Top Banner
Using workplace learning theory to understand novice teacher experience Steven Hodge and Lauri Grace
16

Using workplace learning theory to understand novice teacher experience Steven Hodge and Lauri Grace.

Apr 01, 2015

Download

Documents

Rayna Crutchley
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Using workplace learning theory to understand novice teacher experience Steven Hodge and Lauri Grace.

Using workplace learning theory to understand novice teacher experience

Steven Hodge and Lauri Grace

Page 2: Using workplace learning theory to understand novice teacher experience Steven Hodge and Lauri Grace.

Research on novice teacher experience

Influential constructs:• Transfer of knowledge (e.g. Robert Glaser)• Reflective practice (e.g. Donald Schön)• Enculturation (e.g. Sharon Feiman-Nemser)• Socialisation (e.g. Kenneth Zeichner)

Page 3: Using workplace learning theory to understand novice teacher experience Steven Hodge and Lauri Grace.

Workplace learning theory (take 1)

Paul Hager’s (2011) typology:• Influenced by psychological theories (e.g.

Schön 1983, Marsick & Watkins 1990)• Socio-cultural theories (e.g. Lave & Wenger

1991, Fuller & Unwin 2003)• Post-modern theories (e.g. Edwards & Nicoll

2004, Fenwick 2009)

Page 4: Using workplace learning theory to understand novice teacher experience Steven Hodge and Lauri Grace.

Teachers as workplace learners

Existing research:• Heather Hodkinson• Phil Hodkinson• Alison Fox, Elaine Wilson, Rosemary Deaney

Page 5: Using workplace learning theory to understand novice teacher experience Steven Hodge and Lauri Grace.

Workplace learning theory (take 2)

Stephen Billett• Doesn’t fit cleanly into Hager’s typology• Draws on socio-cultural concepts• Stresses subjectivity, self and personal agency

in workplace learning• Relational nature of workplace learning: the

social and the individual

Page 6: Using workplace learning theory to understand novice teacher experience Steven Hodge and Lauri Grace.

Conceptualisation of our project

Page 7: Using workplace learning theory to understand novice teacher experience Steven Hodge and Lauri Grace.

Conducting our project

• 15 participants drawn from a one-year pre-service program (Graduate Diploma)

• Interviewed in first term of graduate year• Interviewed in final term of graduate year:

• Their teaching work• Influences on their teaching• Influences on other teachers and school

Page 8: Using workplace learning theory to understand novice teacher experience Steven Hodge and Lauri Grace.

Findings 1

• Dual spheres of practice• Staffroom: ‘in the staffroom we’d talk about our

students’, ‘as teachers we’re always asking each other for help…leaning on each other’

• Classroom: ‘I am free to teach the way I want to in there’, ‘I don’t like a lot of the curriculum here…in the classroom I can pick and choose what I want to do’

Page 9: Using workplace learning theory to understand novice teacher experience Steven Hodge and Lauri Grace.

Findings 2

Resistance• In staffroom and other community contexts

novice teachers do not feel confident about criticising practices (‘I’ve decided to lay low this year’)

• In classroom, participants are selective about how they interact with restrictions (‘I can pick and choose’)

Page 10: Using workplace learning theory to understand novice teacher experience Steven Hodge and Lauri Grace.

Findings 3

Convergence vs. divergence of spheres of practice:• Convergence: residential and remote schools,

expansive environments, particular curriculum models, time

• Divergence: Casual teaching, specialist teaching, larger schools, school architecture

Page 11: Using workplace learning theory to understand novice teacher experience Steven Hodge and Lauri Grace.

Findings 4

Strongest influences on personal practice:• Their own experiences as a school student• Selected teachers in the workplace• Their students, through formal feedback,

informal discussion and observation of responses to teaching practice

Page 12: Using workplace learning theory to understand novice teacher experience Steven Hodge and Lauri Grace.

Findings 5

Strongest influence on collaborative practice• Informal groupings and events• Difficult students and classes• Amount of time spent together

Page 13: Using workplace learning theory to understand novice teacher experience Steven Hodge and Lauri Grace.

Findings 6

Role of pre-service education:• Most participants said the program hasn’t

influenced their teaching (‘I can’t remember that course anymore’) or they are not clear how (‘I’m sure [the program] formed more of a basis than I realise’)

• Graduates with previous teaching experience valued the program highly

Page 14: Using workplace learning theory to understand novice teacher experience Steven Hodge and Lauri Grace.

Where to next?

Explore the role of students in teacher workplace learning• Students were consistently identified as a

source of workplace learning• Students were identified as one way novice

teachers learnt about other teachers’ practices and the main way their own teaching was revealed to other teachers

Page 15: Using workplace learning theory to understand novice teacher experience Steven Hodge and Lauri Grace.

Where to next?

Explore relationships between personal and collaborative practices over time• Participants consistently represented

established teachers as sharing a common practice and themselves as doing something unique

Page 16: Using workplace learning theory to understand novice teacher experience Steven Hodge and Lauri Grace.

Questions? Suggestions?