Dr Sue Gordon AM
Born 1943 at Belele Station via Meekatharra, Dr Gordon was removed from her mother at 4 years of age and taken to Sister Kate’s Home in Perth, educated and sent out to work aged 16 years. During 1961 to 1964 she was a full-time member of the Women’s Royal Australian Army Corps (WRAAC) based mostly in the Eastern States. Following this she worked in various administrative positions around Australia, and in the early 1970s started a long association with the Pilbara region, working mostly in Aboriginal Affairs with both urban and traditional people. In 1986 she was appointed as Commissioner for Aboriginal Planning becoming the first Aboriginal person to head a government department in Western Australia. In 1990 she was appointed as one of the first five Commissioners to run the newly established Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission (ATSIC). Dr Gordon was appointed for a period of six months as Chairperson of Inquiry into Response by Government Agencies to Complaints of Family Violence and Child Abuse in Aboriginal Communities, in 2002. She was also awarded the National Aboriginal Overseas Study Award to study employment programs with a number of American Indian communities in the USA in 1977, the Aboriginal Development Commission Australia Day Council Award in 1986, the Paul Harris Fellow from the Rotary Club of Perth in 1994 and, in 2003, the Centenary Medal for service to the community, particularly the Aboriginal community. She is also a member of various organizations across Australia, is a frequent guest speaker on Juvenile Justice issues, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander social and economic conditions. Dr Gordon is a widow with two sons, one a lawyer and the other a civil engineer. Dr Gordon speaks with honesty, openness and humour and she will engage us with multiple perspectives on the experience of learning. |
Professor Richard Johnstone
Professor Johnstone is a graduate of the University of Newcastle (NSW) and Cambridge University and has held senior positions in universities in the UK and Australia. Since 2000, he has been Pro-Vice-Chancellor (Teaching and Learning) at the University of Technology, Sydney. Professor Johnstone has been involved in a range of national activities relating to review and support of teaching and learning in higher education and the development of policy in this area. He was a member of the Australian Universities Teaching Committee from 2000 to 2004 and its predecessor body the Committee for University Teaching and Staff Development from 1997. He has been a member of the Board of Graduate Careers Australia and chairs GCA's Survey Reference Group which oversees the national Course Experience Questionnaire and Graduation Destination Survey. See http://www.carrickinstitute.edu.au/carrick/go/op/edit/pid/99 |