Abstract

<p>This article reports on students’ experiences of learning to work together in a childhood teacher education programme at a university in South Africa. We were interested in how students from diverse backgrounds, with little shared understanding of a model or framework for collaborative working, would find their footing and learn how to operationalise care, accountability and reflexivity through engaging in group work as part of their service learning activities. A cross section of student data, from first year to third year, was analysed using qualitative methods of data analysis. The main findings were that the incremental integration of service learning, with fixed student groupings over three years, was a catalyst for the gradual formation of professional student learning communities. The student struggles with group relationships helped them address their cultural, linguistic and gendered assumptions about each other. Lastly, we found that relatively fixed nature of the student groupings over a three year period encouraged deep reflection about ideas of care, community and social responsibility.</p>

Highlights

  • This article reports on a cross section of students’ experiences of learning to work together in a new childhood teacher education programme at a large comprehensive university in South Africa

  • The main pattern that we constructed from this investigation was that the incremental integration of service learning (SL), with fixed student groupings over three years, resulted in the gradual formation of professional student learning communities

  • We found that students still report that they find the group work challenging

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Summary

Introduction

This article reports on a cross section of students’ experiences of learning to work together in a new childhood teacher education programme at a large comprehensive university in South Africa. Based on the first author’s research incorporating SL into a secondary school teacher education curriculum, we have designed a childhood teacher education programme to incrementally infuse SL into the first three years (Petker & Petersen 2014). This move is in line with the new teacher qualification framework (DoE 2011), with its emphasis on students’ learning in and from practice in order to develop tacit knowledge for the world of teaching. There are a few examples of how SL has been integrated into teacher education programmes in South Africa (Castle & Osman 2003; Mitchell & Rautenbach 2005), research on SL in foundation phase teacher education programmes is very sparse

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