Teaching What They Learn, Learning What They Live

Regular price €192.20
A01=Brad Olsen
Author_Brad Olsen
Baby Boom Era
Category=JNMT
Category=JNT
Cooperative Learning
Credentialing Experience
Credentialing Program
epistemological frameworks
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Fred Korthagen
Heated Critiques
High Poverty Urban Schools
identity formation in education
Incoming Disposition
Knowledge Conflicts
Knowledge Transfer Conception
Life Themes
Liz's Experience
Liz’s Experience
Positive Role Model Positive Role
Pre-service Teachers
Professional Development
qualitative educational research
Seminar Leader
social context in teaching
Social Reconstructionist Tradition
Student Centered Teaching Model
Teacher Development
Teacher Identity
Teacher Identity Development
Teacher Knowledge
Teacher Knowledge Conceptions
teacher knowledge construction process
teacher preparation programs
urban classroom challenges
Vice Versa
Weekly Seminar Meetings

Product details

  • ISBN 9781594515361
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Mar 2008
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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"Cogent, interesting, and provocative."-from the foreword by Ann Lieberman Teaching What They Learn, Learning What They Live explores the multiple social, political, and epistemological domains that comprise learning-to-teach. Based on a study of eight beginning English teachers at four different university teacher preparation programs, this book examines the ways in which beginning teachers' personal dispositions and conceptions combines with their teacher preparation programs' professional knowledge and contexts to form their understandings of and approaches toward teaching. Brad Olsen recasts learning-to-teach as a continuous, situated identity process in which prior experiences produce deeply embedded ways of viewing the world that go on to organize current/future experience into meaning. Since experience shapes learning and everyone acquires different sets of experience, no individual teacher's knowledge is exactly like another's. Yet Olsen shows also that the process by which a teacher constructs professional knowledge is common: the what of teacher knowledge varies, but the how remains the same.
Brad Olsen is Assistant Professor of Education at the University of California-Santa Cruz. His teaching and research focus on teaching, teachers, and teacher development; critical pedagogy; English education; and sociolinguistics. He previously worked as a high school English teacher and administrator.