Tímarit um menntarannsóknir - 01.01.2007, Side 56

Tímarit um menntarannsóknir - 01.01.2007, Side 56
54 Tímarit um menntarannsóknir, 4. árgangur 2007 deal with these complexities (Wideen, Mayer- Smith and Moon, 1998). Richardson (1996) describes it as “a weak interaction [because it is] sandwiched between two powerful forces – previous life history, particularly that related to being a student, and classroom experiences as a student teacher and teacher“ (p. 113). Having spent thousands of hours “observing“ teachers in action and after having lived in a society where folk theories about other minds (Bruner, 1996) shape people’s views, student teachers tend to have deeply ingrained ideas about what it takes to teach and what it means to learn. Such deep-seated ideas, it seems, are not easily dealt with because they are embedded in our common ways of speaking about schools and teaching. While participating in university courses student teachers may be captivated by progressive ideas, but such ideas tend to fade away when brought into contact with common sense discourses in schools (Hafþór Guðjónsson, 2007). Accordingly, if new and better practices, for example of the kind proposed by How People Learn, are to be realized, more effective ways of educating teachers need to be developed. Realistic teacher education Many teacher educators look with a hopeful eye toward the teacher education programme developed at the University of Utrecht in the Netherlands. There, Korthagen and his colleagues have been developing a new approach which they refer to as “realistic teacher education“ (Korthagen and Kessels, 1999). Basically, the programme adopts a framework similar to what How People Learn advocates for schools in general. In short, it rejects the common application-of-theory model and subscribes to a model which gives primacy to the ideas students bring with them to the teacher education programme and the ideas they construct when grappling with particulars in a school environment. The key to successful teacher learning, Korthagen and Kessels (1999) maintain, is reflection on concrete lived teaching experiences. Helping the students elicit their ideas in this regard and reflect on them in company with others enables the students to become aware of their prior conceptions and to go on to construct new ones. Epilogue The Iceland University of Education is in the process of reorganizing its teacher education programme. The goal is to create a programme that will encourage future teachers to use research findings and adopt research- based perspectives on learning to guide their classroom practices. Realizing this goal, I argue, is a formidable task that requires new ways of thinking about teacher learning, for example of the kind suggested by Korthagen and Kessels (1999) and mentioned above. We ourselves, the teacher educators in Iceland, are not free of the cultural forces that tend to keep people captivated in a certain way of thinking and behaving. In particular, we tend to think that just “telling them“ (the student teachers) how they should think and act is enough; we tend to assume that appropriate actions follow automatically from propositional knowledge accumulated somewhere in the brain. There is now ample evidence to support the view that assumptions of this sort do not hold. As a rule, actions are socially and culturally mediated. This implies, for example, that when a student teacher enters a school and a classroom her or his actions will not simply flow from what she/ he has imbibed from courses at the university. Rather, the student teacher’s actions will be mediated by a host of factors, including prior knowledge, but also by factors that constitute the school environment, physical aspects as well as people. A thorough understanding of these complexities, I think, is key if the task is to build a strong teacher education programme. Að kenna í ljósi fræða og rannsókna
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