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Research and Development Tasks in Teacher Education: Institutional Framing and Student Experiences

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Reconfiguring Knowledge in Higher Education

Part of the book series: Higher Education Dynamics ((HEDY,volume 50))

Abstract

Research and development tasks have been proposed as a learning solution in teacher education, where dynamic subject-matter knowledge and professional practices, and increasingly complex teaching environments generate emerging challenges for teacher education institutions and students. While there is an awareness that research is a complex practice, students are, however, expected to handle research activities as a natural part of the curriculum. This empirical study examined how teacher education students worked on research and development tasks linked to their school internships. The findings show that research and development tasks, viewed from an institutional perspective, bring together knowledge, activities, and experiences that allow students to construct their own repertoire of knowledgeable and teaching practices. But they also generate challenges, related to time management, to finding a balance between the needs of the teaching practice and the expectations of the teacher education programme, or to integrating different types of knowledge. The study raises awareness of how these tasks can be used to expose students to the realities of the teaching practice but also of the need for guidance and support required when such tasks are a part of the curriculum.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    A definition and extensive discussion on the notion of research-based education can be found in Afdal and Damşa, Chap. 8, this volume.

  2. 2.

    For reasons of confidentiality, the male participant will be referred to as ‘she’/‘her’ throughout the remainder of the text.

  3. 3.

    The CASS-Query platform (Contextual Activity Sampling System; Salo et al. 2014) is developed and hosted at the Metropolia University of Applied Sciences in Finland.

  4. 4.

    This aspect is further addressed in the following sub-section ‘The student perspective’.

  5. 5.

    The CASS platform failed to collect the survey answers for the last 2 weeks before the assignment deadline. The information regarding the activities was instead collected in the final interview.

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Correspondence to Crina Damşa .

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Damşa, C. (2018). Research and Development Tasks in Teacher Education: Institutional Framing and Student Experiences. In: Maassen, P., Nerland, M., Yates, L. (eds) Reconfiguring Knowledge in Higher Education. Higher Education Dynamics, vol 50. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-72832-2_9

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-72832-2_9

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