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dc.contributor.authorPostlethwaite, Keith
dc.contributor.authorHaggarty, Linda
dc.date.accessioned2013-05-31T16:44:09Z
dc.date.issued2010
dc.description.abstractRecent dominant models of student teacher learning include apprenticeship and reflective practice, but these are now being challenged, extended and enriched by broader socio-cultural models of learning. These new models direct attention to how learning is shaped by an interplay between the characteristics of the student teachers, their lecturers and their teacher mentors, and the characteristics of the university, schools and societal contexts within which these students, lecturers and mentors work. Socio-cultural theories also reveal the importance of how learning is transferred and transformed as the student teacher moves between different contexts (eg between university and school, or between one school and another). This paper explores the nature of student teachers’ thinking at the end of their initial teacher education (ITE) programme, and questions how the student teachers learnt to think about teaching in these ways – in particular what they felt they learnt in the university and school contexts, and how they dealt with differences between the ideas which were valued in those different contexts. Data were collected by questionnaire from a volunteer sample of student teachers of science and mathematics close to the end of their ITE course. Questions generally called for free response answers which were transcribed, and then coded in a grounded fashion. Analysis was strongly influenced by a framework of ideas derived from our synthesis of socio-cultural theories of learning. From the insights gained we develop a theoretical understanding of the emerging aspects of student teachers’ thinking and learning which we summarise under the term “progressive filtering”. We also argue that Activity Theory is of relevance to student teachers’ learning and we illustrate how this theoretical framework offers additional insights that could enable ITE to address issues which have remained problematic for some time.en_GB
dc.identifier.citationVol 27, No.3, 2012en_GB
dc.identifier.doi10.1080/02671522.2010.501906
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10871/9780
dc.language.isoenen_GB
dc.publisherRoutledgeen_GB
dc.relation.urlhttp://www.tandfonline.com/loi/rred20en_GB
dc.subjectDecision Makingen_GB
dc.subjectstudent teacheren_GB
dc.subjectfilteringen_GB
dc.subjectlearning to teachen_GB
dc.titleStudent teachers’ thinking about learning to teach: a study of student teachers of mathematics and science at the end of their initial trainingen_GB
dc.date.available2013-05-31T16:44:09Z
dc.identifier.issn0267-1522
dc.descriptionpublication-status: Publisheden_GB
dc.descriptiontypes: Articleen_GB
dc.identifier.journalResearch Papers in Educationen_GB


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