1 / 27

Teacher Educators' Professional Learning: "You're more or less on your own."

Teacher Educators' Professional Learning: "You're more or less on your own.". Associate Professor Mandi Berry ( ICLON ). [2-7 July, 2013]. [ISATT, Ghent, Belgium]. Conclusions (1). Professional learning (PL) of Teacher Educators ( TEs ) matters. It’s too important to be left to chance.

sela
Download Presentation

Teacher Educators' Professional Learning: "You're more or less on your own."

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Teacher Educators' Professional Learning: "You're more or less on your own." Associate Professor Mandi Berry (ICLON) [2-7 July, 2013] [ISATT, Ghent, Belgium]

  2. Conclusions (1) • Professional learning (PL) of Teacher Educators (TEs) matters. • It’s too important to be left to chance. • Distinctive nature of TE knowledge. • TE learning needs to occur within some kind of framework.

  3. Conclusions (2) • PL of TE’s should be ‘more or less on your own’, but PL should not be a lonely enterprise. • Shift from alone as ‘isolated and disempowered’ to ‘autonomous with agency’. • Reframe ‘alone’ from a lonely (self) journey that does not pay attention to what we learn through and with others. • Involves perspective transformation. • PL of TE’s is an autonomous journey of interdependence: An apparent paradox.

  4. Teacher Educators & their work • Who? “an ill-defined & heteregenous occupational group” (Murray, 2012) of low academic status (Ducharme, 1993). • How? “thrown in at the deep end” (Wilson, 2006) without appropriate support or formal preparation (Zeichner, 2005). • What? Arelative lack of consensus about nature and worth of what teacher educators do (Korthagen, 2001; Davey, 2013).

  5. Distinctive nature of TE’s work • Teaching as main task • Teaching about teaching (content and manner) • Need to simultaneously serve many, often contradictory demands • Inherently both practical & theoretical • Working in a complex, ill-structured domain with “few clear right or wrong courses of action” (McRobbie & Shulman, 1991, p. 1).

  6. ConsequencesforTEswork & learning • TE’s draw from existing knowledge sources and can remain loyal to communities of practice of entry that shapes (and limits) their thinking & approach (Berry & van Driel, 2012; Hadar & Brody, 2010). • A culture of isolation (Kagen, 1990; Korthagen, 2001) • TE knowledge and expertise development largely individualised and remains tacit (Loughran, 2006). • TE learning & development is largely ignored, mostly a matter of chance & inefficient (Smith, 2010).

  7. Calls to change • “…if teacher education is to be taken more seriously…then the preparation of …teacher educators needs to be taken more seriously as well” (Zeichner, 2005, p.123) • “In order to meet the demands placed on the profession, all teacher educators – including mentors at schools – should be given the opportunity to undertake proper lifelong learning of their own.” (ETUCE, 2008).

  8. Calls to change • Specific requirements for TE’s; e.g., classroom experience, academic qualifications (PhD), research active. • More and better formalised induction procedures. • Development of a curriculum for educating teacher educators. • Development of knowledge base of TE. • Pedagogy of Teacher Education.

  9. Some Responses Systemic • Standards for Teacher Educators (e.g., ATE – USA) • Professional accreditation (e.g., VELON- NL) • National centre (e.g., MOFET – Israel) • Academic Requirements (e.g. PhD - many) Local • Programs of study within institutions (e.g. doctoral) • Professional Learning Communities • Co-teaching, mentoring • Self-study SIG – local became systemic

  10. Some Risks • Systemic approaches can reinforce ‘top-down’ culture and accountability pressures. • Approaches may seek to reduce (the necessary) complexity and ambiguity of TEs work; (unintentionally) reinforce assumptions. • Risk losing emphasis on teaching (e.g, through academisation).

  11. Limited research knowledge • Few systematic routes for TE’s ongoing learning and little research documentation of these routes (Smith, 2012) • No research that tells us that specific kinds of backgrounds/experiences are predictors of success as TEs, or that that preservice teachers learn better with or without TE’s in organised programs.

  12. TE learning: “a field where we let a thousand flowers bloom” ? (Shulman, 2006)

  13. Reframing Teacher EducatorLearning • Professional Developmentcarriesassumptions of upskilling/training; ‘spray on’ or ‘done-to’ approaches for short term change; accumulatingknowledge. • Professional Learning introduces a notion of ongoing change thatvalues teacher educators as learners; responsive to theirparticular concerns, issues, needs and contexts; transformingknowledge.

  14. Finding my own PL trajectory as a Teacher Educator • Have come to recognise aspects of my own PL and what has supported it. • Can be organised according to framework of Experiences, Processes, Conditions.

  15. Experiences A mixture of individual and collaborative, formal and informal, planned and unplanned experiences • Being in a new context • Feeling deskilled/disoriented • Becoming a learner again • Finding and working with colleague/s to discuss, co-teach, stimulate thinking, write, publish • Formal academic study (e.g., PhD) • Participation in a professional community, with a collective goal • Involvement in a range of projects • Ongoing analysis of experience through self-study

  16. Processes Becoming conscious of practice, developing a coherent pedagogy of teacher education, leading to professional self-understanding. • Learning to articulate tacit knowledge • Identifying & questioning embedded assumptions • Recognising the broader (theoretical) framework in which practice sits • Reviewing ‘problems’ from different perspectives (e.g. problems became tensions) • Participating in particular discourse communities • Communicating personally developed knowledge.

  17. Conditions A set of personal dispositionsandstructuralconditions, includingformalrequirementsand open opportunitiesforlearning • Support and encouragement of others • Guidance but not directing • Opportunities and expectations for my learning & development in different ways (not about ‘just doing the job’) • Own willingness and openness to learn and change.

  18. Mapping my learning onto PL of other TE’s • Disorienting experience • Re-learning/learning how to teach • Becoming conscious of practice • Recognising the frames that locate practice • Being able to explicate these practices and frames • Challenging assumptions/frames • Reframing understandings of TE • Taking changed thinking into practice • Communicating new understandings of practice Brandenburg, 2008; Kane, 2007; Nicol, 1997; Ritter, 2007; Russell, 1995; Williams, 2013...

  19. Transformation not accumulation • Transformativelearning as a process of “perspectivetransformation” (Mezirow, 2000) • 3 dimensions: Psychological (self-understanding); convictional (revision of belief systems) & behavioural (actions) • Goes beyondacquiringknowledge and skills • Involvesbothindividualefforts and socialinteraction.

  20. Returning to conclusions • TEs criticised for being left on their own, but almost have to be left on own to construct own professional knowledge of practice. • Does not mean that every TE needs to ‘start from scratch’ but it does need them to transform their perspective. • Aspects of a shared knowledge base important to develop but needs to be fluid and flexible enough to respond to change, embrace complexity, and TE’s different contexts and tasks. • A professional learning perspective matters.

  21. PL of TE’s: An apparent paradox • An individual task that cannot be accomplished alone. • It is both an individual sense making processand a relational participatory process. • Sense making by the individual is invoked and developed as one goes through the process of reconciling oneself to particular social contexts. • Involves a perspective shift. • A continuous process of re-forming autonomy through social exchange. • That is, autonomy as interdependence rather than independence.

  22. PL of TE’s: An orderly blooming

  23. Thankyou

More Related