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Teacher education has a central role in the improvement of
educational systems around the world but what do the teacher
educators in universities and colleges actually do? Day-to-day, how
do they support the learning and development of the thousands of
new teachers we need every year? And why does this matter? Drawing
on recent research by the authors, situated in the growing
international literature, Transforming Teacher Education puts these
questions in cultural and historical context and offers a practical
answer in the form of an original agenda for the transformation of
current conditions in teacher education with future designs for
practice. Viv Ellis and Jane McNicholl argue that teacher education
needs to be transformed so as to take advantage of the unique
structural connections that exist between schools and universities
in countries like England (represented by the notion of
'partnership') and the USA (with the example of professional
development schools) by capitalising on the networks of expertise
within and between these different organisations to produce
powerful new forms of knowledge. They offer suggestions for future
designs for teacher education, drawing not only on the latest
research in teacher learning and development but from across the
social sciences.
As economies across the world continue to struggle, there is
growing evidence that the vulnerable in society, especially
children, are paying the greatest cost in terms of reduced
opportunities for access to equitable life chances, the most vital
of these being education. Juxtaposing the ongoing failure of
education systems to address disadvantage with the widespread
belief in the vital importance of the training of teachers raises
another issue, namely that remarkably little is known about the
effective preparation of pre-service teachers to ameliorate
educational disadvantage and, additionally, that little attention
appears to be given to this in most teacher preparation programmes.
This book attempts to redress this balance and is structured by
three themes that focus on national policy, pre-service teacher
preparation programmes and individual pre-service teachers. The
book reveals a disheartening picture of complex patterns of
inequality across and within individual countries, together with an
incomplete understanding of the intersectional mechanisms -
political, ideological, social and cultural - that link poverty and
educational disadvantage. Contributions from five different
countries, however, provide evidence of positive signs that
interesting, innovative and intellectually sound developments are
happening at a local level and offer a valuable contribution to the
debate about how teacher education can create levers for change.
The chapters in this book were originally published as a special
issue of Journal of Education for Teaching.
As economies across the world continue to struggle, there is
growing evidence that the vulnerable in society, especially
children, are paying the greatest cost in terms of reduced
opportunities for access to equitable life chances, the most vital
of these being education. Juxtaposing the ongoing failure of
education systems to address disadvantage with the widespread
belief in the vital importance of the training of teachers raises
another issue, namely that remarkably little is known about the
effective preparation of pre-service teachers to ameliorate
educational disadvantage and, additionally, that little attention
appears to be given to this in most teacher preparation programmes.
This book attempts to redress this balance and is structured by
three themes that focus on national policy, pre-service teacher
preparation programmes and individual pre-service teachers. The
book reveals a disheartening picture of complex patterns of
inequality across and within individual countries, together with an
incomplete understanding of the intersectional mechanisms -
political, ideological, social and cultural - that link poverty and
educational disadvantage. Contributions from five different
countries, however, provide evidence of positive signs that
interesting, innovative and intellectually sound developments are
happening at a local level and offer a valuable contribution to the
debate about how teacher education can create levers for change.
The chapters in this book were originally published as a special
issue of Journal of Education for Teaching.
Teacher education has a central role in the improvement of
educational systems around the world but what do the teacher
educators in universities and colleges actually do? Day-to-day, how
do they support the learning and development of the thousands of
new teachers we need every year? And why does this matter? Drawing
on recent research by the authors, situated in the growing
international literature, Transforming Teacher Education puts these
questions in cultural and historical context and offers a practical
answer in the form of an original agenda for the transformation of
current conditions in teacher education with future designs for
practice. Viv Ellis and Jane McNicholl argue that teacher education
needs to be transformed so as to take advantage of the unique
structural connections that exist between schools and universities
in countries like England (represented by the notion of
'partnership') and the USA (with the example of professional
development schools) by capitalising on the networks of expertise
within and between these different organisations to produce
powerful new forms of knowledge.They offer suggestions for future
designs for teacher education, drawing not only on the latest
research in teacher learning and development but from across the
social sciences.
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