Description: Toward a Framework of Resources for Learning to Teach by Lauren Gatti This book advances a new framework for learning to teach, using in-depth case studies to show how learning to teach—in any type of program—can best be understood as a recursive and dynamic process, wherein teachers differentially access programmatic, relational, experiential, disciplinary, and dispositional resources. FORMAT Hardcover LANGUAGE English CONDITION Brand New Publisher Description This book advances a new framework for learning to teach, using in-depth case studies to show how learning to teach—in any type of program—can best be understood as a recursive and dynamic process, wherein teachers differentially access programmatic, relational, experiential, disciplinary, and dispositional resources. In the last twenty years, debates in the field of teacher preparation have increasingly become paralyzing and divisive as rhetoric around the failure of university teacher preparation intensifies. The author addresses the historical and practical factors that animate these debates, arguing that novice teachers and teacher educators must understand the central conflicts in the field; however, the book also advances a way of approaching learning to teach that accounts for but does not get stuck at the level of programmatic designation. Using lively, in-depth case studies, the author shows how novice urban English teachers from two different teacher preparation pathways—a university-based program and an urban teacher residency—learn to teach within a policy context of high-stakes testing and "college readiness." Back Cover This book advances a new framework for learning to teach, using in-depth case studies to show how learning to teach--in any type of program--can best be understood as a recursive and dynamic process, wherein teachers differentially access programmatic, relational, experiential, disciplinary, and dispositional resources. In the last twenty years, debates in the field of teacher preparation have increasingly become paralyzing and divisive as rhetoric around the failure of university teacher preparation intensifies. The author addresses the historical and practical factors that animate these debates, arguing that novice teachers and teacher educators must understand the central conflicts in the field; however, the book also advances a way of approaching learning to teach that accounts for but does not get stuck at the level of programmatic designation. Using lively, in-depth case studies, the author shows how novice urban English teachers from two different teacher preparation pathways--a university-based program and an urban teacher residency--learn to teach within a policy context of high-stakes testing and "college readiness." Author Biography Lauren Gatti is Assistant Professor in Teaching, Learning and Teacher Education at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA. She earned her PhD in Curriculum and Instruction from the University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA. In 2013, she was awarded Outstanding Dissertation of the Year in Division K (Teaching and Teacher Education) of the American Educational Research Association. Table of Contents 1. Introduction: Learning to Teach in Troubled Times.- 2. Teacher Education in Deep Focus.- 3. Transformative Teacher Preparation: A Framework of Resources for Learning to Teach.- 4. Relational Resources and the Role of Trust.- 5. Disciplinary Resources and the Role of Aims: Teaching Our Subjects To What End?.- 6. Experiential and Dispositional Resources and the Role of Negotiating Curriculum.- 7. Programmatic Resources and the Role of Programmatic Responsiveness.- 8. Teacher Education Partnerships and the Role of Ideology and Aims.- 9. Conclusion: Teacher Education To What End?. Promotional "This book focuses on the process of learning to teach of novice English teachers who participated in two different kinds of teacher education programs. The case studies provide powerful and sobering accounts of teacher learning in US urban schools. What makes the book so important is its ability to help us think beyond the current polarized debates between replacing university programs with narrowly focused ones developed by social entrepreneurs and defending the current system that is in need of substantial improvement. The theoretical ideas it offers that frame teacher learning as a task of building on and accessing resources is a major contribution to the field. This book should be read by everyone concerned with the quality of education in public schools." (Ken Zeichner, Boeing Professor of Teacher Education, University of Washington, USA) "Finally a book that offers an alternative to the polarizing debates plaguing teacher education today! In this book, Gatti resists defensive and reform responses to contemporary teacher education. Instead she digs into what should always be, but rarely is, our focus in teacher education: teachers learning. Illustrating the complex and context-dependent ways in which teachers learn, this book offers hope and direction for the future of teacher preparation, regardless of the pathway. I cant wait to use this book in my own work and to share it with colleagues and students alike." (Jamy Stillman, Associate Professor, Educational Equity and Cultural Diversity, School of Education, University of Colorado, Boulder, USA) "Focusing on the Urban Teacher Residency (UTR)--a key innovation in pre-service teacher education in the United States--Gatti gets right to the heart of learning to teach in high-needs contexts. What happens when the partners in UTRs have conflicting views about the purposes of teaching? How do the teacher candidates negotiate the conflicting ideologies of different stakeholders? Do you have to teach like a robot to become credentialed in urban schools? Or are critical pathways to educational transformation still open? In her beautifully written book, Gatti shows how young teachers grapple with these questions and how the systems of teacher education might better support them." (Viv Ellis, Professor and Chair in Educational Leadership and Teacher Development, Kings College London, UK) "Engaging and timely, this book offers a fresh and discerning conception of teacher preparation, one that transcends unproductive debates about traditional and alternative routes to teaching by focusing attention on the demanding personal work of learning to teach, regardless of the pathway taken. A must read not only for practicing and aspiring teacher educators but also for novice teachers committed to teaching in ways that build on the resources their students bring to learning." (Ana Maria Villegas, Director of the Teacher Education and Teacher Development PhD Program, Montclair State University, USA) "Weaving together compelling personal stories and research-based examples, Gatti offers an engaging account of the tensions novice teachers live out as they negotiate conflicting personal, programmatic, and policy aims as new teachers learning to teach in high needs schools. Through her powerful new framework of resources for learning to teach, Gatti raises crucial questions about the aims of teacher preparation and how we should collectively wrestle with reforming teacher preparation to address educational inequities." (Hilary G. Conklin, Associate Professor of Teacher Education, DePaul University, USA) "With this new volume on the education of teachers, Gatti contests the widely-held view that teacher education is a fluffy program of study, one that should be replaced by either content-area specialization or perhaps nothing at all. She skillfully disabuses her readers of these myths, using her lively and compelling prose to animate the complexity of public school education and illustrate the ways in which thoughtful, dedicated teachers learn to address its challenges. Critics of teacher education would benefit from immersing themselves in this volume and enriching their understanding of the difficult, if ultimately satisfying, task of learning to teach with love and a persistent belief in the mission and practice of public education." (Peter Smagorinsky, Distinguished Research Professor of English Education, The University of Georgia, USA) Details ISBN1137501448 Language English Year 2016 ISBN-10 1137501448 ISBN-13 9781137501448 Format Hardcover Author Lauren Gatti Publisher Palgrave Macmillan Short Title TOWARD A FRAMEWORK OF RESOURCE Media Book Pages 206 Edition 1st Imprint Palgrave Macmillan Subtitle Rethinking US Teacher Preparation Place of Publication Basingstoke Country of Publication United Kingdom Publication Date 2016-08-20 UK Release Date 2016-08-20 AU Release Date 2016-08-20 NZ Release Date 2016-08-20 Illustrations 1 Illustrations, color; XIII, 206 p. 1 illus. in color. Edited by Paul G. Lewis Birth 1955 Affiliation Univ Of Illinois At Urbana-champaign, Usa Position Associate Director Qualifications Ph.D. Edition Description 1st ed. 2016 Alternative 9781349699087 DEWEY 370.711 Audience Professional & Vocational We've got this At The Nile, if you're looking for it, we've got it. 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ISBN-13: 9781137501448
Book Title: Toward a Framework of Resources for Learning to Teach
Subject Area: Developmental Psychology
Item Height: 210 mm
Item Width: 148 mm
Author: Lauren Gatti
Publication Name: Toward a Framework of Resources for Learning to Teach: Rethinking Us Teacher Preparation
Format: Hardcover
Language: English
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Subject: Teaching
Publication Year: 2016
Type: Textbook
Item Weight: 3896 g
Number of Pages: 206 Pages