultural education: school geography and the potential for transformation in the Australian Curriculum.

49. Who cares? Infant educators’ responses to professional discourses of care.

50. Why some school subjects have a higher status than others: The epistemology of the traditional curriculum hierarchy.