This book examines the significance of teacher expertise in the drive to improve quality and effectiveness. Scrutinising both key conceptual issues and current policy developments and approaches, the authors analyse educational systems from around the world and question how different cultural contexts and systems can implement measures to improve teacher effectiveness. The book analyses factors such as policy change and teacher evaluation as well as the regulation of the teaching profession to determine how these aspects can influence the expertise of individual teachers. As numerous policy interventions have tried to define and enhance teacher quality to raise pupil achievement, this book calls for an interrogation of this stance and signals a need to consider an alternative approach. This book will appeal to students and scholars of teacher effectiveness and professional learning, as well as researchers and policymakers.
Spis treści
Chapter 1. The Question of Teacher Quality.- Chapter 2. Issues of Teacher Expertise and Teacher Quality.- Chapter 3. Teachers and the Teaching Profession: Autonomy, Regulation and Expertise.- Chapter 4. Teachers’ Careers, Work Life and Expertise.- Chapter 5. Teacher Professional Learning: Building Expertise over a Teaching Career.- Chapter 6. Teacher Quality and Evaluation and the Development of Accomplished Practice.- Chapter 7. Recognising and Rewarding Teacher Expertise and Accomplished Teaching.- Chapter 8. Career-long Professional Learning, Professionalism and Expertise.- Chapter 9. Developing and Sustaining Teacher Expertise
O autorze
Christine Forde is Emeritus Professor at the University of Glasgow, UK. Her research interests centre around leadership and teaching development, as well as professional learning and equality in education.
Margery Mc Mahon is Professor of Educational Leadership at the University of Glasgow, UK. Her research interests focus on leadership development and career-long professional learning, and she has published widely on these topics.