Problematic ideologies in teacher education
A critical problem facing educationiuls is the problematic quality of many teacher training courses. Vie major source o f the problem seems to be the irrational ideological foundations on which these courses are often based. The research theme revolves around a particular type of problematic ideolog...
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Series: | Koers : Bulletin for Christian Scholarship |
Online Access: | https://www.koersjournal.org.za/index.php/koers/article/view/743 |
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doaj-49caca385c4e4519b9cd2c4672382cb12020-11-25T01:53:20ZafrScriber Editorial SystemsKoers : Bulletin for Christian Scholarship0023-270X2304-85571991-01-0156210.4102/koers.v56i2.743Problematic ideologies in teacher educationMonica Jacobs0Department of General Didactics University of Durban-Westville DURBANA critical problem facing educationiuls is the problematic quality of many teacher training courses. Vie major source o f the problem seems to be the irrational ideological foundations on which these courses are often based. The research theme revolves around a particular type of problematic ideology, viz. lecturing course teams in teacher training whose members refuse to adopt an integrated, muiually-compatible approach when teaching students how to teach. Such course teams in.s'ist on transferring contradictory, subjective views o f teaching to student teachers. It is estimated that a high percentage of students annually qualifying as teachers in South Africa are, from a professional point of view, incompetent to teach. The argument is outlined in three parts: statement of problem, theoretical argimients being forwarded to justify problematic ideologies, and possible solutions. Bearing in mind the far-reaching implications f the situation, the solution could be to appoint a prescriptive controlling body/inspect orate whose members' main task would be to raise teacher training standards in South Africa. Experience in more developed countries suggests that such a controlling body would only function effectively if composed of representatives from other social sciences, schools, future employers (of pupils), educationists, and the government.https://www.koersjournal.org.za/index.php/koers/article/view/743 |
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DOAJ |
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Afrikaans |
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Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Monica Jacobs |
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Monica Jacobs Problematic ideologies in teacher education Koers : Bulletin for Christian Scholarship |
author_facet |
Monica Jacobs |
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Monica Jacobs |
title |
Problematic ideologies in teacher education |
title_short |
Problematic ideologies in teacher education |
title_full |
Problematic ideologies in teacher education |
title_fullStr |
Problematic ideologies in teacher education |
title_full_unstemmed |
Problematic ideologies in teacher education |
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problematic ideologies in teacher education |
publisher |
Scriber Editorial Systems |
series |
Koers : Bulletin for Christian Scholarship |
issn |
0023-270X 2304-8557 |
publishDate |
1991-01-01 |
description |
A critical problem facing educationiuls is the problematic quality of many teacher training courses. Vie major source o f the problem seems to be the irrational ideological foundations on which these courses are often based. The research theme revolves around a particular type of problematic ideology, viz. lecturing course teams in teacher training whose members refuse to adopt an integrated, muiually-compatible approach when teaching students how to teach. Such course teams in.s'ist on transferring contradictory, subjective views o f teaching to student teachers. It is estimated that a high percentage of students annually qualifying as teachers in South Africa are, from a professional point of view, incompetent to teach. The argument is outlined in three parts: statement of problem, theoretical argimients being forwarded to justify problematic ideologies, and possible solutions. Bearing in mind the far-reaching implications f the situation, the solution could be to appoint a prescriptive controlling body/inspect orate whose members' main task would be to raise teacher training standards in South Africa. Experience in more developed countries suggests that such a controlling body would only function effectively if composed of representatives from other social sciences, schools, future employers (of pupils), educationists, and the government. |
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https://www.koersjournal.org.za/index.php/koers/article/view/743 |
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