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The Development of Q.A. within Teacher Education Policy in Ireland Address by Prof. John Coolahan to the Colloquium on Quality Assurance in Teacher Education – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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1
  • The Development of Q.A. within Teacher Education
    Policy in Ireland
  • Address by Prof. John Coolahan
  • to the
  • Colloquium on Quality Assurance in Teacher
    Education
  • U.C.D., 21 June 2010.

2
The Development of Q.A. within Teacher Education
Policy in Ireland.
  • Structure of the Address
  • Quality Teaching A Major International Concern
  • The Irish Context
  • Tradition of Teacher Education
  • Structure of Teacher Education
  • Teacher Education as Part of an Education Reform
    Era
  • New Approaches to Quality Assurance

3
Structure Contd..
  • International Influences on Q.A. OECD, EU
  • Centrality of the Concept of Competence
  • Contemporaneous Q.A. Development in Ireland
    NQAI NQF
  • European Meta-Framework Development
  • The Teaching Council of Ireland
  • Congruence of Thinking on Q.A.

4
Quality of Teaching A Major International
Concern
  • Range of Studies e.g. OECD
  • Teachers Matter (2005)
  • School Leadership (2008)
  • Talis Creating Effective T. and L.
  • Environments (2009)
  • EU - Education of Teachers and Trainers,
    (2002-06)
  • - Conclusions of Council, 2007, 2008, 2009
  • - A Handbook on Teacher Induction
    Programmes,
  • 2010
  • World Bank, Learning to Teach in the
    Knowledge Society (2005)

5
Contd .. Quality Teaching A Major International
Concern
  • UNESCO, Education for All The Quality
    Imperative, (2005)
  • McKinsey Report, Best Performing School
    Systems (2007)
  • Quality Frameworks
  • NQFs now 70 countries
  • Bologna Framework (2005), now 46 countries
  • European Qualifications Framework (2008)

6
The Irish Context
  • High Status / Social Regard of Teaching
    Profession
  • - National Survey, Nov. 2009 70 considered
    teachers did their work very well or well
    87 regarded as a complex job, 70 said
    teachers were Very Trusted or Trusted.
  • From a long occupational list, Teachers
    placed second to Nurses.
  • Very competitive entry to T. Ed. (Primary Top
    Quintile Sec. 90 Hons. Degree)
  • There are no major publicly expressed concerns
    about teacher education, development or
    certification, Country Background Report, for
    OECD, (2003).

7
Tradition of Teacher Education
  • Deep Roots Prim. 1838 Techn. 1902
  • Sec. 1912
  • Q.A. Prim. - Tight control by inspectorate
  • - 1974 Validation by
    universities
  • Sec. - 1915 Registration Council
  • 1918 R.C. in Operation,
    until 2006
  • System of External
    Examiners in
  • Universities.

8
Structure of Teacher Education (ITE)
  • Primary
  • 5 Colleges of Education linked to Universities
  • B Ed. Concurrent 3 year
  • Consecutive Degree 18 months
  • Followed by 1 year of successful probation
  • 2003 Hibernia On-Line Provision (HETAC)
  • Post Primary
  • Consecutive 3/4 Yr. Degree 1 Year Education
  • Concurrent 4 Years
  • Followed by 1 year successful probation

9
Induction
  • Traditionally informal
  • 2002-10 Pilot Programme for Prim and P.P.
  • Involvement of universities, colleges of
    education, DES, and Teaching Profession
  • Partnership Approach
  • Action Research Model
  • Formal Evaluation
  • Yet to be extended nationally

10
In-Service (CPD)
  • Well established
  • Many formats
  • Post grad. Courses formally evaluated
  • Great variety of short courses,
  • many providers
  • 30 Education Centres
  • Subject Associations
  • Extensive Support Services Skilled and Trained
    Peers Curriculum, Leadership, Planning
  • Evaluations
  • Being Curtailed

11
Teacher Education as Part of an Education Reform
Era
  • ?1990s Era of Major Appraisal and Reform of
    Education
  • ?Focus on the Quality of Teacher Education
  • - 1991 OECD Report 1992 Green Paper
  • 1994 National Education Convention
  • 1995 White Paper Gov. Accept 3Is policy
  • ?1998 2002 Reviews of Prim. and P.P. Teacher
    Education
  • Extension and Restructuring Recommended ?No Time
    Extension
  • Course Adaptations Occurred

12
New Approaches to Quality Assurance
  • ?1995 ? Universities Adopt New Q.A. Procedures
  • - Institutional and Departmental
  • - Self-Appraisal, Peer Review, Report
  • Publication (periodic)
  • - External Examiners Continued
  • - Professional Recognition (Reg.
    Council) for P.P.
  • 1996 Irish EU Presidency A Strategy for
    Lifelong
  • Learning
  • ? Concern for Co-ordinating Qualifications

13
International Influences on Q.A. OECD e.g.
Teachers Matter (2005)
  • The overarching priority is for countries to
    have in place a clear and concise statement or
    profile of what teachers are expected to know and
    be able to do. This is necessary to provide the
    framework to guide initial teacher education,
    teacher certification, teachers on-going
    professional development and career advancement,
    and to assess the extent to which these different
    elements are being effective.
  • (P.
    131).

14
  • The profile should be evidence-based and built
    on active involvement by the teaching profession
    in identifying teacher competencies and standards
    of performance. A clear, well structured and
    widely supported teacher profile can be a
    powerful mechanism for aligning the various
    elements involved in developing teachers
    knowledge and skills (P. 132).

15
  • The teacher profile must reflect the broad
    range of competencies that teachers require to be
    effective practitioners in modern schools. It
    should encompass strong subject matter knowledge,
    pedagogical skills, the capacity to work
    effectively with a wide range of students and
    colleagues, contribution to the school and wider
    profession and the teachers capacity to continue
    developing. The profile could express different
    levels of performance appropriate to beginning
    teachers, experienced teachers, and those with
    higher responsibilities. The profile would
    emphasise demonstrated attainment of key
    knowledge, skills and competencies for effective
    professional practice. (P. 132).

16
  • OECD recognised the value of Teaching Councils
    in providing a mechanism for profession led
    standards setting
  • Example of planned role and function of
    Irelands Teaching Council.
  • (P. 216).

17
  • EU Barcelona Council (2002), in wake of Lisbon
    (2000)
  • The European Council sets the objective to make
    Europes educational training system a world
    quality reference by 2010
  • Workgroup A Improving the Education and
    Training of Teachers and Trainers
  • Identifying the skills that teachers and
    trainers need given their changing roles in
    society.
  • Teaching competencies and qualification
    profiles, based on the socially expected role of
    teachers to be defined as criteria for the
    development and external quality assurance of
    teacher education provision.

18
  • In line with the Bologna process teacher
    educators are expected to develop descriptions of
    the learning outcomes of teacher ed. progs., and
    incorporate ECTS credits
  • This topic challenges teacher education
    institutions to participate pro-actively in the
    policy definition of teaching competences and
    qualification profiles.

19
Tuning Project (Socrates) (2001-08)
  • Viewing courses in terms of learning outcomes and
    competencies
  • By learning outcomes we mean the set of
    competencies including knowledge, understanding
    and skills a learner is expected to demonstrate
    after completion of a process of learning.
  • Tuning Educational Structures in Europe 2009

20
Centrality of the Concept of Competence
  • Conceptions arising from behaviourist and
    positivist thinking ?narrow, checklist approach
  • - A more liberal concept which sees the
    achievement of competence as accompanied in its
    appropriation and in its exercise by the
    attitudes, beliefs, and personal culture of the
    person who acquires and exercises the competency
    in question.
  • ? Ireland favours the liberal, professional model

21
Contemporaneous Q.A. Developments in Ireland
  • 1999 Qualifications (Education and Training)
    Act to establish and maintain a framework,
    being a framework for the development,
    recognition and award of qualifications in the
    State (in this Act referred to as a framework of
    qualifications), based on standards of
    knowledge, skill or competence to be acquired by
    learners - Qualifications Act Section 7 (a)
  • 2001 NQAI HETAC, FETAC
  • 2003 NQF

22
(No Transcript)
23
  • The NQAI has Quality Assurance responsibilities
    in relation to all awarding bodies
  • Significance of Communications Campaign,
    Consensus Building
  • Strong commitment by Universities IUQB (2002)
    IHEQN (2003) FIN (2007)
  • Descriptions for all forms of learning formal,
    non-formal, informal recognition of prior
    learning
  • Vision for Lifelong Learning

24
European Meta-Framework Development
  • Ireland an influential partner in shaping
    European Meta-Frameworks
  • 1999 ?2005, Developing the Bologna Framework,
    the EHEA, with the Dublin Descriptors (2004)
  • Nov. 2006 Ireland the first European Country to
    verify the compatibility of its NQF with the
    Bologna Framework
  • Ireland urged European Framework (EQF) 2004
    completed April 2008
  • Sept. 2009 Ireland the first country to reference
    its NQF to the EQF

25
  • EQF EHEA Framework NQF NQF Major Award-
    types
  • Levels (Bologna) Levels
  • 1
    1 Level 1 Certificate
  • 2 Level 2 Certificate
  • 2 3 Level 3 Certificate, Junior Certificate
  • 3 4 Level 4 Certificate, Leaving Certificate
  • 4 5 Level 5 Certificate, Leaving Certificate
  • 5 Short Cycle within 6 Advanced Certificate (FET
    award)
  • First Cycle Higher Certificate (HET award)
  • First Cycle 7 Ordinary Bachelors Degree
  • 8 Honours Bachelors Degree, Higher Diploma

26
2001 The Teaching Council Act Est. 2006
  • 7.2-(2)
  • (d) determine, from time to time, the education
    and
  • training and qualifications required for a
    person
  • to be registered
  • (e) establish procedures in relation to the
    induction
  • of teachers into the teaching profession
  • (g) establish procedures and criteria for
    probation
  • of teachers including periods of probation
  • (m) review and accredit programmes of teacher
    education
  • and training for the purpose of
    registration
  • 38. (1)
  • (c) Review the standards of knowledge, skill and
    competence required for the practice of teaching.

27
Teaching Councils Approach
  • Care in Planning
  • Consultation Partnership
  • Research Evidence Based
  • Communication Reportage
  • Code of Professional Practice Standards of
    Teaching, Knowledge, Skill and Competence
  • Code of Professional Conduct.

28
Review and Accreditation
  • 2009 Draft Strategy for Review and
    Accreditation
  • Structured on Inputs, Processes and Outcomes
  • Five-Member Review Panels Range of Expertise
    and Experience
  • Detailed Framework for Visitations
  • Reportage Procedure
  • Rich Conception of Knowledge, Skill and
    Competence
  • First Four Pilot Accreditation Reviews
    conducted 2009/10 (ITE)

29
Congruence of Thinking on Q.A.
  • Irish tradition, particularly post 1995
  • International approaches e.g. OECD, EU
  • Role of NQAI NQF
  • Co-ordination with Bologna, EQF
  • Development of Teaching Council
  • A Culture Shift Consensus Building Much
    Analysis, Research, Reflection
  • A Work in Progress.
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