Personalized and inquiry‐oriented teacher education: an analysis of two approaches to the development of curriculum for field‐based experiences
- 1 May 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Education for Teaching
- Vol. 8 (2) , 95-117
- https://doi.org/10.1080/0260747820080201
Abstract
This paper analyzes two strategies for the development of curriculum for field‐based experiences in pre‐service teacher education: ‘personalized’ and ‘inquiry‐oriented’. It is argued that, given the self and survival concerns of many student teachers and the role that schools now seem to play in the perpetuation of social and economic inequalities in the USA, a personalized approach to field‐based experiences is misguided. An inquiry‐oriented approach to student teaching is presented and defended on the grounds that it is ethically more justifiable than a personalized approach. Finally, an inquiry‐oriented approach to student teaching is illustrated by examples from the elementary teacher‐education program at the University of Wisconsin.This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- THEORY and practice: methodological procedures for the objectification of craft knowledge∗ †British Journal of Teacher Education, 1979
- What Correspondence Theories of the Hidden Curriculum MissThe Review of Education, 1979
- Technique and Inquiry in Teacher Education: A Curricular Case StudyCurriculum Inquiry, 1979
- Ideology and CurriculumPublished by Taylor & Francis ,1979
- The effect of school practice: the development of student perspectivesBritish Journal of Teacher Education, 1976
- The Teacher as an InquirerThe Educational Forum, 1975
- Some prior questions in the reform of teacher educationInterchange, 1973
- Concerns of Teachers: A Developmental ConceptualizationAmerican Educational Research Journal, 1969
- Student teaching: A transitional stage in the making of a teacherTheory Into Practice, 1963
- Docility, or Giving Teacher What She WantsJournal of Social Issues, 1955