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The
History of ELAN In its 25 years, ELAN has supported Language Arts, English, and Media consultants, teachers, and their principals through continual renewal. |
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| MEETINGS HISTORY E-JOURNAL PROFESSIONAL LEARNING CONTACT ELAN | ||
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ELAN's
Origins
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ELAN has been led by some of Ontario's best known educators. ELAN's
founders in the early '70's were: Roberta
Charlesworth, from the North York Board of Education; Established
as a loose organization of Toronto area consultants and working in close
association with the Ontario Council of Teachers of English (OCTE), this
early group presented workshops for the OCTE's annual conferences, (often
held at the Park Plaza Hotel), served on the OCTE executive and wrote
articles for its journal, Indirections (previously known as The English
Exchange). The Founding
of ECCO The expansion greatly increased the collective resources of the members, and their influence in the provincial Ministry of Education which had subject specialists on staff to develop curriculum. Jerry George and Gray Cavanaugh were two such ministry officials who belonged to ECCO and gave members regular reports on Ministry initiatives. ECCO's responses were held in some esteem. It responded vigorously to the new guidelines in 1987, and ECCO members became writers of provincial curriculum and support documents. Jerry George, for example, organized the Profiles series that supported the 87 guideline. As this relationship with the educational bureaucracy developed, ECCO became the political voice for English teachers in Ontario, while the OCTE in its annual conferences supported professional growth and reflection. ECCO walked a fine line between being a curriculum and human resource to the ministry, and lobbying to make the collective voice of English teachers known to Ministers and Deputy Ministers of Education. In addition to these two functions, its members began to share documents their boards were producing, and to write and publish monographs on key issues in English teaching. By the early nineties this phase of expanding productivity and influence took yet another turn. Serious provincial funding cuts began, and many consulting or coordinating positions began to disappear from boards around the province. By 1993, several representatives attending ECCO meetings were secondary school department heads, principals, and even superintendents. In addition, there was a growing proportion of members from far-off boards who could not attend meetings. ELAN's Early Involvement in Media Education The vigorous activity of ELAN's early founders included annual one-day conferences in the spring and fall featuring keynote speakers and workshops delivered by prominent educators like Bryant Fillion, John McInness and Frank Smith in the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education. Some of these workshops were introductions to the the importance of the media in English education. Frank McTeague and "Robbie" Charlesworth, were early pioneers in this work on Media literacy. They found key leaders in their boards and the funds to promote media study and video productions as far back as the early 1970's. In the late 70's, one member of the group, Barry Duncan, joined forces with Linda Schuyler (De Grassi High) and Arlene Moscovitch (now of the National Film Board) to form the influential Association for Media Literacy. Other ELAN members - Wayne McNanny and Linda May Bell - were part of that founding group in the early 80's. Wayne authored and / or supported a lot of important work in media literacy done by the Waterloo Board of Education. ELAN has continued to support the inclusion of Media Education in the new English curriculum for elementary and secondary schools. In 1987 we supported the AML's successful bid to have Media included in the new guideline as a mandatory component of program. Our members were prominent on the writing team that authored the new elementary curriculum (1997), which included media expectations in all grades, and in 1998 we advocated successfully for a media strand in all core secondary English courses. ELAN
is Born ELAN continued to facilitate a rich exchange of curriculum documents written by members (K to 12), and to promote the voice of English, Language Arts, and Media teachers in Ontario as new provincial secondary curriculum is written (in 1993 and again in 1996-8). Reports from members who have gone on to work on ministry projects, continue to be an important feature of meetings, and the executive established an interim alliance (in 1996) with other language arts organizations in the province (The Media/Language Arts Coalition) to ensure our collective involvement in the writing of new provincial curriculum, and to open an exchange concerning common purposes. ELAN executive and members played a leading role in the development of the new secondary curriculum in Ontario. In 2003, ELAN mounted its first Provincial Conference. Provincial teachers of English, Media and Language Arts had been without such an event for a few years. Teaching with ELAN, held at New College, University of Toronto, was a great success.
ELAN on the Internet In the winter of 1999 ELAN created its current website with a view to extending our networking capacities. In December of 2000, work began on a new electronic journal, ELANguage, given the demise of Indirections, which the OCTE had supported for years ELAN Chairpersons Noeline Laccetti
(2006-2007) Cathy Costello
(2005-2006) Myra Junyk
(2004-2005) Judith Taylor
(2003-2004) Diana Knight
(2002-2003) Cathy Costello (2001-2), Gabrielle O'Reilly (2000-01),
Gillda Leitenberg (1998-00),
Ken Draayer (1996-98), Bob Ernest (1994-96),
John Bray (1992-94),
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