Abstract

The teaching profession is undergoing significant changes, some of which are imposed by the new paradigm of education. This new context marks the shift from the teachers’ position as ‘knowledge users’ towards the more complex position of ‘knowledge creators’. In this new professional culture adapted to a changing society, teaching as a profession is understood as undergoing a continuous transformation and innovation process, while the professionals in the educational field appear to be research users and research promoters able to think thoroughly about their own professional needs and the new topics arising in their field. There is, therefore, a shift from a passive to an active position, enabling educators to become aware of how complex their field is and to understand that it cannot be acknowledged and managed from outside the social, cultural, historical, philosophical, and psychological contexts shaping it. Taking into consideration the characteristics of the new professional culture, this paper is focused on the development of research skills as one of the teachers’ core skills. The study is framed at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, where the Student Perception Research Integration Questionnaire (SPRIQ) of Visser-Wijnveen et al. (2015) was applied to measure students’ perception of research integration in university courses (n=113). Additionally, analysis of the documents on the syllabus of each course of the BA in Primary Education programme was applied to review the research component of initial teacher education curricula. Findings from students’ responses show that they are more consumers than producers of research. We emphasise the importance of student teachers being able to both consume as well as produce research in order to develop professionally.

Highlights

  • The Draft Conclusions of the Council and of the Representatives of the Governments of the Member States, meeting within the Council, on Improving the Quality of Teacher Education adopted in October 2007 (European Union, 2007), provides a useful reminder of the mission of teaching, stating: teaching provides a service of considerable social relevance: teachers play a vital role in enabling people to identify and develop their talents and to fulfil their potential for personal growth and well-being, as well as helping them to acquire the complex range of knowledge, skills and key competences that they will need as citizens throughout their personal, social and professional lives. (p. 300/7)

  • If the students want to have a European recognition according to the Bologna criteria, they should do a minimum of 30 ECTS related to different specialisation programmes

  • This paper supports the idea that it is imperative for the future teachers to have the capacity to integrate research into their professional practice because of a number of reasons, including the sensitive nature of their context, the rapidly evolving nature of teaching, needing to test new pedagogical approaches and understand their impact on learning, needing to determine the effectiveness of their teaching strategies and make judgments, needing to find and analyse problems they may face in their future work, and needing to study and develop their own professional practice on a continuous bases

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Summary

Introduction

The development of teacher research competence and research-based teacher education, as an approach and phenomenon of the 21st century, have received increasing interest among policymakers, researchers of teacher education, and teachers in many countries of the world, based on the assumption that they are a means to improving teacher education.Over the previous decade, European bodies have shown their commitment to the field of teacher education.The Draft Conclusions of the Council and of the Representatives of the Governments of the Member States, meeting within the Council, on Improving the Quality of Teacher Education adopted in October 2007 (European Union, 2007), provides a useful reminder of the mission of teaching, stating: teaching provides a service of considerable social relevance: teachers play a vital role in enabling people to identify and develop their talents and to fulfil their potential for personal growth and well-being, as well as helping them to acquire the complex range of knowledge, skills and key competences that they will need as citizens throughout their personal, social and professional lives. (p. 300/7)Teachers should possess a set of key competences to carry out this mission; in this framework, the European Union education ministers emphasised the need for today’s teachers to ‘develop new knowledge and be innovative through engagement in reflective practice and research (European Union, 2007).In 2015, the European Commission published a guide on policies to improve initial teacher education. Teachers should possess a set of key competences to carry out this mission; in this framework, the European Union education ministers emphasised the need for today’s teachers to ‘develop new knowledge and be innovative through engagement in reflective practice and research (European Union, 2007). The Commission (2015) recommends: To achieve a creative and reflective teaching workforce, policies and actions should encourage student teachers and teachers to use and engage in new research in their learning and practice. While Initial Teacher Education (ITE) lays the foundations for this, policy actions should foster innovative cultures in schools and ensure they have links with universities and other organisations that support research-informed development of teaching practices

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