Practice makes perfect? Learning to learn as a teacher

The context of this research is one in which teachers are now expected to equip their pupils with the disposition and skills for life-long learning. It is vital, therefore, that teachers themselves are learners, not only in developing their practice but also in modelling for pupils the process of co...

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Main Authors: Hagger, H, Burn, K, Mutton, T, Brindley, S
Format: Journal article
Published: 2008
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author Hagger, H
Burn, K
Mutton, T
Brindley, S
author_facet Hagger, H
Burn, K
Mutton, T
Brindley, S
author_sort Hagger, H
collection OXFORD
description The context of this research is one in which teachers are now expected to equip their pupils with the disposition and skills for life-long learning. It is vital, therefore, that teachers themselves are learners, not only in developing their practice but also in modelling for pupils the process of continual learning. This paper is based on a series of post-lesson interviews, conducted with 25 student teachers following a one-year postgraduate course within two well-established school-based partnerships of initial teacher training. Its focus is on the approaches that the student teachers take to their own learning. Four interviews, conducted with each student teacher over the course of the year, explored their thinking in relation to planning, conducting and evaluating an observed lesson, and their reflections on the learning that informed, or resulted from, that lesson. The findings suggest that while the student teachers all learn from experience, the nature and extent of that learning varies considerably within a number of different dimensions. We argue that understanding the range of approaches that student teachers take to professional learning will leave teacher educators better equipped to help ensure that new entrants to the profession are both competent teachers and competent professional learners.
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spelling oxford-uuid:4330ce35-cd37-4f7f-af2b-b6fe6cf62e422022-03-26T14:54:00ZPractice makes perfect? Learning to learn as a teacherJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:4330ce35-cd37-4f7f-af2b-b6fe6cf62e42Symplectic Elements at Oxford2008Hagger, HBurn, KMutton, TBrindley, SThe context of this research is one in which teachers are now expected to equip their pupils with the disposition and skills for life-long learning. It is vital, therefore, that teachers themselves are learners, not only in developing their practice but also in modelling for pupils the process of continual learning. This paper is based on a series of post-lesson interviews, conducted with 25 student teachers following a one-year postgraduate course within two well-established school-based partnerships of initial teacher training. Its focus is on the approaches that the student teachers take to their own learning. Four interviews, conducted with each student teacher over the course of the year, explored their thinking in relation to planning, conducting and evaluating an observed lesson, and their reflections on the learning that informed, or resulted from, that lesson. The findings suggest that while the student teachers all learn from experience, the nature and extent of that learning varies considerably within a number of different dimensions. We argue that understanding the range of approaches that student teachers take to professional learning will leave teacher educators better equipped to help ensure that new entrants to the profession are both competent teachers and competent professional learners.
spellingShingle Hagger, H
Burn, K
Mutton, T
Brindley, S
Practice makes perfect? Learning to learn as a teacher
title Practice makes perfect? Learning to learn as a teacher
title_full Practice makes perfect? Learning to learn as a teacher
title_fullStr Practice makes perfect? Learning to learn as a teacher
title_full_unstemmed Practice makes perfect? Learning to learn as a teacher
title_short Practice makes perfect? Learning to learn as a teacher
title_sort practice makes perfect learning to learn as a teacher
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AT burnk practicemakesperfectlearningtolearnasateacher
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