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The online resource of academic content on teacher training and teacher education

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Section archive - Theories & Approaches

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161
Why Humanistic Teacher Education Still Matters
Authors: Sage Sara M., Adcock Sondra Smith, Dixon Andrea L.
In this article, the authors review literature on humanistic teacher education. They described humanistic characteristics for today's teachers. Selected humanistic dispositions, or the action components that rise from humanistic beliefs, are particularly important for today's teachers and current trends in education. The authors group these dispositions and accompanying pedagogies into three categories: individual, relational, and contextual. They recommend that programs and graduate degrees for in-service teachers should emphasize the teaching and assessing of humanistic dispositions.
Published: 2012
Updated: Mar. 22, 2015
162
Who Enters Teaching? Encouraging Evidence That the Status of Teaching Is Improving
Authors: Lankford Hamilton, Loeb Susanna, McEachin Andrew, Miller Luke C., Wyckoff James
This article analyzes 25 years of data on the academic ability of teachers in New York State. It documents that since 1999 the academic ability of both individuals certified and those entering teaching has steadily increased. These gains are widespread and have resulted in a substantial narrowing of the differences in teacher academic ability between high- and low-poverty schools and between White and minority teachers.
Published: 2014
Updated: Mar. 15, 2015
163
Human Capital Theory: A Holistic Criticism
Authors: Tan Emrullah
This article takes a holistic approach and reviews human capital theory from four comprehensive perspectives focusing on the methodological, empirical, practical, and moral aspects of the theory. The purpose of this article is to bridge the gap between the criticisms of human capital theory and organize them in a systematic way.
Published: 2014
Updated: Mar. 15, 2015
164
Teaching Motivations in Hong Kong: Who Will Choose Teaching as a Fallback Career in a Stringent Job Market?
Authors: Wong Angel K.Y., Tang Sylvia Yee Fan, Cheng May-hung May
This study aims to examine the factors that motivate teacher education students to choose teaching as a career in Hong Kong. The results showed altruistic and intrinsic motivations were the most important teaching motivations. These motivations correlated positively with planned teaching engagement. A major new finding of this study is the identification of two distinct types of fallback career. Two factors along this line of reasoning were extracted from our factor analysis. However, although two types of fallback career motivation were identified, only one correlated negatively with planned engagement.
Published: 2014
Updated: Mar. 11, 2015
165
Measuring Teachers’ and Student Teachers’ Perceptions of Practice-Based Research in PDS and Non-PDS Settings
Authors: Vrijnsen-de Corte M.C.W. Marjan, Den Brok Perry, Kamp M.J. Marcel, Bergen Theo
This study investigated the perceptions of experienced teachers and student teachers in Netherlands with respect to different aspects of practice-based research in professional development schools (PDS) and non-PDS settings and to what degree these perceptions differed. The respondents were asked about their perceptions of several distinguished elements associated with the four main concepts of practice-based research: contextual input, personal input, the research process and the learning outcomes. The findings revealed that the Questionnaire on Teacher Research to be a useful, reliable and valid tool for assessing teachers’ and student teachers’ perceptions of their practice-based research efforts in secondary education schools. Furthermore, it appeared that respondents scored, on average, highest with respect to their research motives and the outcomes of practice-based research.
Published: 2013
Updated: Feb. 25, 2015
166
The Effects of Teacher Beliefs on Teaching Practices and Achievement of Students With Disabilities
Authors: Klehm Mary
This study examines trends in teachers’ attitudes and practices that may be affecting the educational experience and achievement of many students with disabilities (SWD). The results provide information regarding the attitudes of teachers toward the ability of SWD and the fairness and validity of high-stakes testing. The attitude of teachers toward the ability of SWD to learn and achieve higher level thinking was found to predict proficient scores of SWD on the New England Common Assessment Program achievement test.
Published: 2014
Updated: Feb. 17, 2015
167
Teaching As Exploration? The Difficult Road Out of the Classroom
Authors: Rinke Carol R.
This research aimed to understand how today’s teachers, operating in an exploratory context, experience the teaching profession over time. The findings reveal that these three teachers' experiences highlight the ways in which they continue to use their instructional skills for the benefit of others. After leaving the classroom, all three of these former teachers found that a career transition out of education was not as seamless as anticipated. These teachers each found that their detours through the classroom had concrete professional, financial, and emotional costs in the form of delayed entry into new careers, tuition costs, and daily struggles. The author concludes that this study identifies concerns about the costs for the teachers themselves while also recognizing the transformative potential of former educators applying their skills throughout society in a myriad of ways.
Published: 2013
Updated: Feb. 11, 2015
168
Teaching for Success: Technology and Learning Styles in Preservice Teacher Education
Authors: Solvie Pamela, Sungur Engin
This study explored the achievement of preservice teachers when advice in the form of text and resources was provided based on students’ identified learning styles. The authors developed an online module to link prepared advice for the completion of course tasks to particular learning style preferences. The results point to the value of a learning style preference advice module as a scaffolding tool. Students’ assessment results when advice was provided were higher than when advice was not provided. Additionally, students believed the online module provided valuable information in understanding and applying content to the completion of course assignments. The findings show that coupled with feedback provided to students in other ways throughout the course, the online learning style preference module adds additional support to preservice teachers that may lead to increasing their understanding of course content and learning styles.
Published: 2012
Updated: Feb. 11, 2015
169
Institutional Conceptualisations of Teacher Education as Academic Work in England
Authors: Ellis Viv, McNicholl Jane, Pendry Anna
This article examines how the university-based teacher educator is conceptualised as a category of academic worker at the institutional level in England. The findings reveal that it was common for universities to conceptualise the teacher educator as an effective classroom practitioner demonstrating strong personal qualities of enthusiasm and resilience. Furthermore, training and delivery described teaching, often relating directly to how teaching and teacher education were described in policy and professional discourse. The findings also show that the institutions shared a commitment to teacher educators’ credibility with the profession, usually demonstrated through significant professional experience.
Published: 2012
Updated: Jan. 29, 2015
170
Getting Personal with Teacher Burnout: A Longitudinal Study on the Development of Burnout Using a Person-Based Approach
Authors: Hultell Daniel, Melin Bo, Gustavsson J. Petter
The main purpose of this study was therefore to examine whether the use of a person-based approach could identify patterns of intra-individual change in burnout during the first three years of employment for beginning teachers. The authors conclude that the results showed that the majority of the beginning teachers had low levels of burnout, indicating that they coped well with the transition from education to employment. However, the results also showed that more than one in ten experienced burnout at some point during this period. Furthermore, the findings revealed that about half of the teachers experienced moderately high burnout or high burnout at some time.
Published: 2013
Updated: Jan. 13, 2015
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Trends in Teacher Education

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