Introduction; Chapter 1 Can self-study improve teacher education?, Tom Russell; Part 1 Understanding teaching in teacher education; Chapter 2 Developing an understanding of learning to teach in teacher education, Amanda Berry, John Loughran; Chapter 3 A balancing act, Deborah Tidwell; Chapter 4 Opposites attract, Joseph C. Senese; Chapter 5 Self-study as a way of teaching and learning, Lis Bass, Vicky Anderson-Patton, Jerry Allender; Part 2 Studying teacher educators’ roles and responsibilities; Chapter 6 Guiding new teachers’ learning from classroom experience, Tom Russell; Chapter 7 Learning about our teaching from our graduates, learning about our learning with critical friends, Sandy Schuck, Gilda Segal; Chapter 8 Framing professional discourse with teachers, Mary C. Dalmau, Hafdís Guðjónsdóttir; Chapter 9 Can self-study challenge the belief that telling, showing, and guided practice constitute adequate teacher education?, Charles B. Myers; Part 3 Fostering social justice in teaching about teaching; Chapter 10 The (in)visibility of race in narrative constructions of the self, Enora R. Brown; Chapter 11 “Nothing grand”, Morwenna Griffiths; Chapter 12 Change, social justice, and re-liability, Mary Lynn Hamilton; Part 4 Exploring myths in teacher education; Chapter 13 Myths about teaching and the university professor, Belinda Y. Louie, Richard W. Stackman, Denise Drevdahl, Jill M. Purdy; Chapter 14 What gets “mythed” in the student evaluations of their teacher education professors?, Linda May Fitzgerald, Joan E. Farstad, Deborah Deemer; Chapter 15 Research as a way of knowing and seeing, Jeffrey J. Kuzmic; Part 5 Conclusion; Chapter 16 Understanding self-study of teacher education practices, John Loughran;
John Loughran is a teacher educator at Monash University,
Australia.
Tom Russell is Professor in the Faculty of Education at Queen’s
University, Canada. The authors have previously collaborated on
Teaching about Teaching (RoutledgeFalmer, 1999).
'Improving Teacher Education Practices Through Self-Studyoffers access to a range of powerful and evocative, yet challenging narratives that push the boundaries of teaching practice and simultaneously celebrate the scholarship of teaching ... It will serve as a key text for teacher educators committed to self-study and growth and to the dissemination of teaching scholarship.' - Escalate
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