LEARNING TO BE ENTREPRENEURIAL IN VOCATIONAL TEACHER EDUCATION

2013 ◽  
Vol 1 (13) ◽  
Author(s):  
Heikki Hannula ◽  
Taru Dorra

Being entrepreneurial is a concept which has evoked interest in the context of entrepreneurship education.  It is a desirable quality not only among people already in working life but also among students, teachers and learning organizations.  Teachers are a group who by their own example can serve as a model for others.  Through their own entrepreneurial example teachers can encourage their own students to be entrepreneurial.  Therefore, it is appropriate that the entrepreneurial activities will be learned already during the teacher education. Observations of the entrepreneurial approach of two groups who began their studies at HAMK were initiated in August 2011.  Instead of the normal teacher-led training the groups of students were divided according to the tenets of Problem-Based Learning into small groups. Each group was assigned the responsibility for the independent planning, implementation and assessment of studies pertaining to vocational teacher education.  The task of the instructors was to monitor the activities and to intervene only when necessary.  In the reactions and development of the students the phases of the risk pedagogy model proposed by Paula Kyrö could be discerned- confusion, taking action and learning to take risk. The students in the groups responded twice to questionnaires addressed to them.  The first questionnaire was implemented in the beginning of studies and the second at the end of studies. The observations of the teacher educators and students were also analyzed.  It can be concluded/stated as a conclusion that in the early stage the students were confused, and partly also angry.  Taking action, however, yielded results and the prospective teachers realized that they had coped with the challenges.  Eventually in the course of implementation there actually emerged competition in regards to which group had achieved the highest quality implementation.  Thus through experiences of being teachers, the prospective teachers also learned the matters pertaining being entrepreneurial, such as responsibility and risk-taking. The purpose of this article is to describe the story of the growth of prospective vocational teachers. First we present the key concepts used in the research. Thereafter we describe the studies of the prospective teachers as a whole.  Next we introduce the prospective teachers’ and instructors’ experiences of the implementation phase.  Finally we both draw conclusions about the implementation and endeavor to stimulate discussion on the further development of entrepreneurial education.

2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ellen Beate Hellne-Halvorsen ◽  
Halvor Spetalen

Denne artikkelen er basert på en studie om skriving i yrkesfaglærerutdanningen. Med bruk av en kvantitativ spørreundersøkelse av studenter på bachelorutdanningen og kvalitative intervjuer av et utvalg yrkesfaglærerutdannere, som «mixed methods», gir artikkelen et dobbelt perspektiv på hvordan skriving praktiseres i utdanningen sett fra studenters og yrkesfaglærerutdanneres erfaringer og synspunkter. Studien undersøker hvordan studenter utvikler sin skrivekompetanse og hva slags skrivekompetanse som vektlegges i yrkesfaglærerutdanningen. Begrepet «skrivekompetanse» har i denne studien et dobbelt perspektiv; det ene er relatert til disiplin eller fag- og kontekst-spesifikk skriving, det andre til en generisk, overførbar og kontekstuavhengig skrive-kompetanse. Artikkelen diskuterer behovet for en generisk og overførbar skrive-kompetanse når fagkompetanse skal kommuniseres i et tekstbasert arbeidsliv i raske endringer. Dette aspektet vil stå sentralt når studenter på yrkesfaglærerutdanningen skal, som ferdig utdannete yrkesfaglærere, gi opplæring til framtidens fagarbeidere. Den teoretiske innrammingen av studien er basert på en sosiokulturell tilnærming i tråd med New Literacy Studies, og på teorier som utforsker nye perspektiver på literacy og kontekst. Forskningsspørsmålene er: Hva slags skrivekompetanse vektlegges i yrkes-faglærerutdanningen, og hvordan forbereder skrivearbeidet i yrkesfaglærerutdanningen studentene på deres framtidige yrkesliv som yrkesfaglærere? Resultatene viser at studentene har en liten utvikling av skrivekompetansen sin i løpet av bachelor¬utdanningen. En forklaring er at mye skriving i løpet av utdanningen gir skrivetrening og bidrar til å utvikle skrivekompetansen. En annen er læreres eksplisitte undervisning og veiledning. Men lærere i yrkesfaglærerutdanningen praktiserer dette i ulik grad og med ulike vektlegginger på skrivekompetanse. Det siste kan ha sammenheng med lærernes egen kompetanse og synspunkter på behovet for skrivekompetanse rent generelt, men kan også knyttes til institusjonens prioriteringer. Verdt å nevne er at mange studenter etterlyser mer fokus på skriving og å lære å skrive akademiske tekster. Skrivearbeidet i yrkesfaglærerutdanningen har som primært mål å mediere læring og i mindre grad å utvikle studentenes skrivekompetanse i et framtidsperspektiv som yrkes¬faglærere. Nøkkelord: yrkesfaglærerutdanning, skrivekompetanse, generiske og fagspesifikke skriveferdigheter, arbeidslivets behov for skrivekompetanse   Writing practices in Vocational Teacher Education AbstractThis article is based on a study on writing practices in Vocational Teacher Education. By using a quantitative survey of bachelor students and qualitative interviews of a sample of teacher educators, as mixed methods, we got a double perspective on how writing is practiced by experiences and utterances from students and teacher educators. The study explores how students develop their writing competences and what kind of writing competences are emphasized in Vocational Teacher Education. The concept “writing competences” in this study has a dualistic or two-sided approach; one is related to professional, discipline and context specific writing, the other to a generic, transferable and context independent writing competence. The article discusses the need of generic and transferable writing skills as an important part of professional communication in a text-based and fast changing labor market. This aspect will be essential when students as full-fledged vocational teachers shall educate pupils to become skilled workers. The theoretical framing of the study is based on a socio-cultural approach in line with New Literacy Studies, and on theories that explore new perspectives on literacy and context. Our research questions are: What kind of writing competences are emphasized in the Vocational Teacher Education, and how do writing practices prepare students to their future work as vocational teachers? The results show that students have little development of writing competences during their bachelor studies. One explanation is that a lot of writing during education also develops their writing competences. Another is teacher educators’ supervision of writing competences. However, teachers supervise in different ways with focus on different factors of writing skills. The latter is probably related to teachers’ own competences and attitudes towards the need of writing competences in general. But it can also be related to institutional policy and priorities towards writing competences. Worth mention, is that students ask for more focus on writing practices and learning to write academic texts. Writing practices has a primary goal to mediate learning in Vocational Teacher Education, and to a lesser extent to develop students’ writing competences in the perspective of a future as vocational teachers. Keywords: Vocational Teacher Education, writing competences, generic and subject specific writing skills, labor market’s need of writing competences


Author(s):  
Darshana Sharma

Teaching Practice is widely recognised as the sine-qua-non of any teacher education programme. It is a component in the teacher preparation programme where prospective teachers are provided with an opportunity to put their theoretical studies into practice, get feedback, reflect on practice and consequently further improve their teaching skills. As teaching practice is an important component of a teacher education programme, considerable attention must be given to make it more effective and fruitful. This paper is based on a research study conducted to know pre-service teachers' experiences of the quality of teaching practice and the common concerns they have during teaching practice. On the basis of focussed group discussion a total of five themes were identified, these are (1) usefulness of teaching practice (2) experiences/concerns with pupils' behaviour (3) experiences/concerns with own behaviour (4) experiences/concerns with supervisors' behaviour (5) experiences/concerns with institutional and personal adjustments. The outcome of the focussed group discussion was used to prepare a structured questionnaire. Among other things, the study recommended rigorous practical training in lesson planning, demonstration lessons by teacher educators, simulated teaching before the commencement of practice teaching, school orientation programmes, a separate internship of two weeks and writing a journal by student teachers during teaching practice.


Author(s):  
Rukiye Didem Taylan

Teacher educators have a responsibility to help prospective teachers in their professional growth. It is important that teacher educators not only teach prospective teachers about benefits of active learning in student learning, but that they also prepare future teachers in using pedagogical methods aligned with active learning principles. This manuscript provides examples of how mathematics teacher educators can promote prospective teachers' active learning and professional growth by bringing together the Flipped Classroom method with video content on teaching and learning as well as workplace learning opportunities in a pedagogy course. The professional learning of prospective teachers is framed according to the components of the Pedagogical Content Knowledge (Park & Olive, 2008; Shulman, 1986). Implications for future trends in teacher education are provided.


2008 ◽  
Vol 78 (4) ◽  
pp. 652-674 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hilary Gehlbach Conklin

As the work of teacher education becomes increasingly focused on the challenges of helping mostly white, monolingual, middle-class prospective teachers become compassionate,successful teachers of racially, culturally, linguistically, economically, and academically diverse students, some teacher educators struggle to find compassion for the prospective teachers they teach. Motivated by this concern and drawing on feminist and Buddhist theories, Hilary Conklin argues that many teacher educators would benefit from a renewed consideration of modeling the pedagogy they hope prospective teachers will employ. In this article, she analyzes and brings together the work on critical, justice-oriented approaches to teacher education, relationships in teaching, modeling as pedagogy, and the Buddhist notion of compassion to articulate a pedagogy of modeling in critical, justice-oriented teacher education. Conklin proposes that such a pedagogy has the potential to move us closer to transformative teacher education.


2008 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 535-547 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philipp Grollmann

What are quality vocational teachers? This article analyzes the different factors exerting an influence on the professional knowledge, practices and performance of teaching staff involved in technical and vocational education and training (TVET). The international variety of vocational teacher education patterns, profiles and recruitment practices is presented. Any assessment of the quality of teachers' work, be it in theory or practice, needs to be considered against the background of the institutional environment in which they practise. Hence, some common trends of institutional change within vocational education are introduced. Most particularly here, the author focuses on the professional reality of vocational teachers as made manifest in the conjoined elements of the knowledge of teachers and professional cultures. In doing so, the author draws on some empirical exemplars. The author shows how closely teacher education and the institutional contexts are entwined in the minds of teachers as well as in professional cultures. Finally, some conclusions are drawn as to what this implies for high-quality vocational teacher education and recruitment.


1973 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 209-211
Author(s):  
Evelyn Sowell

That professor! What he says is great—but that idea just won't work in the classroom!” These statements may be common among some teacher education students. Such comments are now heard much less frequently, however, around the University of Houston. The mathematics education faculty is experimenting with a competency- based program, as part of a collegewide endeavor, that requires prospective teachers to actually use in their classrooms what they hear and read about teaching. Initial experiences with this program suggest several advantages both for teachers in training and for teacher educators. This article describes some features and benefits of one type of approach to competency-based mathematics education.


Author(s):  
Abdul Nasir Kiazai ◽  
Zarina Waheed ◽  
Saba Rehman

A large number of children in Balochistan attend religious schools (Madrasas) that have been criticized for spreading extremist views in the society. Teacher education institutions play a vital role in bringing cultural and religious harmony by producing prospective teachers who are able to cultivate tolerance, acceptance, patriotism, ethnic, religious respect and counter extremism, sectarian, and discrimination prospective. This qualitative exploratory study explores whether the prospective teachers in Balochistan are trained enough to teach in religious schools. The data were collected through in-depth interviews and focused group discussions. All teacher educators and prospective teachers from the universities that remained part of Pre-STEP or Teacher Education Project (TEP) assisted by USAID constituted the population of the study. Sample was selected through purposive sampling from two universities situated in Quetta. 10 teacher educators (5+5) and 10 prospective teachers (5+5) were selected as sample for interviews while two groups of prospective teachers (5 participants in each) were selected from the both case universities for focus group interviews. Data were analyzed through thematic analysis. The findings indicated that the prospective teachers and teacher educators considered the recent teacher education programs in Balochistan not enough to train teachers to teach in religious schools. Keywords: Prospective Teachers; Religious Schools; Teacher Education Programs; Balochistan


2017 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Heidi L. Hallman ◽  
Hannah R. Meineke

This article discusses teacher educators’ response to the issue of preparing prospective teachers in core content areas to be teachers of English language learners. In the case study we present in the article, the views of English language arts teacher educators, as analyzed from a nationwide survey of the teaching of English, are articulated. As a follow-up to the survey, focus groups were conducted with a sub-section of survey respondents. Findings indicate that, although the teaching of ELLs is viewed as a priority for teacher education, the field has yet to determine how to adequately address program coherence and partnership approaches to teaching ELLs within pre-service teacher education.  


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eglė Pranckūnienė ◽  
◽  
Rūta Girdzijauskienė ◽  
Remigijus Bubnys ◽  
Liudmila Rupšienė

After the World Health Organization announced the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020, education systems were forced to move instruction to the virtual world. It drastically changed the interplay between teachers and learners, educational content, and the learning environment. When scrutinising the experience of teacher educators, we realised that it was important to focus on their discoveries. Collective reflection and collaborative autoethnography of four teacher educators developed into a reflective process of creating collective knowledge about their lived experience of coping with the new reality of teaching. The research was carried out in four steps: collective reflection on the context of education and individual lived experiences, collective analyses of transcribed first-person narratives, collective interpretation of the first-person narratives, co-creation of insights, and implications for the future of teacher training. The paper discusses the discoveries of four teacher educators made during the pandemic period: the benefits of communication technology, new interpersonal relations, the dynamics of self-learning, and a new concept of multiple educational spaces. The research results showed that the online teaching and technological breakthrough encouraged teacher educators to use various online platforms and technological tools, to develop new teaching strategies, to find effective ways of communication, to focus more on the organisation of teaching and learning, the usage of multiple learning spaces, and teaching multimodality. At the end of this paper, we provide some insights for teacher education: teacher education programmes should create conditions for student transformative learning preparing prospective teachers to live and work in a rapidly changing and challenging world, to create space and time to develop important qualities of student teachers such as flexibility, the ability to adapt to changing circumstances and resistance to physical and emotional disturbances.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (47) ◽  
pp. 11615-11620
Author(s):  
Preetha George

The Covid-19 pandemic has shattered the lifestyle, daily routine, and especially the education system of the globe. The academic fraternity has been badly affected by this pandemic. Teacher educators across the different universities in India have been abruptly pushed into the charted online classes since India went into lockdown on March 25, 2020.The traditional teacher training practices created chaos in the online teacher preparation and practice procedures. The first part of this paper focuses on the challenges of teacher educators and prospective teachers during online teacher education programme and the second part envisages the need for an updated curriculum and a few feasible solutions to the problems highlighted.


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