Full Description
Why are fifteen million children and youth in poverty not achieving when we know that low-income students excel in the classrooms of 'star' teachers (who comprise approximately 8 percent of the teaching force)? Teachers who empathize with students and the life challenges they face soon realize that the dysfunctional bureaucracies will not permit them to meet the needs of their students. Half of the starry eyed beginners are gone in five years or less. Why does teacher education focus on the managerial, instrumental or delivery system aspects of the profession? The expert advice dispensed by schools of education regarding what future teachers should do is not connected to any theory of learning, or to any reality of life in school classrooms. Why has the recruitment process resulted in a cohort of teachers who are unable to connect with their students? Does a qualified teacher equate to a quality teacher? The best hope of getting more effective teachers from university teacher preparation programs is to base their budgets on the number of their graduates who serve in challenging schools and their effectiveness with children and youth. At the district level, the salaries of hiring officials should be based on how well these officials identity and retain quality teachers. In this book, twelve distinguished scholars provide a hard-hitting, thoroughly researched, historical and theoretical critique of our schools of education, offer a clear recommendations on what must be done to ensure all children can achieve their potential, and contribute to a vibrant democratic society.
Contents
FOREWORD - Peter McLaren; PROLOGUE - Valerie Hill-Jackson & Chance W. EDUCATION; 1) (Re)enVISIONing Teacher Education: A Critical Exploration of Missed Historical Moments and Promising Possibilities - Jennifer Milam, University of Akron; 2) Liberal Progressivism at the Crossroads: Towards a Critical Philosophy of Teacher Education - Nathalia Jaramillo, Purdue University; PART II: IMPLEMENTING VALUE-ADDED TEACHER TRAINING & DEVELOPMENT:; 3) Dispositions Matter! Advancing Habits of the Mind for Social Justice - Valerie Hill-Jackson & Chance W. Lewis, Texas A&M University; 4) Teacher Candidate Selection, Recruitment, and Induction: A Critical Analysis with Implications for Transformation - F. Blake Tenore, Alfred C. Dunn, Judson C. Laughter, and H. Richard Milner, Vanderbilt University; PART III: ACCOUNTABILITY & EVALUATION; 5) A Modest Proposal for Making Teacher Education Accountable - Martin Haberman, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee; 6) High Stakes Accountability and Teacher Quality: Coping with Contradictions - Jennifer Rice, University of Maryland; 7) Meeting the Challenge of High-Stakes Testing: Toward a Culturally-Relevant Assessment Literacy - Kris Sloan, St. Edwards University; PART IV: TRANSFORMING TEACHER EDUCATION; 8) When Policies Meet Practice: Leaving No Teacher Behind - Jeanita Richardson, University of Virginia -Arlington & Virginia State University; 9) Constructing 21st Century Teacher Education - Linda Darling-Hammond, Stanford University; EPILOGUE: This is Our Moment: Contemplating the Urgency of Now for the Future of Teacher Education - Chance W. Lewis & Valerie Hill-Jackson, Texas A&M University.