Viv Ellis traces the development of three beginning teachers' thinking about their subject knowledge in the context of the teaching standards and the practice of 'auditing' student teachers' subject knowledge.Teachers' knowledge of the subjects they teach has been of enduring interest to governments, the profession and the wider society. In this book, Viv Ellis traces the development of three beginning teachers' thinking about their subject knowledge in the context of the teaching standards and the practice of 'auditing' student teachers' subject knowledge. Ellis puts forward a theory of subject knowledge development that moves on from the objectivist and individualistic epistemologies associated with standards and the practices of auditing to more a contextualist and sociocultural understanding of cognition and learning. An important implication of this study is that if teacher education wishes to have greater impact on the development of beginning teachers, teacher educators need to pay greater attention to the schools and subject departments in which these beginning teachers learn.
Viv Ellis traces the development of three beginning teachers' thinking about their subject knowledge in the context of the teaching standards and the practice of 'auditing' student teachers' subject knowledge.About the AuthorViv Ellis is Tutor for English Education and University Lecturer in Educational Studies at Oxford University. He has written widely on teacher education and has served as Vice-Chair of NATE.
Book InformationISBN 9780826419880
Author Professor Viv EllisFormat Paperback
Page Count 208
Imprint Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC