Learning to Think Like A Teacher Educator: Making The Substantive and Syntactic Structures of Teaching Explicit through Self-Study

From Section:
Teacher Educators
Published:
Apr. 30, 2009

Source: Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, Volume 15, Issue 2 (April 2009) , pages 291 – 304

The construction of a pedagogy of teacher education requires a sustained, systematic, and careful inquiry into one's own practice, predicated on the understanding that teaching is a discipline. This article begins by arguing that it is more appropriate to speak of a basis for knowing, rather than a knowledge base, for thinking about teaching and learning. Furthermore, the article also argues that self-study methodology is one way for a new teacher educator to develop his or her basis for knowing about teaching teachers. Excerpts from self-studies that the author has conducted during his first three years as a preservice teacher educator are described and interpreted with a view to examining the substantive and syntactic structures of the discipline of teaching and the influences of my prior experiences as a teacher candidate.
The article concludes with a set of personal understandings that the author has constructed as a new teacher educator.
Self-study methodology is offered as a way for teachers and teacher educators to make their knowledge about teaching and learning explicit by naming and analyzing both the substantive and syntactic structures of the discipline of teaching.


Updated: Jan. 17, 2017
Keywords:
Self-study | Teacher educators | Teaching | Teaching and learning | Teaching as a discipline