Teacher education in the United Kingdom post devolution: convergences and divergences
This paper examines the roles of research in teacher education across the four nations of the United Kingdom. Both devolution and on-going reviews of teacher education are facilitating a greater degree of cross-national divergence. England is becoming a distinct outlier, in which the locus for teacher education is moving increasingly away from Higher Education Institutions and towards an ever-growing number of school-based providers. While the idea of teaching as a research-based profession is increasingly evident in Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales, it seems that England, at least in respect of the political rhetoric, recent reforms and explicit definitions, is fixed on a contrastingly divergent trajectory towards the idea of teaching as a craft-based occupation, with a concomitant emphasis on a (re)turn to the practical. It is recommended that research is urgently needed to plot these divergences and to examine their consequences for teacher education, educational research and professionalism.
History
Published in
Oxford Review of EducationPublisher
Taylor and FrancisVersion
- AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Citation
Gary Beauchamp, Linda Clarke, Moira Hulme & Jean Murray (2015) Teacher education in the United Kingdom post devolution: convergences and divergences, Oxford Review of Education, 41:2, 154-170, DOI: 10.1080/03054985.2015.1017403Print ISSN
0305-4985Electronic ISSN
1465-3915Cardiff Met Affiliation
- Cardiff School of Education and Social Policy
Cardiff Met Authors
Gary BeauchampCopyright Holder
- © The Publisher
Language
- en