Becoming a Teacher
Based on: Becoming a teacher, UNISA custom Edition, 978-1-485-70973-2
Chapter 1: The Teacher as a Reflective Practitioner
Teaching as a challenging profession:
Shulman claims that good teaching combines:
- Content, general and curriculum knowledge
- Pedagogical content knowledge (PCK)- making content meaningful
- Knowledge about learners and educational contexts.
LaBoskey: good teachers make thoughtful. Caring decisions to reach beyond the limitations of the limitations of
their own backgrounds.
Good teachers make decisions, formulate ideas, observe, inquire, assess, diagnose and design.
Reflection and Reflective Practice:
Reflection: Thinking that is focused, intentional and purposeful. Aims to deepen understanding and inform
further thought and action.
Reflect: look at our inner thoughts and thought processes & device further though and action.
Meta-thinking: thinking about thinking.
Teachers are reflective practitioners – teaching is a practise.
Practitioners use their own personalities and professional identities in their practice.
Teaching as a reflective practice: active, persistent, careful examination of teaching actions and beliefs with
the aim of continuously improving as a teacher.
Dimensions of teaching as a reflective practice:
Reflection on action: Reflection after a teaching experience.
Reflection in action: Reflection while engaged in practice.
Reflection for action: Planning thinking ahead about what we will encounter, how to respond.
Planning a lesson- reflection for action and reflection on action.
Theory and Practice:
Students worry that the theory about teaching in university will not benefit them when doing their teaching practice.
No single theory is sufficient to inform teaching decisions.
Learning from experience and extending our personal theories requires reflection.
Formal knowledge gives knowledge beyond our immediate environment.
Page 1 of 17 Notes by: Christina Avgoustis
, Professional values and ethics:
Code of ethics: sets out professional values and responsibilities.
South African Council for Educators (SACE): teachers register with SACE and commits to SACE Code of
Professional Ethics. Cannot practice as an educator if not registered with this council.
A teaching philosophy:
Teaching philosophy: Statement that you craft to guide you as a teacher.
Teachers must construct a teaching philosophy, whether it is put into words or not.
Revisiting our teaching philosophy helps us to stay focused.
Brookfield: “a distinctive organising vision- a clear picture of why you are doing what you are doing that you can
call up at points of crisis”
- Aspirations
- How will I teach?
- Why do I teach this way?
- What are my teaching and personal values?
-
Pedagogical content Knowledge:
Pedagogical Knowledge: Knowledge about teaching and learning.
Content Knowledge: Subject knowledge
Pedagogical content knowledge (PCK): Special mixture of content and pedagogical knowledge.
Tools to guide reflection:
DATA Process:
- Description- describe what happened
- Analysis- Analyse why it happened
- Theorising- Theorise to improve your practice
- Action- Act to test your theory in practice
Guided Reflection Protocol
- What happened?
- Why did it happen?
- Reflection
- What might it mean?
- What are the implications for my teaching practice?
Reflective Journal:
Keep a reflective journal as a student-teacher and novice teacher.
Write a journal for 20 minutes a week
Page 2 of 17 Notes by: Christina Avgoustis
, Chapter 2: The teacher as a caring professional
Critical education theory:
Critical theory: Set of assumptions and beliefs that informs your actions. Lay the foundations for alternative
pedagogical approaches.
Allows us to critically analyse the elements of an education system and uncover practices, beliefs and attitudes
that limit the potential and status of marginalised groups
Marginalised Groups: people who are on the edges of society- less important or less useful. Eg- Homeless.
In South African Context:
Children are shut out of schools because they cannot afford them
Children’s teachers speak a different language to them
Children not being able to afford food or the school uniform.
Advantages of Critical education theory:
Movement for teachers to become co-creators of knowledge rather than users of knowledge
Enable participation in education and produce knowledge according to social, historical and cultural context.
The idea of care:
- Caring about something: feeling it is very important or interesting and you are concerned about it
- Doing something with care: do it with great attention because you want to do it properly.
- Care becomes part of who you are and allows you and your students to see things differently.
- Pedagogy of care: being accountable, designing responsible and moral environments as a teacher.
Noddings’ thinking on care in education:
- Care is not a “duty” but is important for connections and relationships
- Relational ethic: natural care where the relationship between the carer and the cared-for is important.
- Elements:
- Engrossment: non-selective attention to the cared for
- Displacement of motivation: Energy and motives flow from the carer to the others
- Start with the sharing of a feeling to analyse the relationship and not the situation
Creating pedagogy of care in the classroom:
- Teachers introduce themselves and them let students introduce themselves (involvement and commitment)
- Learner-centred curriculum:
- Participation: caring relationship, sharing,
- Feelings
- Problem posing
Benefits of a caring pedagogy:
Change views of interaction, encourage learners, break traditionally routine
Page 3 of 17 Notes by: Christina Avgoustis