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13 June 2012

Research and Teacher Education: the BERA/RSA Inquiry. 13 June 2012. Background. Joint BERA and UCET review of current policy developments in 2011 - ‘Prospects for Education Research in Education Departments in Higher Education in the UK’ (Whitty et al, 2012).

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13 June 2012

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  1. Research and Teacher Education: the BERA/RSA Inquiry 13 June 2012

  2. Background • Joint BERA and UCET review of current policy developments in 2011 - ‘Prospects for Education Research in Education Departments in Higher Education in the UK’ (Whitty et al, 2012). • The close relationship between educational research and the nature of teacher education provision was a key theme to emerge from the report – but also that the relationship is not widely understood. • Moreover, there are strong grounds to believe that the relationship between research and teacher education is about to change, particularly in England but also elsewhere in the UK.

  3. About the Inquiry • As a follow up to the BERA / UCET report, BERA in partnership with the RSA is undertaking a major Inquiry into the relationship between educational research and teacher education and how both work to improve outcomes for children and young people. • The Inquiry will gather evidence and commission and disseminate a range of papers on the relationship between teacher education, educational research and school improvement. • A major focus will be on the benefits of research informed teacher education. The aim will be to produce papers that are both authoritative and accessible to a wide audience. They will include papers reviewing evidence on current practice in different parts of the UK and well as internationally, together with papers of a more theoretical nature.

  4. Aims of the Inquiry • Shape debate – by collecting and reviewing evidence about the role which research-informed teacher education plays in promoting school improvement; • Inform policy – within Government and the education sector by making recommendations to develop the relationship between research and teacher education; • Influence practice – developing practical approaches to connect researchers, teacher educators, teachers and others.

  5. Process • Phase One – evidence-gathering and filling gaps • Phase Two – publication and dissemination • Phase Three – recommendations and implications

  6. Steering Group • Secretariat at RSA led by Louise Bamfield • Plus advisers: Graham Donaldson, Dr Carmel Gallagher, Sir Alasdair Macdonald, Lord Putnam, Sir Alan Steer • John Furlong • Joe Hallgarten • Pamela Munn • Ian Menter • Geoff Whitty • Nick Johnson

  7. Reference Group • More than twenty organisations have been invited to nominate a representative • Unions, GTCs, learned societies, other voluntary groups – including UCET • First meeting held on 5 June 2013

  8. Commissioned Papers • International policy and practice – Dr Teresa Tatto • UK policy and practice – Dr Moira Hulme, Prof Linda Clarke, Gary Beauchamp, Prof Jean Murray • The contribution of research to teachers’ professional learning – philosophical understandings – Prof Chris Winch, Dr Alis Oancea, Dr Janet Orchard • Review of research-informed clinical practice in teacher education – Dr Katharine Burn, Trevor Mutton • Research, teacher education and school improvement – Dr Monica Mincu • The continuum of professional learning – Philippa Cordingley

  9. Call for Submissions Issued yesterday and circulated to all UCET contacts. Six key questions: • What do you see as the MAIN strengths and areas for improvement within teacher education as a whole in your part of the UK today, and why? • When thinking about initial teacher education (ITE) in your part of the UK today, what contribution do you think that research currently makes to ITE, and what role do you think that it should play? • When thinking about continuous professional development (CPD) in your part of the UK today, what contribution do you think that research currently makes to the professional learning and development of teachers, and what role do you think it should play? • What do you think are the main barriers faced by teachers when it comes to (a) engaging with research evidence and (b) undertaking their own research? What support do you think schools or others (such as colleges and universities) could provide to help to overcome those barriers? • What impact do you think that research can make to improving the quality of teaching and learning outcomes for students? • Is there anything else that you wish to add about the contribution that research can make to teaching and teacher education?

  10. Teacher survey/focus groups? • To be carried out in the new school year, hopefully with the help of the unions and the GTCs

  11. Timeline 2013 March April May June July Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec 2014 Jan Start-up Phase 1: Evidence gathering & analysis Phase 2: Interim Report Stage 3: Recommendations and Final Report COMMISSIONED PAPERS FINAL REPORT Interim Report Evidence & Analysis CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS TEACHER SURVEY LAUNCH EVENT Launch &Dissemination BERA CONFERENCE 3-5 Sept Oxford Conference 6 June Inquiry Seminar 16 July Co-ordinate press activity between BERA & RSA

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