1st Edition

Learning Teaching Becoming an inspirational teacher

By Pete Boyd, Barry Hymer, Karen Lockney Copyright 2015
160 Pages
by Routledge

160 Pages
by Routledge

This essential and aspirational text is aimed at all beginning teachers whatever your training route, age phase and setting. It explicitly adopts and builds on a new metaphor for teachers' professional learning as interplay between the body of public knowledge and the practical wisdom of teachers within a particular school setting. It also accepts that 'telling' you how to teach is ineffective;... Read more

Chapter 1 Practical wisdom and public knowledge

Chapter 2 Belief versus ability 

Chapter 3 Autonomy versus compliance 

Chapter 4 Abstract versus concrete 

Chapter 5 Feedback versus praise

Chapter 6 Collaboration versus competition 120

Chapter 7 Epilogue: getting it all together

Biography

Pete Boyd is a Reader in Professional Learning at the University of Cumbria. Pete teaches and supervises experienced school teachers on the MA in Education and supports teachers and lecturers in their educational practitioner research.

Barry Hymeris Professor of Psychology in Education at the University of Cumbria. He works as an educational consultant with experienced teachers in their schools as well as teaching and supervising teachers and lecturers in their educational practitioner research.

Karen Lockney is a senior lecturer at the University of Cumbria teaching on the Working with Children and Families degree programme, and supervising doctoral students in Education. 

I have been really impressed with the structure, especially the classroom scenario and the critical thinking which it invites the students to engage in. It is very accessible and has all the recent theorists which the students are already familiar with. The chapter headings emphasise the criticality which permeates the whole text....  Thank you for a book which will be a real inspiration and guide for our 'becoming teachers'. - Lynne Bhania, University of Hertfordshire

It is highly readable first and foremost. While it is clearly academic in foundation, concepts are clearly explained and examples are used to clarify meaning. I also find the emphasis on a constructivist approach fits in with many of the messages that we give to our students. Finally, I like the way that the book clearly presents an argument for trainees to develop a mindset - it is not just about abstract learning theory, or practical example, it goes further by outlining the importance of a teacher's personal philosophy (and mindset) within their approach to teaching. In summary, it is the best all in one guide to teaching that I have read in my short career as a teacher educator and in my longer career as a secondary teacher. - Sam Nelson, Trinity St David

This will be a valuable resource for any beginning teacher, practitioners in the NQT year and for any teacher wishing to rethink their role as an inspirational and research informed teacher.  The text provides opportunities to hear and analyse stories and relate these to our own experiences as teachers with a relentless focus on learning - emphasising a long term approach rather than quick fix strategies. - Wendy Cobb, Canterbury Christchurch