Abstract

Education 4.0 prepares new generations to develop the skills required to perform in a technological, dynamic, and unpredictable world. The main barrier to implementing Education 4.0 in schools is that teachers have not been trained for it. Given the advances and new resources of the technological field, teacher preparation will be insufficient if it focuses on technological skills but does not incorporate the necessary dispositions for lifelong learning. Universities have the ethical imperative to update teacher education so teachers can become lifelong learners. The objective of this study was to understand whether practice-based curricula offer opportunities to promote lifelong learning tendencies. We used a sequential explanatory method. Quantitative and qualitative instruments were applied to pre-service teachers (survey: n = 231, semi-structured interviews: n = 8), and causal and descriptive approaches were supported by a structural equation model and constant comparative method, respectively. Data triangulation confirmed and added depth to the relationship found. Practice opportunities provided by teacher educators in learning activities and assessment tasks promote curiosity, motivation, perseverance, and self-learning regulation, when they are (i) systematic; (ii) relevant to the classroom work; (iii) presented with clear instructions and effective rubrics; (iv) accompanied with feedback focused on the task, soliciting reflection, and performed by peers and teacher educators in a trustworthy environment. This research may be of value to universities looking to renew their Education 4.0 programs because it shows that practice-based curricula not only transform pre-service teachers into teaching experts but also into lifelong learners.

Highlights

  • This study aimed to understand, through the pre-service teachers’ perception, whether practice-based curricula offer opportunities to promote lifelong learning tendencies to contribute to updating teacher education programs for Education 4.0

  • We applied quantitative and qualitative instruments to pre-service teachers, taking causal and descriptive approaches supported by a structural equation model (SEM) and constant comparative method (CCM), respectively

  • This study was performed in teacher education for early childhood, elementary, and secondary students offered by the Universidad del Desarrollo in Chile

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Education 4.0 prepares that new generations to develop the skills required to perform in a technological, dynamic, and unpredictable world [1]. It focuses on problem-solving and incorporates emerging technologies and innovative teaching strategies [2]. Educational offerings are flexible under this new paradigm; digitalization is incorporated into educational environments, and teachers become coaches, mentors, or referral sources [3]

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