professional preparation in times of change: teacher education in england jonathan allen, jacek...

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Professional preparation in times of change: teacher education in England Jonathan Allen, Jacek Brant, Norbert Pachler and Katharine Vincent November 2014

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Page 1: Professional preparation in times of change: teacher education in England Jonathan Allen, Jacek Brant, Norbert Pachler and Katharine Vincent November 2014

Professional preparation in times of change: teacher

education in England

Jonathan Allen, Jacek Brant, Norbert Pachler and Katharine Vincent

November 2014

Page 2: Professional preparation in times of change: teacher education in England Jonathan Allen, Jacek Brant, Norbert Pachler and Katharine Vincent November 2014

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Introduction/overview

• The “good teacher”

• Good teaching

• Teacher training or teacher education?

• ITE landscape in England

• Routes into teaching

• Partnership: universities and schools

• Conclusion and arguments

Page 3: Professional preparation in times of change: teacher education in England Jonathan Allen, Jacek Brant, Norbert Pachler and Katharine Vincent November 2014

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Context: Emphasis on importance of teacher quality

The best school systems are those that have the best teachers. Countries and regions such as Finland,

Singapore, South Korea, Ontario and others recruit teachers from the top echelon of graduates each year, they pay them well and they create and maintain a

culture of inclusion and quality throughout teachers’ careers that imbues the whole school system.

Barber, M., and Mourshed, M., (2008) How the world’s best performing school systems come out on top

London and New York: McKinsey

Page 4: Professional preparation in times of change: teacher education in England Jonathan Allen, Jacek Brant, Norbert Pachler and Katharine Vincent November 2014

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Context: Emphasis on importance of teacher quality

What is the most important school-

related factor in student learning?

The answer is teaching

Bob Schwartz, 2010

Page 5: Professional preparation in times of change: teacher education in England Jonathan Allen, Jacek Brant, Norbert Pachler and Katharine Vincent November 2014

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What makes great teaching?

Sutton Trust Report (2014) identifies 6 factors:

• Content knowledge• Quality of ‘instruction’• Classroom climate • Classroom management • Teachers’ beliefs• Professional behaviours

Page 6: Professional preparation in times of change: teacher education in England Jonathan Allen, Jacek Brant, Norbert Pachler and Katharine Vincent November 2014

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Initial teacher training education

ITTCraft knowledge: learn from seasoned experts - replicate ‘best practice’

Theory and practice are independent of each other

Competencies to evidence

Knowledge as a defined entity

ITETeaching is complex

Knowledge is ‘messy’

Good teaching requires the understanding of classrooms as systems

Theory and practice are inter-dependent

Teachers as professionals

Page 7: Professional preparation in times of change: teacher education in England Jonathan Allen, Jacek Brant, Norbert Pachler and Katharine Vincent November 2014

Changes to the ITE landscape in England

between the 1988 and 2014

1988: Education Reform Act

- 1998: Start of Graduate Teacher Programme (GTP) and School-Centred Initial Teacher Training (SCITT)

- 2002: Introduction of Teach First

2010: DfE White Paper ‘The Importance of Teaching’ (followed by 2011 Education Act)

- 2011: Designation of first Teaching Schools- 2012: Introduction of School Direct

Page 8: Professional preparation in times of change: teacher education in England Jonathan Allen, Jacek Brant, Norbert Pachler and Katharine Vincent November 2014

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Changing relationships with schools owing to the current policy context

Under the current UK government, education policy has emphasized:

- Teaching as ‘practical competence’ and as ‘craft’- The idea of ‘Teaching Schools’ where new entrants are provided

training ‘on the job’ and where ‘trainee teachers can observe and learn from great teachers’

- The benefits of ‘school-based’ (and ‘school-led’) teacher training- Challenging and questioning the role of universities in relation to

teacher education and training

Page 9: Professional preparation in times of change: teacher education in England Jonathan Allen, Jacek Brant, Norbert Pachler and Katharine Vincent November 2014

Current routes into teaching in the UK

‘University-led’ programmes:

Bachelor of Arts (BA) with QTS (3 or 4 years)Bachelor of Education (BEd) (4 years)Postgraduate Certificate of Education (PGCE) (1 year)

‘School-led’ programmes:

Teach First (1 year – training ‘on the job’)School Direct (1 year – salaried trainees train ‘on the job’ and unsalaried trainees usually join a PGCE programme)

**All of these routes lead to QTS**

Page 10: Professional preparation in times of change: teacher education in England Jonathan Allen, Jacek Brant, Norbert Pachler and Katharine Vincent November 2014

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‘Responding to our critics’

(Grossman 2008)

Teacher educators must be able to provide credible evidence of the effectiveness of their practice in preparing teachers which enable them to make strong claims about the effectiveness of their programmes. This will require:- Well-designed and well-executed studies examining the

outcomes of different teacher education programmes, using clear, credible procedures for data collection and analysis.

- Comparative studies teasing out the effects of different programmes, based on characteristics of entrants or the specific effects of particular pedagogical approaches.

- More ‘programmatic research’, focusing on a critical set of questions, that builds on its own findings and provides better, clearer answers.

Page 11: Professional preparation in times of change: teacher education in England Jonathan Allen, Jacek Brant, Norbert Pachler and Katharine Vincent November 2014

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‘An economy of discourses and truth’

(Maguire 2014)

We must resist the technology of erasure:

‘the erasure of the work of progressive and reforming teacher educationalists who have in different times attempted to produce new ways of using school-based experiences to produce new forms of teacher (and trainee teacher) knowledge.’

Page 12: Professional preparation in times of change: teacher education in England Jonathan Allen, Jacek Brant, Norbert Pachler and Katharine Vincent November 2014

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Teacher educators working in universities must...

- Continue to engage with schools and teachers, contributing to the development of a research-informed and research active profession, and developing even stronger, more constructive relationships with schools.

- Design, undertake and disseminate research which provides

credible evidence of the effectiveness of their approaches to teacher education.

- Continue to challenge the ‘erasure’ of contributions made by

progressive and reforming teacher educators; continue to emphasize the extent to which teacher education has always been rooted in schools.