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Teacher Education, Teacher Work

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Title: Teacher Education, Teacher Work


1
Teacher Education, Teacher Work
  • 12 February 2008
  • University of Glasgow
  • Presentation by Donald Gray

2
Scottish Teachers for a New Era
Dr Donald Gray School of Education, University
of Aberdeen
3
Structure of presentation
  • In the beginning
  • Consideration of meanings and the development of
    a rationale.
  • The changing environment context of the study.
  • What is STNE?
  • Structure of the B.Ed course.
  • Phase 1 some reflections.
  • STNE phase two addressing the issues.
  • Moving forward.

4
The Invitation
  • DEVELOPING TEACHERS, INCREASING PUPIL GAINS
  • A NEW PILOT PROGRAMME TO FURTHER DEVELOP TEACHING
    AS A
  • VALUED AND RECOGNISED PROFESSION IN SCOTLAND

5
Sanders and Rivers
  • Cumulative teacher effects in mathematics from
    grades 3 to 5.
  • Teachers influence on the rate of academic
    growth.
  • the single most dominant factor affecting
    student academic gain is teacher effect

Teacher effectiveness construed only in terms of
academic test results. Study was reductionist,
purely quantitative and focused entirely on
numerical causal links.
6
The Independent. Friday 8th February 2008
Our children tested to destruction English
primary school pupils subjected to more tests
than in any other country
7
Characteristics of Effective Teachers?
  • Beliefs about teaching well formed by the time a
    student begins college (Pajares (1992)
  • preservice teachers enter teacher preparation
    programs with well established filters for what
    constitutes effective teaching based on an
    apprenticeship of observation (Lortie, 1975,
    cited by Walls et al, 2002).
  • ..teaching must be understood in terms of its
    complex contributions to new, as-yet-unimaginable
    collective possibilities. (Davis Sumara, 2007)
  • Muijs et al. (2005) argue for a differentiated
    model of teacher effectiveness.

8
The New Teacher Education For Better or Worse?
Marilyn Cochrane-Smith AERA Presidential Address
2005, Educational Researcher, 34, 7, pp3-17
New Teacher Education constructed as Public
policy problem, based on research and driven by
outcomes. new teacher education needs also to
be informed by inquiry and scholarship that are
not empirical we need to make learningnot
outcomes narrowly defined as teststhe bottom
line of teaching and teacher education When
teacher education is learning-driven, there is a
focus on ensuring that all schoolchildrenincludin
g those in poor schoolshave rich opportunities
to learn, not just opportunities to be held
accountable to the same high stakes.
9
Constructing 21st Century Teacher Education
  • Three critical components of teacher education
    programmes
  • Tight coherence and integration among courses and
    between course work and clinical work in schools
  • Extensive and intensely supervised clinical work
    integrated with course work using pedagogies that
    link theory and practice and
  • Proactive relationships with schools that serve
    diverse learners effectively and develop and
    model good teaching. (p300)
  • The What of Teacher Education
  • Knowledge of learners and how they learn and
    develop within social contexts, including
    knowledge of language development
  • Understanding of curriculum content and goals,
    including the subject matter and skills to be
    taught in light of disciplinary demands, student
    needs, and the social purposes of education
  • Understanding of and skills for teaching,
    including content pedagogical knowledge and
    knowledge for teaching diverse learners, as these
    are informed by an understanding of assessment
    and of how to construct and manage a productive
    classroom. (p303)
  • (Darling Hammond, 2006)

10
TTA Teaching 2020
What sort of teachers will be needed then, and so
what kind of teacher education and training?
Whatever happens in 2020 schools and teachers
will be very different. The teachers we are
training now, and those currently teaching and
engaging in CPD, need to be prepared to be
flexible, to manage change, and more than that,
to be agents of change.
11
Globalisation (Mortimore, 2001)
  • International comparisons show effects of
    motivating staff, focusing on TL, enhancing the
    physical environment, changing the culture of the
    school. However, while many similar strategies
    used, the different context meant similar actions
    did not always produce similar results.
  • Improvements must fit the grain of society
    indiscriminate borrowing from other cultures may
    not achieve the desired results there is no
    quick fix for school improvement change has to
    be carried out by the school itself.

12
Scottish Teachers for a New Era
Developing teachers increasing pupil gains
  • Scottish Executive Education Department
  • Hunter Foundation
  • University of Aberdeen
  • Opportunity for Change
  • Research Informed Development

13
Change vs Transformation
  • Context
  • Former College of Education. Northern College was
    the last of Scotland's monotechnic colleges to be
    merged with an institution of higher education on
    December 1, 2001, but remained on a separate
    campus.
  • Move to the main University Campus in the summer
    of 2005.
  • No culture of research.
  • Contract for STNE awarded at the beginning of
    2005.
  • Implementation of a new (STNE) B.Ed course in
    October 2005.
  • Research team appointed in October 2005.

14
What is STNE ?
  • Design Principles
  • Decisions driven by evidence
  • Engagement with Arts Sciences
  • Teaching as an academically taught clinical
    practice
  • Key Aims
  • To develop a
  • Teacher for a New Era
  • New Learning Environment
  • New Framework for Continuous Learning
  • New Professional Culture

15
What is STNE ?
  • Transforming initial teacher education, through
  • Developing ITE Programmes, particularly although
    not exclusively, the BEd(P) Programme
  • Research
  • Enhanced Partnerships
  • Developing and contributing to quality
    professional learning opportunities for teachers
    who are mentoring, coaching and assessing student
    and beginning teachers

16
What is STNE ?
Research a multi-disciplinary team of
researchers and practitioners are developing
evidence gathering activities related to
  • Pupil learning gains and achievements
  • Student teacher knowledge and performance
  • Beginning teacher knowledge and performance
  • Programme review and development

17
What is STNE ?
  • The engagement of Arts and Sciences
  • Student teachers gain enhanced subject knowledge
    through academic study and learning in Arts and
    Sciences Faculties/Departments.
  • Teaching as a clinical profession
  • To develop a model of teaching as a clinical
    practice which is integrated into an extended
    induction programme.
  • Teaching as an evidence-based profession
  • Evidence is generated and used routinely within
    teacher education
  • Teachers (inc. beginning teachers) using and
    generating evidence of pedagogy to inform
    practice.

18
Working in partnership to
  • Build a seamless continuum of teacher
    development from pre-service through induction to
    continuous professional development.

19
STNE Phase 1 2005-2007
B.Ed1
Field Experience Originally 2xhalf days per week,
over 7 weeks (semester 2). Working in pairs
(peers). Now one full day per week. Focus
contexts for learning, the learner and learning.
Community, school environment.
20
STNE Phase 1 2005-2007
B.Ed2
Field Experience 1 full day per week over 7 weeks
(semester 1). Focus on learning experiences. 1
full day per week over 9 weeks. Focus on
particular curricular areas.
21
STNE Phase 1 2005-2007
B.Ed.3
22
STNE Phase 1 2005-2007
B.Ed.4
23
Phase 1 Research
  • Focus on original B.Ed1 (2005-06) cohort and the
    programme through B.Ed2, B.Ed3 and B.Ed4.
  • Entry questionnaire B.Ed1.
  • Exit questionnaire of B.Ed4 (2005-06)
  • Longitudinal Study of 20 students.
  • New Field experience (ASG study).
  • Examination of the process of change.

24
Phase 1 Data 2005-2007
Year 1 Mapping Exercise B.Ed1 Questionnaire 1
B.Ed1 questionnaire 2 ASG Data B.Ed1 tutor
interviews B.Ed4 Focus group (sem.1) and
questionnaire (sem.2) Survey 2005 Graduate
Experiences of Induction Year Video Interactive
Guidance (VIG) Literature reviews.
Year 2 B.Ed2 tutor interviews B.Ed2
questionnaire Teacher questionnaire B.Ed2 focus
groups B.Ed2 observations B.Ed2 questionnaire
B.Ed2 interviews Teacher questionnaire Video
Interactive Guidance (VIG) Literature reviews
Summary reports for each of these elements have
now been produced and will shortly be available
on the website. Fuller reports are complete for
some and in preparation for others.
25
Shifting Sands?
B.Ed1
B.Ed2
B.Ed3
Evidence
Evidence
26
STNE Phase 1 2005-2007. Issues
  • Peer working of students accepted very
    positively.
  • Field experience model mixed views but
    principles and potential viewed very favourably.
  • Implementing new paradigms in traditional
    contexts.
  • Concerns with shift from teaching as practice
    to teaching as reflection on learning.
  • Need for strategies to develop shared vision and
    focus.
  • Need for greater engagement and reflective
    professional development for tutors, and
    additional elements for CPD for teachers.
  • Need for transformative as well as informative
    PD.
  • Organisation and communication among all
    stakeholders.
  • Compartmentalised working, links to communication
    and sharing of vision and focus. Fragmentation.
  • Lack of cohesive teams.

27
STNE Phase 1 2005-2007. Issues
  • Assessment and effective feedback for students.
  • Need for development of effective modelling of
    assessment on the courses.
  • No clear strategy for assessing impact of
    initiatives on pupil learning.
  • Greater need for clarity with respect to the role
    that other courses play in the B.Ed programme,
    and exploration of other roles that arts and
    sciences may have.

28
Identified Needs
  • Greater sharing and discussion of data.
  • More in-depth analysis and critical review of
    existing data to provide foundations for further
    research within the School of Education.
  • Creation of space for dialogue and sharing of
    ideas and information needs to develop.
  • Greater emphasis on creating a shared vision, and
    understanding of personal values and beliefs.
  • Needs effective linkage with schools through
    action research initiatives and school placement
    and internal (to the school) and external
    comparative measures of impact on pupil learning.

29
STNE Phase 2 2007-2009
While there is a continuation from phase 1 with
the longitudinal case studies, phase two of the
STNE research is deepening and broadening through
  • comparison of data across all the ITE programmes
    in the School of Education,
  • involvement and engagement with teachers in
    practice and
  • supporting and taking forward projects with
    specific focuses involving staff within the
    School of Education in collaboration with staff
    in other Colleges and Departments.

This model is represented in the following
diagram which shows the three main components of
phase 2.
30
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31
STNE Phase 2 2007-2009
  • Continuation of focus with B.Ed course and the
    process of change.
  • Continuation of longitudinal study of B.Ed
    sample.
  • Observations of students on first block
    placements.
  • Building on Graduate surveys of Induction year to
    inform support and partnership developments of
    future beginning teachers (e.g. Beginning Teacher
    Support Network)
  • Extension of entry and exit surveys to cover all
    programmes (PGDE primary and secondary, B.Ed and
    B.MusEd and MA.Ed). To be analysed using
    advanced modelling techniques.
  • Collaboration and partnership through Teacher
    Action Research linked to pupil gains B.Ed
    student research.
  • Linking to LTS ACfE trialling in the six
    partner authorities.
  • Secondees from each authority to work with
    SoE/STNE and T A-R.
  • Support and development of research capacity
    building and other learning projects within the
    School of Education.

32
A-R SCHOLARSHIPS
  • Research seminars
  • University mentors
  • Links with APS (Masters route)
  • Focus on classroom practice
  • Focus on pupil (learner) gains
  • 2007 Funded 15 teachers

33
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34
STNE A-R SCHOLARSHIPS 2007
  • Examples (PS)
  • The impact of using drama in media studies in a
    CfE.
  • New approaches to introducing P1 children to ICT.
  • Video-based approaches to problem solving (maths
    recovery).
  • Writing through role-play structured activities.
  • Personal Learning Planning
  • Enterprise in mathematics

35
PUPIL GAINS ?
  • Debate about what is meant by pupil gains. What
    kind of gains? E.g. Parsons et al.
  • Link to Curriculum for Excellence four
    capacities.
  • Collaboration with LTS in six partner authorities
    trialling schools.
  • Links with Teacher Action Research

36
Learning Projects
  • E.g.
  • ATLAC Arts as a Tool for Learning Across the
    Curriculum. In collaboration with Aberdeen City
    Council with Arts Council Funding.
  • Communities for Learning group. Actor Network
    Theory a Theoretical Framework for Examining the
    School Experience
  • Student Impact on Schools group.
  • Literature Review Group -

37
Needs
  • Effective database management to keep track of
    all projects.
  • Now under development
  • Template for information gathering on all
    projects at regular intervals e.g every six
    months.
  • In development
  • Agreed structure for final reports to enable
    efficient meta-analysis.
  • Preliminary structure undergoing refinement.
  • Effective communication strategy.
  • Central repository and Project Co-ordinator.
    Multi-level website under development.
  • Evidence seminars and open research meetings.
  • Needs driven training and support e.g. research
    and writing workshops
  • Plan for publication and dissemination.
  • Writing up of Phase 1 underway for different
    audiences. Continued

38
Phase 1 Some Outcomes
  • A model to look at the courses tutorial
    coherence, theoretical framework and teaching
    philosophy.
  • A model to reflect on teaching, what it means and
    how it changes.
  • A model to empower teachers and schools.
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