Article

Eliciting student teacher's views on educational research to support practice in the modern diverse classroom: a workshop approach

Details

Citation

McCartney E, Marwick H, Hendry G & Ferguson EC (2018) Eliciting student teacher's views on educational research to support practice in the modern diverse classroom: a workshop approach. Higher Education Pedagogies, 3 (1), pp. 342-372. https://doi.org/10.1080/23752696.2018.1498748

Abstract
Teachers’ professionalism includes using educational research to support their work in the modern diverse classroom. Student teachers’ views as they enter the profession are therefore important. Within a Higher Education Academy social science priority research strand, ‘Supporting research-informed teacher education in a changing policy environment’, this study developed workshops to ascertain student teachers’ views on educational research, preparing materials suitable for primary and secondary sectors. These could be updated, and used by other higher education courses. Face-to-face or email workshops asked participants about their current uses of educational research, and to read and comment upon one policy research extract and one ‘what works’ research review. Small-scale piloting suggested the workshops readily elicited views, and students identified some personal changes following participation. Participants were generally unfamiliar with the principles of ‘what works’ research. Thematic analysis suggested students considered educational research was often inaccessible, but wanted accessible research to inform their practice.

Keywords
Teacher education; student views; educational research; diversity;

Journal
Higher Education Pedagogies: Volume 3, Issue 1

StatusPublished
FundersHigher Education Academy
Publication date31/12/2018
Publication date online13/09/2018
Date accepted by journal06/07/2018
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/27775
eISSN2375-2696

People (1)

People

Professor Elspeth McCartney

Professor Elspeth McCartney

Honorary Professor, Faculty of Social Sciences