reflecting on the nature of teacher work

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Reflecting on the Nature of Teacher Work Phil Wood School of Education University of Leicester

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Page 1: Reflecting on the nature of teacher work

Reflecting on theNature of TeacherWork

Phil WoodSchool of EducationUniversity of Leicester

Page 2: Reflecting on the nature of teacher work

• Some initial thinking and ideas

• Based on several areas of work from the last few years

• Complexity theory• Lesson Study• Curriculum Design and programme development• Action research projects

• Emergent process

Page 3: Reflecting on the nature of teacher work

Current policy and cultural environments in education

• Teaching as business capital (Hargreaves and Fullan, 2012)

• Teaching as a ‘complicated’ activity (= reductionism and hence predictability)

• Focus on ‘measurable’ leading to fixation with numeric data

• Grading of teacher work, ever more elaborate accountability structures, central position of testing within the system

Page 4: Reflecting on the nature of teacher work

Considering an alternative view

• Teaching as an activity is meaningless unless it is considered in conjunction with:

• Learning• Curriculum• Assessment

• If we take any one of these elements, they are each made up of a large number of elements.

• They are complex adaptive systems – in this case interpenetrating complex adaptive systems

Page 5: Reflecting on the nature of teacher work

Cilliers (1998) characterised CASs has having:

• a large number of elements with many interactions;

• interactions which are non-linear, i.e. large-scale causes can have small-scale impacts and vice versa;

• interactions which lead to feedback loops, both negative and positive;

• an ‘open’ system, having interactions with elements in external environments beyond the immediate system;

• elements which interact with their environment making the identification of boundaries difficult;

• a system which is far from equilibrium and therefore needs a constant energy flow for it to operate;

• the importance of history, past processes playing a role in forming the present, often unpredictably;

• each element only acting on local information rather than information from the whole system.

Page 6: Reflecting on the nature of teacher work

Pedagogy defined as the interpenetration of these complex adaptive systems and their interact with teacher and students

Page 7: Reflecting on the nature of teacher work

But faced by such huge complexity, how can teachers’ work be experienced as a coherent process?

• We build schema which help to scaffold and structure our understanding and practice of pedagogy.

• Such schema emerge over time, developed through practice, experience, engagement with educational debates

• Influenced by prior experiences and values/ethics

• Help in complexity reduction (Biesta, 2010)

Page 8: Reflecting on the nature of teacher work

In the classroom, we also reduce the immediate complexity through the use of heuristics:

‘A heuristic is a strategy that ignores part of the information, with the goal of making decisions more quickly, frugally, and/or accurately than more complex methods.’

(Gigerenzer and Gaissmaier, 2011: 454)

‘[Simple heuristics]..are indispensable to social intelligence.’

‘…complex social problems with ill-defined rules…lie far beyond the reach of optimization. Complexity makes simple heuristics indispensable.’

(Hertwig et al, 2013: 16-17)

Page 9: Reflecting on the nature of teacher work

Examples of heuristics

• Imitate the successful heuristic - Determine the most successful individual in a given context and imitate their behaviour

• Representativeness heuristic – using past experience of events. To what extent does this event fit with similar events/known processes I have come across before?

• Availability heuristic – the probability of an event is estimated by how many like events can be immediately called to mind

• Familiarity heuristic – where the familiar is preferred over the novel, and linked to the availability heuristic

Page 10: Reflecting on the nature of teacher work

Heuristics

Schema

Page 11: Reflecting on the nature of teacher work
Page 12: Reflecting on the nature of teacher work

But….

• Heuristics are linked to various fallacies due to their frugal nature.

• Schema and heuristics are simplifications and therefore will always be approximations.

• Reflective practice is concerned with identifying fallacies/approximations and opening up areas of complexity to consider and change practice – amending heuristics and schema.

• Research is the same process, but extends evidence concerning the complexity and useful possible practice changes in a given context.

• Complex pragmatism – knowledge and understanding of complexity through action

• Theory-practice gap dissolves as theories are only schema/heuristics in a sense.

Page 13: Reflecting on the nature of teacher work

Some initial insights

• Teachers develop over time by creating and amending schema and heuristics which provide the basis for judgement and practice

• Reflective practice (and research) help create better schema and heuristics

• The emergence of ‘wise judgement’ (Biesta, 2014) the continued grappling with these processes

• When helping new teachers develop practice, or supporting those in trouble, we need to help them develop a structured understanding of their emerging practice, and support reflective/reflexive practice.