Reprint: Truth and Consequences? Inquiry and Policy in Research on Teacher Education

IF 3.1 1区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Journal of Teacher Education Pub Date : 2023-03-01 DOI:10.1177/00224871231161457
L. Shulman
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

What kind of research on teaching is of most worth? To what extent should researchers in this field be conducting highly functional investigations that attempt to identify the key elements of accomplished teaching or the most important components of teacher preparation programs or experiences? Should we be asking whether teacher education programs significantly improve the likelihood that someone will teach effectively? Should we instead be conducting inquiries that explore the rich complexities of teaching, learning, schooling, and development and the contexts that support them? What genres of research are worth undertaking? The tacit dialogue between the present articles by Wilson, Floden, and Ferrini-Mundy (2002 [this issue]) and by Florio-Ruane (2002 [this issue]) is nostalgically familiar. We designed the Institute for Research on Teaching (IRT) in 1975 on the basis of our critique of the then-prevailing prototype of process-product research on teaching. We considered process-product research on teaching behavioristic, simplistic, and unduly dependent on standardized achievement tests as indicators of product. Indeed, the leaders of process-product research, such as Nate Gage (1978) and Barak Rosenshine (Rosenshine & Stevens, 1986), complained that their critics were unnecessarily “complexifying” the phenomenon of teaching, whereas the hall-mark of scientific progress was increased sim plification, not complication. Moreover, if research on teaching were to have the desired impact on policy makers, it needed to be both simple and clearly connected to easily under stood indicators of student achievement. Finally, there was a moral message in the process-product tradition. Our bottom-line obligation as teachers was to the students and their learning. To study teaching without reference to students was unethical self-indulgence. These two articles stimulated me to reflect on my history of work as an active scholar on teaching and teacher education. I thought about the nearly four decades of research in which I had been actively involved. And I began to wonder how, if at all, it added up. I concluded that we may be asking the wrong questions and focusing on the wrong units of analysis. That is, individual studies rarely can be adjudged as valuable or trivial per se. Instead, we need to think about extended programs of scholarship, in which a variety of types of research are pursued, to maximize the value to be gained from studies of teaching. I want to tell a story of more than 30 years of research, of a series of research programs that cumulated into a meaningful knowledge base, an enduring policy initiative, and the spinning off of a number of significant lines of research. I begin with my work on medical problem solving in the 1960s and 1970s, followed by the research on teaching as information processing that characterized the IRT programs. A set of studies on the development of teacher knowledge, with special reference to pedagogical content knowledge, followed that work, which transitioned into the Teacher Assessment Project conducted on behalf of the then-infant National Board for Professional Teaching Standards. The board’s own validation studies of board certification were conducted in the year 2000, and a new program of Carnegie Foundation studies of teacher education is currently underway. This sequence will help to illustrate my conception of the value of general programs of research that alternate freely 1161457 JTEXXX10.1177/00224871231161457Journal of Teacher EducationShulman research-article2023
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重印:真相与后果?教师教育研究中的问题与对策
什么样的教学研究最有价值?该领域的研究人员应该在多大程度上进行高功能的调查,试图确定成功教学的关键要素或教师准备计划或经验的最重要组成部分?我们是否应该问,教师教育项目是否显著提高了某人有效教学的可能性?相反,我们是否应该进行调查,探索教学、学校教育和发展的丰富复杂性以及支持它们的背景?哪些类型的研究值得进行?Wilson、Floden和Ferrini Mundy(2002年[本期])和Florio Ruane(2002年]本期)的文章之间的默契对话令人怀念。我们在1975年设计了教学研究所(IRT),其基础是我们对当时流行的过程产品教学研究原型的批判。我们认为教学过程产品研究是行为主义的、简单化的,过度依赖标准化的成绩测试作为产品指标。事实上,过程产品研究的领导者,如Nate Gage(1978)和Barak Rosenshine(Rosenshine&Stevens,1986),抱怨他们的批评者不必要地“复杂化”了教学现象,而科学进步的霍尔标志是更简单化,而不是复杂化。此外,如果教学研究要对政策制定者产生预期的影响,就需要既简单又明确地与容易被低估的学生成绩指标联系起来。最后,在工艺产品传统中有一个道德信息。作为老师,我们的底线义务是对学生和他们的学习。在不参考学生的情况下学习教学是不道德的自我放纵。这两篇文章促使我反思自己作为一名活跃的教师教育学者的工作历史。我想起了我积极参与的近四十年的研究。我开始怀疑,如果有的话,它是怎么加起来的。我得出的结论是,我们可能提出了错误的问题,并专注于错误的分析单元。也就是说,个人研究本身很少被认为是有价值或微不足道的。相反,我们需要考虑扩大学术计划,在该计划中进行各种类型的研究,以最大限度地提高教学研究的价值。我想讲述一个30多年研究的故事,一系列研究项目积累成了有意义的知识库,一项持久的政策倡议,以及许多重要研究领域的衍生。我从20世纪60年代和70年代的医学问题解决工作开始,然后是关于教学作为信息处理的研究,这是IRT项目的特点。在这项工作之后,开展了一系列关于教师知识发展的研究,特别是关于教学内容知识的研究,并将其转化为代表当时还处于起步阶段的国家专业教学标准委员会开展的教师评估项目。董事会自己对董事会认证的验证研究于2000年进行,卡内基基金会教师教育研究的一个新项目目前正在进行中。这个序列将有助于说明我对自由交替的一般研究项目的价值的概念1161457 JTEXXX10.1177/0224871231161457教师教育杂志Shulman research-article2023
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来源期刊
Journal of Teacher Education
Journal of Teacher Education EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
8.90
自引率
7.70%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The mission of the Journal of Teacher Education, the flagship journal of AACTE, is to serve as a research forum for a diverse group of scholars who are invested in the preparation and continued support of teachers and who can have a significant voice in discussions and decision-making around issues of teacher education. One of the fundamental goals of the journal is the use of evidence from rigorous investigation to identify and address the increasingly complex issues confronting teacher education at the national and global levels. These issues include but are not limited to preparing teachers to effectively address the needs of marginalized youth, their families and communities; program design and impact; selection, recruitment and retention of teachers from underrepresented groups; local and national policy; accountability; and routes to certification. JTE does not publish book reviews, program evaluations or articles solely describing programs, program components, courses or personal experiences. In addition, JTE does not accept manuscripts that are solely about the development or validation of an instrument unless the use of that instrument yields data providing new insights into issues of relevance to teacher education (MSU, February 2016).
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