Post on 23-Mar-2016
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Teacher Educationthrough School-basedSupport in India
From Encyclopaedia Britannica to Wikipedia: collaborative authorship of school-based professional development materials
TEC14, Hyderabad
Introduction
• Tess-India: Teacher Education through School-based Support in India
• Led by: The Open University UK, with funding from DfID/UKaid• Goal: to provide flexible, practical, context-appropriate school-
based teacher development at scale• Format: as Open Educational Resources (OERs), to be translated
and localised as required• Design: to employ a Wikipedia-based model of creating teacher
development resources that draws on the collective wisdom of teacher educators from India and in place of the traditional top-down Encyclopaedia Britannica approach professional training.
The materials• One set of School Leadership and Management Units (LDUs) (20 units)• Seven sets of Teacher Development Units (TDUs) (15 units per set)• Elementary Language and Literacy Development
• Elementary Science • Secondary Science
• Elementary Maths• Secondary Maths
• Elementary English• Secondary English• Total 125 units
• All include• An introduction, learning outcomes, practical activities, case studies, reflective tasks, images,
photos, videos
Valuing different voices
• The ‘institutionalised intellectual isolation of the school teacher’ (NCFTE, 2009)
• A host of disconnections at different levels of the teacher education system
• Agency, capability and the pursuit of good quality education
Our approach to teacher development• Starts from the voices of Indian teachers and an appreciation of
their educational context• Is supportive and speaks directly to the teacher• Focuses on transferable classroom techniques• Includes many practical activities• Takes the form of a resource or tool kit, rather than a linear course• Stands alone, complementing other forms of training• Suggests and inspires rather than being prescriptive and
exhaustive• Provides the ‘seeds’ for adaptation and adoption• Promotes reflection
Our emergent pedagogic principles1. Lessons actively engage students2. Teaching learning involves dialogue 3. There is mutual respect between teachers and students4. New learning builds on students’ prior learning and
existing knowledge5. Teaching Learning is relevant to students’ lives6. Children’s background, skills and attitudes are valued, as
well as content, knowledge and understanding7. Assessment is holistic, continuous and values a range of
skills and competencies
The wikipedic writing process
• Gathering a bi-national writing team• Scoping what is needed (policy, research, experience)• Outlining a syllabus for each subject set, focusing on classroom
techniques, as applied to selected topics• Writing each unit as a team, peer reviewing and reworking it to
produce the first draft• Circulating the first draft to critical readers (Indian and UK
pedagogues)• Using their feedback to inform the writing of the second draft• Preparing the audio visual content (photos and films from Indian
classrooms)• Developmentally testing the materials in Indian classrooms
Production
• Standardisation and quality assurance of the set of TDUs & LDUs
• Signing off of final drafts• Formatting, editing and tagging of text and video
content • Final quality check• Publication of the units in English as ‘shells’• Making them available in multiple formats: in print,
online, on CDs, on SD cards for mobile phones
As OERs, the online sets of units are: • Free• Open• Assume adaptation and amendment by teacher
educators, in conjunction with user feedback • To be translated• To be localised to fit different teaching and learning
contexts• Never finished or complete
Example content from Elementary English (1)
EE 02: English emergent literacy: songs, rhymes and word play: Activity 5
EE 15: Everyday English: using the community as a source: Activity 1
Example content from Elementary English (2)
EE 15: Everyday English: using the community as a source: Activity 5
EE 6: Reading English: shared reading and guided reading: Resource 2
Example content from Secondary English (1)
SE 02: English in the Classroom: Case study 1
Example content from Secondary English (2)--SE 6: Helping students write independently: Resource 1
SE 12: Teaching literature: Activity 5
Units
• The units represent both tools that can be employed according to their users’ differing needs and contexts, and vehicles for creating supplementary units to extend what is currently available.
• As such, they place their end-users at the centre of their creation, enhancement and deployment, in a collaborative, needs-driven, iterative process.
“Our efforts to communicate with each other have, I
hope, helped shape our materials with a balance of
thoughtfulness and practicality.”
Professor R. Amritavalli Hyderabad