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Living our Principles Three Examples of Practice

Living our Principles Three Examples of Practice. Joy Jarvis Roger Levy University of Hertfordshire, UK Anja Swennen VU University Amsterdam. John Loughran, 2001.

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Living our Principles Three Examples of Practice

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  1. Living our Principles Three Examples of Practice Joy Jarvis Roger Levy University of Hertfordshire, UK Anja Swennen VU University Amsterdam

  2. John Loughran, 2001 It is modelling the processes, thoughts and knowledge of an experienced teacher in a way that demonstrates the ‘why’ or the purpose of teaching: it is not creating a template of teaching for unending duplication

  3. Modeling ATE: Standard 1 Model teaching that demonstrates content and professional knowledge, skills, and dispositions, reflecting research, proficiency with technology and assessment, and accepted best practices in teacher education.

  4. Congruent teaching Teaching teachers in line with your own principles and the principles you want you students to bring into practice

  5. Congruent teaching • Model excellent teaching in the broadest sense of the word • Explicit modeling: unpacking teaching • Legitimizing one’s own teaching: underpinning one's own teaching with theory Some research suggests that Teacher Educators appear to lack knowledge on congruent teaching, and the skills needed to put it into practice

  6. Why is this important? • To improve the teaching skills of teacher educators (Korthagen, 2002; Loughran, 1996). Teacher educators who are able to teach in a congruent way enlarge their own teaching repertoire. • To bridge the gap between theory and practice. Teacher educators will not only teach about theory but they will practise the theory they teach about. • To improve the teaching of student teachers. (Wood & Geddis, 1999). Student teachers do not only absorb the theory, but they experience it when their teacher educators practise it. • To improve education . Innovations in teaching methods must be introduced modelled in teacher education. If innovations are not modelled in teacher education and teacher educators teach in a traditional way, while they expect their student teachers to adapt new teaching methods, teaching education looses it credibility.

  7. Three Examples of Working with the Idea of Modelling our Principles in Practice • In initial teacher education at the University of Hertfordshire – an example from yr 1 of the BEd course • An example of professional development with staff engaged in self-study of their practice • Working in partnership with colleagues in Malaysia to develop a new teacher education course. How colleagues modelled and developed principles of learning and teaching.

  8. Staff identify shared values and principles

  9. School of Education BUILDING LEARNING COMMUNITIES TEACHING LEARNING SOCIAL Learners progress best in a safe, inclusive yet challenging learning environment DISPOSITIONALAll learners can expand their knowledge and deepen their understanding INTELLECTUAL Learning develops through enquiry, exploration, discovery and critical reflection

  10. Principle: Learners progress best in a safe, inclusive yet challenging learning environment

  11. Principle: Learning develops through enquiry, exploration, discovery and critical reflection

  12. Principle: All learners can expand their knowledge and deepen their understanding

  13. Student Assignment Students write an assignment exploring the 3 principles. They consider their own learning and their learning about teaching. They observe in school and look for how these principles could be/ are used in practice.

  14. Staff Professional Development Sessions on Modelling

  15. Loughran, J. (2006) Developing a Pedagogy of Teacher Education. Understanding teaching and learning about teaching. Routledge 'Modeling is inherent in all that we do in teacher education. Intended and unintended learning about teaching occurs through our modeling whether we are conscious of our actions or not. With that in mind, modeling then can be conceptualized as teaching in the very ways we encourage our students to teach but to do so with the intention of offering them access to the thoughts of, and knowledge about, such practice by explicating the underlying purpose of that teaching approach. This is in stark contrast to the misconception that modeling is a mock teaching demonstration or a tacit call for students of teaching to “teach like me.”'  Loughran 2006:95

  16. Exploring ‘Developing a Pedagogy of Teacher Education’

  17. Questions about Modelling • Staged? • Focus? • Planned and unplanned? • How much? • Student response? ‘…for students of teaching, their learning agenda includes learning about the specific content being taught, learning about learning and learning about teaching.’ (Loughran, 2006 :5)

  18. - Welcome Working with Colleagues to Model and Develop Principles into Practice Working in partnership to promote excellence in teacher education

  19. Action ARM yourself for Learning and Teaching Reflection Modelling

  20. Active Talking partners Concept mapping

  21. Reflection Identifying learning Raising questions/ issues

  22. Modelling Documenting Feedback

  23. BUILDING LEARNING COMMUNITIES MONITORING SHARING THE LEARNING PRINCIPLES REFLECTING PLANNING SUPPORTINGLEARNING LEARNINGTOGETHER

  24. Aims of Teacher Education Institutes in Malaysia • developing reflective teachers • active learning via experiential learning • Lee, W.H. & Tan, S.K. (2004). Reflective practice in Malaysian teacher education. Assumptions, practices, and challenges. RAiL active learning without thinking is fun without learning reflection without enjoyable experience is stressful learning

  25. How to RAiL? • Plug-n-Use Strategies • Use easily-made & readily-available resources to promote innovativeness. • Use reflection protocol to promote critical & creative thinking. • Use “questioning structure” to promote higher-order thinking. • Use “interacting structure” to promote face-to-face communication. 4. 3. 1. 2.

  26. 'When we do in importance of talk. We did this activity whereby they do the activity in pairs. We give three activities – the first person talk, the other person just listen. Then we do the second part, the first person talk and the second person can answer 'yes' or 'no' (close ended questions). Part 3 the second person can interrupt whenever they like. Then we do some reflection on the best way of communication. The first is one-way, the third is two-way. So we model the importance of talking. We emphasise this is two-way communication. So we model this is two-way communication. This helps to know what the children are thinking. In Malaysia the primary school children don't want to talk so we try to teach that – they are quite shy to give their opinion. So hopefully the future teachers can change that.' (Lecturer – Malaysia)

  27. RAiL vs ARM • RAiL is a specific model of ARM. • ARM is extendable to learning among primary children, but RAiL focuses on learning about teaching among student teachers. • RAiL accelerates ARM in Malaysian setting.

  28. ‘While modelling is appropriate when my pupils get stuck and need helps. One way to get them understand is by modelling, not only teacher's model but pupils also can modelling on what they've learn.’(Student teacher – Malaysia) Dickerson C. et al. (2010) Learning together through international collaboration in teacher education in Malaysia. Report of a project to develop a Bachelor of Education (Honours) in Primary Mathematics. In Press

  29. A Continuing Journey ‘..teaching excellence is about the enduring human struggle to ‘live out’ our educational values in practice.’ Skelton, A (2009) A ‘teaching excellence for the times we live in? Teaching in Higher Education 14:1 p109

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