Pre-service
Training
In-service
Training
Professional
Organizations
Online
Teacher Networks
Pre-service Teacher Education
·
All
stages of education and training that precede the teacher’s entry to
his/her employment in a school or in an educational institution.
Students who complete a bachelor's
degree before returning to a university to complete the pre-service education
programme are in a consecutive pre-service
programme, while students who complete their pre-service training at the same
time as their undergraduate degree are in a concurrent programme.
Theoretical Background
The
practical nature of pre-service education training programmes aligns with
American philosopher John Dewey’s theory of experience. In his book “Experience
and Education” Dewey
prescribes that learning must be based upon the actual life experiences of an
individual that are interactive, experimental, and purposive in nature.
Donald Schon expanded upon Dewey’s model by focusing further upon
the importance of reflective practice in the learning process. Schon
was a proponent of using reflection in teacher education and other professions
to guide learning through reflection on past experiences to guide future learning
and practice.
Major focus in the pre-service education programme-
·
The
pre-service teacher is placed within a school setting (either elementary, or
secondary)
·
The
pre-service teacher will be given opportunities to develop skills through
observing their associate teacher (teacher educator), creating lesson plans,
teaching lessons and experiential learning about classroom management.
·
Pre-service
programmes offer academic based courses, designed to expose teacher candidates
to collaborative inquiry, current research, educational philosophy, theory,
pedagogy and practical resources to provide a foundation for their work as
educators. This, combined with the experience gained through the practical
teaching, prepare the next generation of teachers for the challenges of the
classroom.
Pre- service Training in India,
Historical Background
The significance of
teacher education has been stressed by successive commissions and committees
appointed by the Govt. of India from time to time. Isolation of training
institutions for primary and secondary teachers from the mainstream of academic
life of the universities was identified as a crucial problem. It was
recommended to distinguish education from pedagogy and to recognize it as a
social science or as an independent academic discipline.
Recommendations to
improve the quality of Teacher Education
§ Re-orientation
of subject knowledge
§ Vitalization
of professional studies
§ Improvement
in methods of teaching and evaluation
§ Development
of special courses and programmes
§ Revision
of curricula
2.2 In-service Teacher Education
The
definition of in-service is something that happens while someone is a full-time
employee. In-service training is a process and a part of continuing education that
helps the teachers to gain greater insight into teaching. In this training
teachers become involved in order to broaden their knowledge, improve their
skills and attitudes.
It is
essential for bridging the gap in pre-service education and for meeting the
demands of the changing world.
Objectives
1. To remove the inadequacies of
pre-service education.
2. To acquaint teachers with new
international experiments in education
3. To make them aware of the new
developments in the educational field
4. To motivate teachers and promote the
spirit of inquiry and help to be a reflective teacher
5. To renew knowledge, maintain and
enhance efficiency
6. To upgrade pedagogical skills
In-service Courses
a) Refresher
courses
b) Summer
courses
c) Orientation
programmes
d) Workshops,
seminars, symposia, panel discussions, conferences etc.
e) Study
visits, exchange programmes, project works, media based distance education
Agencies involved in In-service
Education
UGC, SCERT, NCERT, DIET, Council for
Teacher Education, NGOs, etc.
1. Programme
of Mass Orientation of School Teachers (PMOST)
Implemented
by NCERT in collaboration with various SCERT s, in 1986-90.
2. Special
Orientation Programme for Primary Teachers (SOPT)
3. District
Primary Education Programme (DPEP)
4. Sarva
Siksha Abhiyan (SSA) initiated in 2000. (20 days in-service programme to each
teacher in a year on different programmes like pedagogy monitoring, evaluation,
etc. 10% of total number of working days of an academic session should be spent
in training of teachers for their professional development.)
5. SRGs
(State Resource Group) and DRGs
(District Resource Group) and BRCs (Block Resource Centre) were
established to develop training packages and plan to cover the whole state.
6. 30
days of induction training for freshly recruited teachers
7. 60
days training for untrained teachers
Agencies
of Teacher Education.
(a) National Level
University Grant Commission
National Council of Education Research
and Training (NCERT)
National Council for Teacher Education
(NCTE)
India Council of Social Science and
Research
Tata Institute of Social Science and
Research
Centre of Advanced Studies in Educator
(MSU)
(b) State Level
State Institutes of Education
State Councils of Educational Research
and Training (SCERT)
Centres of Continuing Education
Teachers
State Boards of Teacher Education
University Department of Education
2.3 Online Teacher
Networks
Online communities are transforming
professional development for teachers.
From
blogging and Twitter to online networks, the evolution of professional
development and interactions for teachers in the social media age takes place
drastically.
Merits
1.
Helps to save from professional isolation. Especially in schools where teachers
have find themselves in schools where innovation can be a dirty word, where any
attempt to change is met with resistance, and even ridicule. In this
environment, some teachers can eventually lose some of their motivation and
willingness.
2.
A whole new world of professional dialogue is open. Stimulating and challenging
conversations with teachers from around the world is possible.
3.
Huge amount of professional support is provided.
4.
Gets chance to communicate the nuances of the development
5. Provides a sort of positive environment
6. It is a platform to blend conventional wisdom with
emerging technologies
7. Helps for the mobilization of available resources
relevant in the contemporary context
Websites provide discussion forums. There
are now other examples of sites providing a community approach, including the
Guardian Teacher Network. These positively oriented online communities provide
the genuine potential to affect real and meaningful change in classrooms. In
order to learn from each other, one need to share and be prepared to be
positively questioned and challenged by others in the community. It's through
this rich form of interaction that successfully innovative real-world staff
rooms are achieved.
Online networks can provide us with
the opportunity to interact with broader group professionals, if converted into
communities.
Examples of Teacher Networks
(international)
§ The
Guardian
§ European
Schoolnet
§ An
On-Line Journal for Teacher Research
o
Networks offers a place for sharing
reports of action research, in which teachers at all levels, kindergarten to
postgraduate, are reflecting on classroom practice. Published online by the
University of Wisconsin Digital Collections Center
§ New
Teachers Online
o
Teachers Network seeks to improve student
learning by helping teachers integrate web-based lessons into their
instructional practice. Helps to Browse free lesson plans, Resources &
Videos for Teachers, Educators etc.
§ NEA
- Online Social Networking for Educators
§ ETEN-
European Teacher Education Network.
§ The
National Teachers Enhancement Network (NTEN) offers online, graduate-level
science courses from a world-class public research university. NTEN was one of
the first online professional development programmes of Extended University at
Montana State University and was created with funding from the National Science
Foundation.
2.3
TEACHER ORGANIZATIONS or professional organizations for teachers
A professional association (also
called a professional body, professional organization, or professional society) is usually
a nonprofit
organization seeking
to further a particular profession, the interests of individuals engaged in that profession
and the public interest.
·
A
group of people in a learned occupation who are entrusted with maintaining
control or oversight of the legitimate practice of the occupation.
·
A
body acting to safeguard the public interest.
·
Organizations
which represent the interest of the professional practitioners that act to
maintain their own privileged and powerful position as a controlling body.
Many
professional bodies are involved in the development and monitoring of
professional educational programmes, and the updating of skills. Many
professional bodies also act as learned societies for the academic disciplines underlying their profession.
In
order to overcome the problems faced in the professional life and to enhance
the status, the teachers assemble at a common platform and conceive a formal
association named as the teachers’ organization.
Teachers’ organizations are
voluntary organizations. To promote effective learning and enable teachers to
concentrate on their tasks, congenial working conditions, professional
organization of teachers could play a critical role.
Academically Oriented Teachers Organizations
Ø Primarily
concerned with curriculum improvement, leadership development, research and
publication of materials needed by specialists in the field.
Objectives
1.
To obtain associations of teachers into relations of mutual assistances and
cooperation.
2.
To obtain for them all the rights to which they are entitled.
3.
To raise the standards of teaching profession by securing the conditions
essential to the best professional service.
4.
To promote the welfare of the children of the nation by providing progressively
better educational opportunity.
5.
To promote such a democratization of the schools as well enable them better to
equip their pupils to take their places in the industrial, social and political
life of the community.
6.
To fight all forms of racism in education.
§ Role
of teacher organization towards teacher accountability is a new emphasis on
learning
§ The
professional teacher organizations make provision of resource teachers,
equipment and adequate space.
§ Guidance
services for students
The ill effects of unscientific view
leads to lots of problems like decreased interest and concentration in studies
and co-curricular activities, examination phobia, anxiety, panic and extremely
depressed reactions. The professional teacher organizations will have to work
globally to search for a technique of guidance.
Teacher
Associations in India
1. Indian
Association of Teachers of Library and Information Science (IATLIS)- professional
organization to further the cause of library education in India.
2. English
Language Teachers' Association of India (ELTAI), Chennai, India.
3. Association
of Mathematics Teachers of India
4. National
Science Teachers Association
5. NABT
National Association of Biology Teachers