探花视频

Professional preparation

Published on
November 24, 2011
Last updated
May 22, 2015

Herb Marsh writes in his opinion piece "Help teachers improve their skills or live with the consequences" (10 November): "Universities need to implement programmes to both train and evaluate university teachers..."

Twenty-one years on from Ernest Boyer's Scholarship Reconsidered: Priorities of the Professoriate, it seems that educationalists are still asking why teacher education is not higher on the agenda (if it is present at all).

In a news story one week before Marsh wrote, Craig Mahoney, chief executive of the Higher Education Academy, noted that mandatory teacher training "is something that might soon become a requirement" ("Sector opposes plans for compulsory teacher training", 3 November).

Surely teacher education is effective - why else would it be mandatory in the schools sector? And indeed, mandatory in a profession (think medicine, law, religion)?

It is no less effective in higher education, as research shows to be the case: teacher education, over a period of time, changes teachers' conceptions of their roles, which in turn changes students' conceptions of learning and their intention to learn in a particular way. Educationalists have knowledge, skills and insights worth sharing with their peers. The problem seems to be the multiple role academics have: researcher, teacher and so on. Which should we be educated to fulfil?

Peter Gossman, Programme leader, postgraduate certificate in professional development in higher education, Glyndwr University

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