Abstract:
This paper is a response to calls made in the teacher education pedagogy literature
(e.g. Loughran, 2006; Moletsane, 2003; Murphy, 2008; Russell, 1997) for teacher
educators to take a critical look at how they mediate knowledge and skills to
pre-service and in-service teacher education students. Teaching teachers is a
particularly complex kind of teaching, and is even more complex when this teaching
is done on the page or screen in distance learning programmes. It is argued that,
when teacher educators design materials for teacher education at a distance, they
should consider not only the pedagogies they wish to describe and discuss in the
materials, but also the pedagogies of the materials because both contribute to
the constitution of particular subject positions for readers (as students and as
teachers). Such positioning is likely to affect their “investment” (Norton, 2000)
in their studies and in the classroom practices advocated by the designers. I use
examples from a critical pedagogic analysis (Reed, 2010) of selected South African
teacher education materials to illustrate this argument.
Description:
Proceedings of the 4th biennial International Conference on
Distance Education and Teachers’ Training in Africa (DETA) held at
the Eduardo Mondlane University, Maputo, Mozambique, 3-5 August 2011.