Maria Flores, Gillian Hilton, Katerina Kloneri, Elizabeth Nilsen, Marco Snoek ATTE research and...
Transcript of Maria Flores, Gillian Hilton, Katerina Kloneri, Elizabeth Nilsen, Marco Snoek ATTE research and...
Maria Flores, Gillian Hilton, Katerina Kloneri, Elizabeth Nilsen, Marco
SnoekATTE research and development group on the teacher education curriculum
Identifying Teacher Quality, theoretical backgrounds of a
reflection tool
This paper
Discusses how to engage teachers in defining teacher quality rather than having ideas imposed upon them.
Based on an international 3 year project ATEE RDC 19 sponsored by the EU 12 countries and 28 participants.
Involved developing tools to aid teachers to reflect on teacher quality and increase their ownership of professional quality.
Teacher qualityOf immense interest world wide the most
important aspect in student achievement (Darling-Hammond et al. 2005)
High political priority e.g. OECD; EC, 2007 Countries have followed the competency
line or that of teacher standards re pedagogy, knowledge skills etc. (Evans, 2002. Wong & Wong,1998)
Many countries now have formal lists of competencies or standards for teachers in training and also for their CPD (TDA, 2007)
Attempt here is to be objective but subjective judgements on personal qualities such as moral or emotional characteristics, personal interpersonal values etc. are more difficult to measure
We need a shared understanding of teacher quality for all the stakeholders
Quality is a personal construct complex and multi-faceted depending on the views of the teacher and the context in which they find themselves
Teacher Quality and Professionalism
Professionals have autonomy to define their own core standards so are teachers professionals if standards are imposed?
Imposed standards have led to some narrow instrumental versions of teaching to more broad based ideas on professionalism
Professionalism must come from the workforce itself wanting to make a difference (McCulloch, Helsby, Knight, 2000) not be imposed by policy makers
Teacher professionalism must come from the teachers themselves not be imposed from outside by policy makers
Imposition brings compliance or possibly activism but not ownership and commitment to improve in a time of change and uncertainty.
Types of professionalismHoyle (1974) describes two types of
professionalism restricted - classroom based experienced basedextended – involving the social context of education and teachers collaborating and arguing using a theoretical basis to aid discussion
We need to ensure quality in both kinds of professionalism
Goodson & Hargreaves(1996) professionalism is what teachers experience it as not what others say it should be
Need for collaboration and co-operation between teachers and stakeholders to meet the assumption that teachers influence society
Teachers must be involved in defining quality as the constant changes, ambiguity and complex demands require proactive responses
But? Do all teachers demonstrate this professionalism in day to day work in the classroom and beyond?
Teacher quality and reflectionNational instruments for measuring TQ seen as
control on teachers – but can be instruments for prof dev and change – reflection is the key here
Professionals have to share ‘norms’ in reflection as to what is considered good practice - insight into oneself but also reflect on the level reached in the ‘norms’ of the profession
How? By discussing with colleagues and striving for quality from within related to shared and internalised professional standards created through professional discourse
The ITQ project
A 3 year international projectFunded by the EU Socrates programme
Aims to support teachers to develop their professional quality through
reflection by using a variety of tools designed to aid reflection
Based in 6 assumptionsTeachers are professionals –Reflection on professional quality is a
stimulus for professional developmentOwnership is a condition for learning and
changeQuality is a personal contextual constructPersonal involvement in defining
professional quality stimulates ownership and therefore learning and change
Education asks for an interactive relation between policy research and practice
The result?
Empower teachers to participate in national and regional debates on teacher quality
Stimulate reflection on different aspects o teacher quality
Stimulate collaborative learning of teachers – individual and school development leading to a shared language
Stimulate sensitivity to and understanding of concerns of other stakeholders
Reflection tools From different sources and stimulating
different learning stylesOutside sources e.g. formal documents
research publications national standardsObservations of classroom practice -
videos/DVDsUsing shared experience – my most
remarkable teacher diary writing and exchanging these experiences
Creative and expressive activities role plays drawings metaphors etc.
Use of the tools and evaluationAll tools stimulate reflection on teacher quality
and on identification of indicators of teacher quality
Used with pre service – in service and practising teachers national projects on TQ and for looking at specific themes
Tools are being evaluated and tested across Europe and in a Comenius course later this year.
Data has been collected through reflective journals of the tool designers , questionnaires for tool testers and the test organisers.
A reflection by the tool testers on their perceptions of teacher quality which will be compared with national documents
These evaluations will be used to improve the tools during year 3 of the work
The tools used and the results will be published on the website and possibly become par of a book.
Website - www.teacherqualitytoolbox.eu
Final thoughtsWe believe that helping teachers to reflect upon quality
will – Empower teachers to become more involved in defining
qualityHelp teachers at all levels to discuss professional quality
in an ongoing debate that will enhance practiceEnsure that stakeholders’ needs are consideredHelp teachers to become more involved and have a voice
in national and European discussions on teacher qualityRaise the professionalism of the professionWe believe that involving teacher in this is more likely to
have success in raising quality than will externally proposed and imposed standards
Thank you for your attention Please visit the website and try out some of
the tools
The ITQ group from ATEE RDC 19