- Acknowledgement & About
- Chapter 1 Professional Learning Communities
- Chapter 2 The State of Teacher Education
- Chapter 3 Learning to Teach
- Chapter 4 Learner Centered Education
- Chapter 5 Curriculum
- Chapter 6 College Teaching and Learning
- Chapter 7 Expanding Assessment Practices
- Chapter 8 Reflective Practice
Introduction: A Resource For Teacher Educators
With the introduction of free primary education throughout Africa over the past 20 years, the
demand for more qualified teachers has grown tremendously (Nilsson, 2003). Mainstream
teacher education programs, typically consisting of 1-3 years of residence in teachers'
colleges and some form of practice teaching, are unable to meet this escalation in demand.
Given this, many countries have resorted to alternative models of teacher education to
supply the needed teachers in a short period of time (Global Campaign for Education,
2006; Lynd, 2005; Moon, 2007). A number of hybrid programs have also emerged to
deal with this increased demand for more teachers. With myriad approaches to teacher
education and recruitment in place simultaneously, the quality of most teacher education
programs has declined, resulting in calls for increased attention to quality (Carnoy, 2007).
Isolation of teacher educators is not conducive to the development of teacher colleges as high quality professional institutions. Professional Learning Communities in the Teachers' College, responds to this need for collective reflection. In Professional Learning Communities we take the perspective that teacher educators can transform their practice through 1) updating their knowledge on salient educational issues for teacher education, 2) engaging in critical dialogue about those issues in relation to their personal beliefs and the local context and 3) developing a reflective approach to their practice. The content of all the chapters is aligned with these purposes. The main body of each chapter consists of the main theoretical ideas underlying reforms in education. This is followed by proposed seminars that prompt the participating teacher educators to carefully examine their own system of teacher education and reflect on the possible ways of removing impediments to reform. Given the central importance of the idea of professional learning communities, the first chapter is devoted to surveying this idea. While the rest of the themes in the remaining chapters will vary, the authors hope that seminars at the end of each chapter will be part of a general effort to form professional learning communities.