OAR@UM Collection:/library/oar/handle/123456789/374532025-12-27T14:26:53Z2025-12-27T14:26:53ZEuropean integration, social change and new challenges in the training of teachers in Spain : more questions than answersVillanueva, Maria/library/oar/handle/123456789/376842018-12-22T02:49:57Z2002-01-01T00:00:00ZTitle: European integration, social change and new challenges in the training of teachers in Spain : more questions than answers
Authors: Villanueva, Maria
Abstract: The current phase of economical development is characterized by a new
labor process: the introduction of new technologies and work practices is
designed, in the global system, to obtain greater flexibility in production,
labor and markets, and to quicken rates of innovation and capital
circulation. Communication technologies have opened up access to
information in an impressive manner, but that access is asymmetrical, and
closely related to uneven world development. Apparent predictability and
security is being replaced by complexity, uncertainty and increasing
apprehension (Huckle, 1996; Meadows, 1992). This not only produces new
fractures in society, with new status and class divisions becoming evident,
but it also has a significant cultural impact (Harvey, 1989).
In this context of change, new inequalities and competition are arising
and their tensions are reflected in education. Traditionally, educational
policies in democratic countries have attempted to balance those tensions
emphasizing social and cultural values. However, in our times, an everincreasing
utilitarian spirit seems to reinforce the need for work-related
'basic skills' and 'useful knowledge', which predominates over any
consideration of social values (Hartley, 1993). On the one hand, pupils, as
future citizens, are expected to learn and apply democratic values and to be
aware of the global repercussions of their actions and choices. They are
therefore expected to acquire, thorough schooling, the skills and critical
thinking that will enable them to understand and interpret the messages and the superabundance of information given by worldwide media. On the
other hand, however, much information tends to erode traditional values,
supplying little other than facts.
Due to European historical processes, most countries' demographic
composition is multi-cultural. The consolidation of national-states during
the 19th century left within their territorial borders many linguistic and
cultural minorities. One of the main goals of schooling was
homogeneization as a strategy to reinforce clear distinctions between
states, cultures and languages. Social 'minorities', especially linguistic
ones, were ignored in the process, and national systems of teacher training
were used as an instrument to convey the concepts and values of the
national state. After World War II, European economic growth was
sustained by intense flows of migrants both from the northern region and
from the eastern and southern ones as well. These flows increased the
cultural pluralism and heterogeneity of European states that constitutes,
nowadays, one of the most important pedagogical challenges that requires
clear social policies.
But the issue here is that contemporary European societies, being at one
and the same time capitalistic and democratic, have principles that are not
easily reconcilable. The democratization of schooling, the massification of
compulsory education, and the search for efficiency in educational systems
have been some of the steps taken to respond to the ever increasing
requirements of the global system. Traditionally, the school has been the
main instrument to erase diversity as well as to silence the problems and
complaints of minorities. In our days, education for pluralism and respect
for human rights is seen as a present and future need.
In recent years, the increasing pressure for neo-liberal political reform
has placed teachers and school systems in the eye of the hurricane. The
decline in educational standards, the increasing incidence of violence and
bullying, and the lack of ethical and social values are some of the charges
made against schooling. Teachers were held responsible not only for their
work, but also for the failure of the school system. As a result, teachers have
become more subject to control and inspection, even as at the discursive
level the principles of pedagogical autonomy are widely declared.
Increasingly, schools are held as solely responsible for the results they
achieve, with teachers being required to be competent in new skills, to
expand their knowledge horizons, and to facilitate the personal
development of future citizens. While such demands are, in themselves,
positive, the problem is that there is an underlying assumption that school can address and cope with new labor requirements, and can somehow
resolve new social needs and conflicts generated by broader social
processes.
As it is clearly pointed out in the Delors Report (Delors, 1996), the four
pillars that constitute the foundations of education are 'learning to be,
learning to know, learning to do and learning to live together' . This implies
a global understanding of education, and the coming about of a society
which links formal and non-formal provision in such a way as to facilitate
the move towards lifelong learning, widening access to knowledge and
information, and ensuring that new social fractures are not created by
uneven opportunities. The role of teachers, from this point of view, is
becoming crucial for preparing young people not only for looking
confidently to the future but also for building it by themselves in a
responsible way.
In the case of Spain, the latest reforms in teacher education are a good
example of all these tensions. The increasing demands made on the school
have made themselves felt through debates on the content of the curriculum
for the preparation of new teachers, for instance, with the latest reforms
demonstrating the difficulties of matching practical and professional skills
with theoretical knowledge. The objective was to maintain theoretical rigor
while emphasizing field-based practice, but what happened in reality was
the privileging of the latter at the expense of the former. Another
contradiction has therefore become manifest: schools are expected to
socialize students by conveying attitudes and values that will reduce
societal conflict, but teachers are deprived of the kind of broad intellectual
formation that ensures an understanding of the wider context.
It is only if and when teachers have the intellectual tools that enable
deeper theoretical reflection about society that they will be able to establish
clear objectives for their professional action. A three years diploma, one
less than other University degrees, is placing teacher training in a difficult
dilemma between requirements that are not always wholly compatible:
technical efficiency and educational quality in an ever increasingly
complex society.2002-01-01T00:00:00ZTeacher education in Malta : national agendas and the reform processSultana, Ronald G./library/oar/handle/123456789/376832018-12-22T02:49:33Z2002-01-01T00:00:00ZTitle: Teacher education in Malta : national agendas and the reform process
Authors: Sultana, Ronald G.
Abstract: This chapter sets out to provide a description of a process of reform that
was initiated at the Faculty of Education of the University of Malta. The
focus is on the process of reform, and on the strategies that were employed
in order to help teacher trainers (a) discover the strengths and weaknesses
of current pre-service teacher education programs; (b) to systematically
compare their practice with that obtaining in other countries; (c) to identify
trends in order to develop insights in addressing perceived problems; and
( e) to make recommendations regarding changes in structures and practices
that lead to an improvement in the institution's contribution to the national
educational enterprise. The reform process identified twelve key categories
around which discussions on teacher education reform could focus. Each of
these categories constituted the focus of a Working Group led by a Faculty
of Education coordinator, with members being co-opted from various
national bodies and organizations. Research-based position papers were
produced by each working group, with each paper being tabled at national
fora in order to generate debate about the form and direction of teacher
education.2002-01-01T00:00:00ZAlternative teacher certification in Turkey : problems and issuesYildirim, AliOk, Ahmet/library/oar/handle/123456789/376822018-12-22T02:49:59Z2002-01-01T00:00:00ZTitle: Alternative teacher certification in Turkey : problems and issues
Authors: Yildirim, Ali; Ok, Ahmet
Abstract: Certification provides teachers with a status that protects them against
unfair competition with unqualified teachers. At the same time certification
aims to protect children in schools from inadequately prepared teachers.
Certification requires a teacher to complete a specific coursework in major
subject area and in pedagogy, and an internship in schools. Alternative
certification mayor may not conform to these descriptions. Adelman
(1986) describes alternative teacher certification as a route that enrols
noncertified individuals with at least a bachelor's degree and offers a
special program leading to eligibility for a standard teaching certificate.
Roth (1989) refers to five characteristics of alternative certification
programs (ACPs): (a) They allow an individual to teach before completing
the preparation program, (b) they sometimes do not require an indi vidual to
complete the preparation to achieve certification, (c) they accept
nontraditional students, (d) they bypass traditional preparation programs
through accelerated programs, (e) they are established mostly by state
policy.
The form of ACPs varies greatly in terms of their priorities, students
they accept, courses they offer, the nature of collaboration with universities
and schools. For example, there are ACPs that accept students with an
undergraduate degree in a field other than education. Other programs give
priority to bring experienced professionals into teaching. Still others offer
individuals emergency certificates to put them in classroom right away
without any training, and provide them with on-site support or supervision
while taking pedagogical courses for full certification (Feistritzer, 1993). The purpose of ACPs may range from combating teacher shortage in
specific subject areas to proposing alternative programs supposedly to train
teachers better than regular teacher education programs. Some ACPs may
be linked to school reform efforts where traditional teacher education
programs (TEPs) are viewed as conservative in responding to the changing
conditions of restructured schools (Corbin, 1992). Some ACPs allow more
on-the-job training, such as mentoring and extensive classroom teaching
experience, and might thereby be favored by policy makers who believe in
the importance of experience in real settings.
Opponents of ACPs, mainly teacher educators, argue that these
programs intend to serve as a shortcut into teaching whereas proponents
believe that ACPs reduce the teacher shortage, stimulate professionals into
the teaching career, and prepare them through practice. Evaluation of the
quality and effectiveness of ACPs is quite complicated since they may not
be long-term and run regularly. Evaluation focusing on the content and
process may indicate that these programs do not provide sufficient number
of courses, credits and experience in comparison to regular TEPs. Such an
evaluation may only produce prediction on the performance of the
alternatively certified, and this may be insufficient to arrive at a judgment
about the quality of these programs (Feistritzer, 1999).
Several studies carried out on alternative route teachers (Grossman,
1989; Lenk, 1989; Mitchell, 1987, cited in Darling-Hammond, 1992)
found that these teachers have difficulty with curriculum development,
pedagogical content knowledge, attending to students' differing learning
styles and levels, classroom management and student motivation. In
addition they show more ignorance about students' needs and differences
and about teaching basics than teachers trained through regular TEPs.
Other studies (Barnes, Salmon & Wale, 1989; Dewalt & Ball, 1987, cited
in Miller et at., 1998) showed that ACP teachers are not necessarily
different from their counterparts trained through regular TEPs in the
teaching and learning process they create. So it appears that the present
research evidence on ACPs is inconclusive and somewhat contradictory,
owing to the differing nature of these programs in terms of purpose,
control, student selection, program content and process.
Alternative certification in Turkey also presents variance in terms of
emphasis, coursework and approaches, and its analysis is important in
understanding how alternative routes in teacher education have responded
to the demands brought by the changes in and critical needs of the society
since the foundation of the Republic.
Description: Includes Notes About Contributors2002-01-01T00:00:00ZTowards the improvement of practice teaching in Lebanon : educating today's teachers for the 21st centuryFathallah, Ihsan/library/oar/handle/123456789/376812018-12-22T02:49:32Z2002-01-01T00:00:00ZTitle: Towards the improvement of practice teaching in Lebanon : educating today's teachers for the 21st century
Authors: Fathallah, Ihsan
Abstract: Education as a social process is intimately connected with several other
features and aspects of life, with current events, with the heritage of the
past, and the aspirations of the people. In order to appreciate the present
practice teaching schemes in Lebanon and the views and experiences of
student teachers in this study, it is essential to provide an overview of the
socio-economic context, issues, and problems in which the drama of
education is played out.
The Lebanese Republic is a small country that lies on the eastern shore
of the Mediterranean Sea. The total area of the country is 10,452 square
kilometers (4,500 square miles) and its population is approximately four
million. The country's main sources of income are agriculture, light
industry, and tourism.
Though Lebanon is identified worldwide as an Arab country, yet it
is perceived by its people to have two distinct cultural heritages: ArabMoslem
and Western-Christian. This uniqueness has enabled the
Lebanese to establish a cordial relationship with both the East and the
West. Because of its strategic location, Mediterranean climate, and fertile
soil, Lebanon has been subjected to numerous invasions since the earliest
times by the Assyrians, Babylonian, Persians, Greeks/Macedonians,
Romans, Arabs, Christian Crusaders, Mamlukes, Ottoman Turks,
French, and the Israelis.2002-01-01T00:00:00Z