Lifelong Learning for Teachers
Teaching is often described as one of the noblest of all professions. What is less often acknowledged is how difficult a profession it is. Part of this difficulty arises from the fact that the standards by which teachers are judged shift from year to year. These standards, while purporting to arise from concern for providing the nation's children with the best possible education, are in fact often more reflective of political changes in concept about pedagogy. In the scenery of shifting political winds and the true complexity about what constitutes the most effective ways of teaching, it is difficult for teachers to make the most informed decisions about how to engage in lifelong learning activities that will truly benefit their students as well as helping them pursue their own personal career goals. This paper examines some of the key issues in this complex topic.
Shain has written some of the most trenchant analysis of this topic, noting that the ways in which teachers are judged, and the larger issue of the ways in which the idea of professionalism within the teaching sector is defined to begin with, are affected by politics and overall shifts in society that reflect evolving ideas about the relative importance and responsibility of the state and private interests:
This analysis reveals that 'public sector' notions of teacher professionalism committed to notions of service to community and teacher autonomy are challenged by market liberal reform committed to privatisation and deregulation in ways that suggest deprofessionalisation proceeds alongside reprofessionalisation as part of an ongoing politics of knowledge, power and social organisation. Seddon encourages researchers to consider the character and parameters of preferred reprofessionalisations that might be pursued through contemporary processes of educational change. (Shain, n.d.)
Shain argues...
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