International Journal for Transformative Research (Sep 2014)

Developing Researcherly Dispositions in an Initial Teacher Education Context: Successes and Dilemmas

  • Roche Mary

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2478/ijtr-2014-0003
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 1
pp. 45 – 62

Abstract

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Douglas and Ellis (2011, p. 175) suggest that institutionally universities and schools are required to work with different conceptual tool-kits. Seeking to minimise the potential standoff between academic and practitioner knowledge, and, therefore, to enhance the learning of student teachers, means, they suggest, rethinking both the social relationships and the processes of abstracting knowledge from experience. Lingard and Renshaw (2010) advocate that all education practitioners, policy makers and teachers, should have a researcherly disposition, be interested in research and knowledge production and see themselves as participants in the field of educational research broadly defined.

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