Reviewing initial teacher education

Some responses to the "Initial teacher training market review"

A 'market' review

Image by Pexels from Pixabay

The UK Government's Department for Education (responsible for the school system in England) is currently undertaking what it called a 'market review' of initial teacher education (ITE) or initial teacher 'training' as it prefers to describe ite. (Arguably, 'education' suggests broad professional preparation for someone who will need to make informed decisions in complex situations, whereas 'training' implies learning the skills needed for a craft.)

The aims of the review are certainly unobjectionable:

The review has aimed to make well informed, evidence-based recommendations on how to make sure:

• all trainees receive high-quality training
• the ITT market maintains the capacity to deliver enough trainees and is accessible to candidates
• the ITT system benefits all schools1

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/initial-teacher-training-itt-market-review/initial-teacher-training-itt-market-review-overview

Despite such intentions clearly being laudable, the actual proposals (which, inter alia, can be seen as looking to further increase central government control over the professional preparation of teachers) raised concerns among many of those actually involved in teacher education.

The consultation

There was a public consultation to which all interested were invited to respond. Since the consultation closed, the Secretary of State (i.e., senior minister) for Education has changed, so we await to see whether this will derail the review.

The review is wide ranging, but there is a widespread view that once again government is seeking to reduce the influence of academic education experts (see for example, 'Valuing the gold standard in teacher education'), and my colleagues still working in university-school based ITE partnerships certainly felt that if all the proposals were brought to fruition such partnership would be at risk. Not that Universities would not be able to contribute, but they would not be able to do so in a way that allowed full quality control and proper planning and sustainable commitment.

My own University, Cambridge, has suggested

We cannot, in all conscience, envisage our continuing involvement with ITT should the proposals be implemented in their current format.

Government ITT market review consultation, Faculty of Education website

Some discussion on one teachers' email list I subscribe to, provoked me me decide to look back at my own consultation responses.

A selective response – and a generic default hole-filler

I have not worked in I.T.E. for some years, and so did not feel qualified to comment on all aspects of the review. However, there were some aspects of the plans (or at least my interpretation of what  was intended) that I felt would put at risk some of the strongest and most important aspects of high quality teacher preparation.

As being able to submit a response to the consultation required providing a response at every section (a cynic might suggest that expecting full completion of such a long consultation document is a disincentive for most people to contribute), I used a generic statement to cover those questions where I  did not feel I had anything informed and useful to say:

I am aware of concerns raised in responses by the Russell group of Universities, the University of Cambridge (of which I am an emeritus officer), and Homerton College, Cambridge (of which I am a senior member). I concur with these concerns, and rather than seek to reproduce or mirror all of their comments (already available to you), I refer you to those responses. Further, I am offering some specific comments on particular issues where I have strong concerns based on my past experiences as a PGCE student teacher; as a teacher in comprehensive secondary schools; as a school/college-based mentor supporting graduates preparing for teaching in schools and also in a further education context; as a researcher exploring aspects of student learning and the teaching that supports it; as a lecturer and supervisor on initial teacher education courses as part of University-School training partnerships; as a supervisor for teachers in post undertaking school-based research; as an advisor to schools undertaking context-directed research; and as a lecturer teaching graduates how to undertake research into educational contexts.

Here are my more specific responses highlighting my particular concerns:

Individual differences

Having worked in initial teacher education as well as having been a school teacher, I am well aware that one of the most important things anyone working in the education sector has to appreciate is individual differences – between pupils, between teachers, between classes, between schools, and between new-entrants. Too much focus on uniformity is therefore unwelcome and likely to reduce the quality of the highest provision which takes this into diversity into account, Similarly, genuinely 'rigorous' sequencing of the educational experience will be responsive to individual needs and that would be welcome. However, uniform and inflexible sequencing, which would be far from rigorous, would be damaging.

Being equipped to engage with research

I am aware that the diversity in routes for new entrants now available has reduced the quality of training experience available to some new teachers. In particular, the fully professional teacher has to be a critical reader of research, and to have the tools and confidence to undertake their own small-scale context based enquiry to develop their own practice.

Table 1 from Taber, 2010

This is essential because the research shows clearly that whilst it is sometimes possible to identify some features of best practice that generalise across most teaching contexts, this is by no means always the case. Teaching and learning are highly complex phenomena and are strongly influenced by contextual factors. So, what has been found to 'normally' work best will not be the best approach in all teaching contexts. Teachers needs to be able to read research claims critically

(there are always provisos

  • most studies are small-scale where strict generalisation is simply not possible,
  • few studies are sufficiently supported with the resources to test ideas across a wide range of contexts; and
  • experimental studies which are the gold standard in the natural sciences are usually problematic in education
    • as randomisation {a critical aspect of true experimental research} is seldom possible, and
    • there is seldom the information or means to characterise populations sufficiently to build representative samples;
    • moreover the complexity of educational contexts does not allow the identification (let alone control) of all relevant variable, and
    • there are some key known factors which influence results when double-blind methods are not viable
      • – a situation that is very common when testing innovations in educational practices as teachers and learners are usually well aware of deviations from normal practice)

and identify the most promising recommendations when taking into account their own teaching context (i.e., what is referred to as reader or naturalistic generalisation) and test out ideas in their own classrooms, and iteratively develop their own practice.

Sadly, whilst the M-level PGCE type programmes usually support new teachers in introducing these skills, this does not seem to necessarily be the case on some other routes.

On 'intensive' practice placements

I consider this is a misguided notion based on a flawed conceptualisation of teaching and teacher skills. It is certainly the case that generally speaking teachers develop their skills over time with greater teaching experience, and that all other things being equal, the more direct teaching experience a new entrant has during the period of initial teacher education the better, as long as this is productive experience.

However, teaching is a highly complex activity that requires making myriad in the moment decisions in response to interactions with unique classes of unique people. The quality of those decisions tends to increase over time with experience, but only if the teacher is well prepared for the teaching in terms of subject knowledge, general and specialist pedagogic knowledge, and knowledge of the particular learners.

This requires that the teacher has extensive preparation time especially when new to teaching a topic, age, group or pedagogic approach, and opportunities for productive debrief and reflection. Given the intensity of teaching as an experience, it is much better for new entrants to initially focus on parts of lessons with plenty of opportunity for preparation and reflection than to too quickly progress to whole lessons where much of the experience will not be fully processed before moving on. Similarly, it is better that new teachers have sufficient time between classes to focus intensely on those classes rather than be moving directly from class to class.

In the same way, the programmes that allow regular movements between the teaching context and an HEI or similar context offer an ideal context for effective learning. The intense focus on the school is broken up by time in faculty (still focused, but as a student without the intense scrutiny in school), where there are extensive opportunities for peer support (especially important given the extreme highs and lows often experienced by new teachers).

Partnerships of Universities with Schools offer new entrants complementary expertise, and opportunities for 'iteration' – moving between the 'graduate student' and 'teaching department member' contexts 2 (Figure 1 from Taber, 2017)

This is also critical for developing teaching that is informed by research-informed and evidence-based theories and constructs. Being taught 'theory' in an academic context, and expecting such content to be automatically applied in a teaching context is unrealistic – rather the new teacher has to learn to conceptualise actual classroom experience in terms of the theory, and to see how to apply the theory in terms of actual teaching experience. 2

This learning is best supported by an iterative process – where there are plenty of opportunities to reflect on and analyse experience, and compare and discuss experiences with peers, as well as with mentors, other experienced teachers, and with academic staff. Over time, as new teachers build experiences, especially ones they recognise as productive and successful, they will come to automatically apply ideas and skills and techniques, and will be able to 'chunk' component teaching moves into longer sequences – being able to work effectively for sequences of whole classes, with less reflection time, and less explicit support. 3

The aim is for the new teachers to be able to prepare, teach, assess, on something approaching a teaching timetable whilst working in school full-time. However, efforts to move to such a state too quickly will [be counter-productive] for many potentially excellent teachers, and will likely increase drop-out rates.

Ultimately, the quality of the teaching experience, and the ability to manage increasing workload according to individual needs, is what is important. Any attempts to increase the intensity of the teaching placements, or to accelerate the rate at which new teachers take on responsibility without recourse to individual circumstances is likely to be counterproductive in terms of retention, and the quality of the 'training' experience in supporting the development of excellent teachers.

I am very pleased that I would not be 'training' nor still working in teacher education under such expectations as I think the incidents of crises, mental health issues, and drop-out, would be likely to increase.

On common timetables for progress

As suggested above, any attempt to tightly quantify these things would be misplaced as it removes the ability of providers to manage the process to seek the best outcomes for individual trainees, and it ignores the responsibilities of teachers and schools to ensure that trainees are only given responsibilities as and when they are ready.

Please remember that every class taught by a trainee contains children or young people who are required to be in school and are entitled to be taught by someone who

  • is prepared for class,
  • confident they are ready to teach that class, and
  • is not under such intense stress that they cannot perform to their potential.

You have a responsibility to consider the pupils as well as to your 'market'.

On applying research evidence

A postgraduate award is meant to include a strong research component. As suggested in earlier comments, it is essential for the fully professional teacher who will need to make informed decisions about her own classroom practice to be be provided with the skills to access research (including understanding strengths and weaknesses of methodology), critique it, evaluate its potential relevance to the immediate teaching and learning contexts, and to evaluate it in the context. Many PGCE-MEd and PGCE-MA programmes already support this.

I totally agree that this should be provided to all new trainees, and would have thought there are enough HEIs with expertise in educational research for this to be possible (as it is on the PGCE-M route already). However, it is not enough to simply provide teachers the skills, they also have to have

  • access to research publications,
  • time to
    • read them and
    • undertake small-scale context-directed enquiry, and
    • to give them the confidence that this aspect of professional practice is recognised and appreciated.

For example, a teacher has to know that if they are doing something differently to some government advice because they have looked at the research, considered it in relation to their specific context, and evaluated approaches in their own teaching context and concluded that for a particular class/course/students some approach other than that generally recommended is indicated, THEN this would be recognised (e.g., in Inspections) as praiseworthy.

On 'incentives that could encourage schools and trusts to participate in ITT'

I would think it is dangerous and perhaps foolish to add to schools' expected responsibilities where they do not welcome this.

On proposed reforms on the recruitment and selection process

To me, this seems to complicate matters for a PGCE applicant who at the moment has to only select a university-schools partnership.

Potential equality impacts

As discussed above, in my experience current arrangements, at least for the PGCE route, offer flexibility to meet the individual needs of a range of new entrants. My sense is the proposals would be unhelpful in this regard.

Comments on 'any aspect'

I was lucky enough to undertake my PGCE at a university that at the time was recognised as one with excellent provision in my teaching subjects (chemistry and physics, at Nottingham Trent). At that time the structure of the teaching placement (two isolated blocks, one of 4 weeks, one of 8 weeks) did not allow the kind of incredibly valuable iterative experience of moving between the university and school contexts I discuss above, and the teachers in the schools did not act as mentors, but merely handed over their classes for a period of time.

Otherwise I was very happy with my 'training' experience.

I was also privileged to work for about 10 years in initial teacher education in a PGCE university-schools partnership that has consistently been awarded the very top inspection grades across categories. I have therefore seen much excellent initial teacher education practice in a stable partnership with many committed (if diverse) schools. We were also able to be pretty selective in recruitment, so were working with incredibly keen and committed new teachers.

If (some) university-schools partnerships (such as that based at the University of Cambridge) are recognised as excellent, why change the system in ways that threaten those providers?

Despite this, I know some of our excellent new recruits went through serious periods of doubt and crises in their teaching due to the intense and highly skilled nature of the work. In the context where I was lucky enough to work, the structure of the training year and the responsive and interactive nature of managing the graduates in their work meant that nearly always these setbacks were temporary, and so could be overcome.

I am concerned that some of this good practice may not continue if some of the proposals in the review are carried through – and that consequently a significant number of potentially excellent new teachers will not get the support they need to develop at the pace that best matches their needs. This will lead to drop-out, and early burn-out – or potentially candidates doing enough to cope, without meeting the high standards they wish to set for themselves to the benefit of their pupils.

Keith S. Taber

1 It strikes me that the third bullet point might seem a little superfluous – after all, surely a system of initial teacher education that both maintains the supply of new teachers at the level needed (which in some subjects would be a definite improvement on the existing system) and ensures they all receive high quality preparation should inherently benefit all schools by making sure there was always a pool of suitably qualified and well-prepared teachers to fill teaching vacancies across the school curriculum.

Perhaps, however, this means something else – such as (in view of the reference to 'incentives that could encourage schools and trusts to participate in ITT' in the consultation) making sure all schools receive funding for contributing to the preparation of new teachers (by making sure all schools make a substantial contribution to the preparation of new teachers).

2 It strikes me that the way in which teachers in preparation are able to move back and forth between a study context and a practitioner context, giving opportunities to apply learning in practice, and to 'stand back' and reflect on and conceptualise that practice, reflects the way science proceeds – where theory motivates new practical investigations, and experience of undertaking the empirical enquiry informs new theoretical refinements and insights (which then…).

3 That is, the pedagogic principles which teachers are expected to apply when working with their students are, in general terms, just as relevant in their own professional education.

Work cited:

Thank you, BBC: I'll give you 4/5

BBC corrects cruel (to cats) scientific claim on its website

Keith S. Taber

I just got 80% on a science test for primary school children

I've just scored 4/5 (80%) on an on-line KS2 science test on the BBC (the British Broadcasting Corporation) educational website. 80% sounds quite good out of context, but I am a science teacher and KS2 is meant for 7-11 year olds.

The BBC awards me 4/5 for my primary level science knowledge about the states of matter

My defence is that the question I got wrong was ambiguous (but, as Christine Keeler might have said, I would say that).

I was actually getting round to checking on something from a while back.

In 2019 I came across something on the website that I thought was very misleading – and I complained to the BBC through their website form. I had an immediate, but generic response:

"Thank you for taking the time to send us your comments. We appreciate all the feedback we receive as it plays an important role in helping to shape our decisions.

This is an automated message (sorry that we can't reply individually) to let you know that we've read your comments and will report them overnight to staff across the BBC for them to read too (after removing any personal details). This includes our programme makers, commissioning editors and senior management.

Thanks again for contacting the BBC.

BBC Audience Services.

NB: Please do not reply to this email. It includes a reference number but comes from an automated account which is not monitored."

Email: 6th Sept., 2019

This kind of response is somewhat frustating. My complaint had been recieved, and would be passed on, but it looked like I would get no specific response (as presumably if my "comments" were to be reported to relevant staff "after removing any personal details", those staff would not be in a position to let me know if they were following up, dismissing, or simply ignoring, my comments.) Indeed, I never did get any follow up.

So, my intention was to check back after a decent period had elapsed (n.b., where does all the time go?) and see if anything had been changed in response to my complaint. Strictly, if there had been a change this could be because:

  • a) I complained
  • b) someone else/some other people complained (i.e., people who's complaints were taken more seriously than mine)
  • c) I was one of number of people who complained
  • d) material had been updated compleltely independently of any compaints

That is, I could not know if I personally had had any effect, BUT if the offending material (because as a chemist I was offended professionally, even if not personally) was still there then I would know my compaint had not been heeded.

So, I intended to check back; I expected to find no change (as pointing out blatant, basic, errors in the science in the English National Curriculum to government ministers did not have any effect, so the BBC…? ); and, if so, I thought of following up with an email or an old fashioned snail-mail … ("…yours, disgusted of Cambourne"*).

Well done, BBC

So, I am happy to publicly acknowledge that the BBC has changed its materials appearing under the heading 'What are the states of matter?'

The topic comprises of a short animation (with odd anthropomorphised {"guys"} geometric shapes handling examples of the states of matter: solid, liquid and gas); a series of bullet points on each state; a sorting task; and then the set of five objective (multiple choice) questions.

There are a number of issues with the examples used here, as discussed below. But the main focus of my complaint, a cartoon cat, has now been released from the indignity of being classified as a state of matter. Yes, a cat!

Limitations of the three states of matter model

The idea that matter can exist in three states is a pretty important foundation for a good deal of other science.

However there is big problem with the generality of the model. Basically it really applies to pure samples of substances: generally substances (not materials in general, and certainly not objects) exist as solids, liquids, or gases, depending on the conditions of temperature and pressure – although at high enough temperatures plasmas are formed (and theoretically when hot enough even the atomic cores, and eventually nuclei would break down – but those conditions are pretty extreme and not found in the typical home or classroom).

Examples of substances include water, salt, calcium carbonate, iron, mercury, hydrogen, graphite, carbon dioxide, sulphur… that is, elements and compounds. Of course, many of these are seldom met in pure form in everyday life outside school science labs.

Most materials that people come across are mixtures or composites. Mixtures often exist as solutions or suspensions – as gels or foams or emulsions – not as solids, liquids or gases.

This is probably why the terms 'solids', 'liquids' and 'gases' actually have two sets of meanings – the science or technical sense, and the everyday or 'life-world' sense. So milk is a liquid(everyday) as you can pour some into your tea cup and a block of wood is a solid(everyday) as it retains its shape and integrity as you nail it to another structure. But milk and wood are not substances – and so not liquid(scientific) or solid(scientific).

Does this matter? Yes, because if we are teaching children things in science lessons, it would be good to get the science right. A solid will melt at a distinct melting temperature to give a liquid which will boil at a distinct boiling temperature. Wood, for example, does not.

Wood is a complex material. It has gas pockets. It has (variable) moisture content, and the structure contains various compounds – lignin, cellulose, and many more. The response to heating reflects that complex constitution.

The BBC's examples of solids, liquids, and gases

The BBC website suggests examples of the three states of matter to introduce primary age students to the concept.

Animation:

Solids: block of ice, football

Lquids: water, honey

Gases: none are specified – animation shows the clouds (of liquid water droplets) forming around a kettle spout, and 'gas' put into in fizzy drinks is referenced.

A football is not solid, but usually air (a mixture of gases with some other components) contained in a plastic shell. (The voiceover refers simply to a 'ball', but the animation show a large ball with a traditional football pattern being used to do 'keepy uppies' by the cartoon character.)

Honey is not a liquid(scientific) but a complex mixture of sugars in solution. There is usually much more sugar than water. (So, arguably, it is more solid than liquid – but it is better to simply not consider it as either.) This is where I dropped a mark on the terminal test:

Two of the options are NOT liquids. Only one response gets credit in this test!
Web text:

The bullet points on the site list some further examples:

"Examples of solids include ice, wood and sand." (Ice and sand are solids(scientific).)

"Examples of liquids include water, honey and milk." (Only water is liquid(scientific) here.)

"Examples of gases include steam, helium and oxygen." (3/3, well done BBC!)

Sorting task:
The BBC website task invites children to sort cards showing objects into three categories. (What is that object on the front card meant to be?)

In the sorting task, children are asked to sort a number of examples shown on cards into solid, liquid, and gas:

The examples presented are air, a feather, helium, milk, a pencil, sea, steam, syrup, wood. Of these only helium and steam strictly meet the criteria for being a solid(scientific)/liquid(scientific)/gas(scientific). Yet, as suggested above, it is difficult to find genuine examples that are both scientifically correct and familiar to young children. Perhaps sea and air (at least materials) are closer approximations than a pencil or a feather ("solids retain their shape" – would a child using the website have handled a feather, and, if so, would it have retained its shape under child-handling?)

So, I still have reservations about this material, whilst acknowledging the need to balance scientific correctness with relevant (to children) examples. Strictly, some of the examples can be seen as encouraging children to get the science wrong. These things matter if only because children are learning things on this site that later in their school career will be judged as alternative conceptions and marked as wrong.

(Read 'Are plants solid?')

None the less, I am pleased that the BBC has at least decided to amend its sorting task, and remove the poor cat:

Which pile does the cat belong in? [This example has now been removed. Bravo.]

The website had previously been quite clear that putting the cat as anything other than solid was 'wrong'. It is classed as a solid even though a cat (like any animal) is (or would be if separated out into its constituent substances – and children should not try this at home) more water than anything else.

I had real trouble seeing how that example fitted with the criteria specified on the webpage:

"[Cats] stay in one place and can be held.

[Cats] keep their shape. They do not flow like liquids.

[Cats] always take up the same amount of space. They do not spread out like gases.

[Cats] can be cut or shaped."

Characteristics of solids, but perhaps not entirely true of cats?

* cf. the idiom 'disgusted of Tunbridge Wells' – referring to a hypothetical person who writes to media complaining about matters of concern.

Images used here are screenshots, copyright of the BBC – a publicly funded public service broadcaster.

A teacher who loves not knowing the answers

You have to learn it at a greater depth and a more detailed level in order to be able to teach it

Keith S. Taber

I have listened to a lot of Professor Jim Al-Khalili's interviews with scientists for the BBC's 'The Life Scientific' programme.

I enjoy hearing about the science and the scientific lives, but Professor Al-Khalili's recent interview with Professor Alice Roberts particularly struck me in terms of her comments on teaching.

[Note: the material discussed in this posting is copyright of third parties, i.e., the BBC (the broadcast and website) and the scientists (the text produced in the interview). It is used here with acknowledgement for purposes of critique and review.]

I have made a rough transcription of that part of the conversation, below, starting at about 6' 24" into the podcast 'Alice Roberts on Bones', which is freely available on the BBC website – and the whole programme is highly recommended.

I found myself nodding along to Prof. Robert's comments about teaching.

Knowledge for teaching

I absolutely agree that "you have to learn it at a greater depth and a more detailed level in order to be able to teach it" – there is no examination which is as testing as the questions of a class of learners struggling to make sense of subject matter. (See 'Learning from experience and teaching by example: reflecting upon personal learning experience to inform teaching practice'.)

There has been much talk in education of pedagogic knowledge being important alongside subject knowledge (one needs to now how to teach as well as what to teach), which is clearly so. Perhaps it is less recognised, however, that a specialist teacher's subject knowledge, whilst clearly different from that of a cutting edge researcher in the subject, is also a form of specialised expertise – 'subject knowledge for teaching' is subject matter extensively infused with pedagogic expertise.

Teachers are specialist experts

I would argue that an experienced school teacher's subject knowledge will often be more advanced in some areas than an academic/researcher in the same discipline.

The researcher has very detailed and advanced knowledge in their specialist area, but the teacher will have been repeatedly revisiting the 'foundation bricks' (in Prof. Robert's terms) in the light of students' varied learning difficulties and (sometimes highly creative) questions. The 'building a wall' metaphor, a wall that needs sound foundations, reflects a constructivist perspective on learning that has been widely adopted in science education.

A lust for learning

Prof. Roberts has the healthy attitude that the teacher never knows everything, without being complacent. Being challenged ("I really love that") is an opportunity to spot the limitations in your own knowledge, and to do something about it – to "advance your own understanding". The good teacher never stops learning, and seeks to understand better, and so sets an example to her students of valuing life-long learning .

Prof. Alice Roberts talking about teaching

Podcast available on the BBC SOUNDS website – transcription from 6'24" to 7'55

06.24

Did teaching anatomy [at the University of Bristol] enhance your understanding of the subject?

Oh my goodness, yeah, I mean I think it's the same with teaching anything, isn't it?

Mm.

Er, you, you have to learn it at a greater depth and a more detailed level in order to be able to teach it.

And, also, I think as soon as you start teaching, you, you realise where the gaps in your own understanding are. You start probing how well you know a subject, and you think 'oh actually, I thought I know that, and I didn't', and you, and you start to go back to kind of foundation levels.

I always think of it as a wall that you are building up and you get to a certain level of knowledge and then you think 'oh I had better just go and test those bricks at the bottom and make sure they are secure as I though they were',

Yeah {laughing}

and you inevitably find little chinks and you think 'oh I am going to have to work a bit harder than that', > but then > > {laughing} >

<The worst thing is < for me,<  you know <, when, teaching, and then, a student, after teaching a course for many years will say 'actually that's not quite right', or 'how can you explain that?' and I'll realise, you know, generations of students, I've been giving them some wrong information, somewhere, and sent them out into the world. Very embarrassing. > Hasn't happened very often >.

< But, I – < But, I really love that. I, you know, when you go, when someone asks you a question and you go 'oh hang on a minute, I think I should know the answer to that'.

I mean some questions you go, 'I'm never going to know the answer to that, but I will go and find out', or you can send your students to go away and find out.

But sometimes you do get asked questions where you think 'actually, I, I would have thought I knew the answer to that, and I don't'.

Yeah, it's never occurred to me.

And so it helps you advance your own understanding. I really appreciate that.

Absolutely.

07.55