Transcript Slide 1

Hazel Bryan
Chris Carpenter
Canterbury Christ Church University
Method and context
 Carried out as part of a Training Needs
Analysis (TNA) into the development of Gifted
and Talented children in Physical Education
which was funded by the DfES (carried out by
Leeds Metropolitan University and Canterbury
Christ Church University in 2004-2005).
Semi structured interviews with 56 primary
teachers (PE co-ordinators and non PE coordinators) and secondary PE teachers.
Continuing professional development; emancipation or constraint.
Method
Interview structure
 Establish current conceptions of Gifted
and Talented children in PE.
Establish current provision.
Establish conceptions about effective
CPD.
Establish ideal situation and how this
might best be achieved.
Continuing professional development; emancipation or constraint.
Themes emerging in the data
Given to me
•National initiatives are incontestable
•‘Putting things in place.’
•Relevant - up to date.
•Training to take the school to the top
•Working within the guidelines
•knowledge is received.
•Practice is ‘given’ to me.
•Helps me know what levels the children are at.
Themes emerging in the data
show me
•Case studies of what ‘works’
•I want to be ‘taken through things.’
•Venues – relevance
•I ‘ll respect you if you can demonstrate it with my children.
•I want to know ‘how’ to.
•I want strategies.
•I want examples and ideas.
•I like watching others.
•Training helps my confidence
Themes emerging in the data
I enact it
•Little stepping stones.
•Reflection is least effective
•I learn with my friends
•I collaborate
•I enact confidently because it is someone else’s design.
•‘I like it because I could not evaluate my lessons’.
•Gives me reassurance because I know I am doing it right.
•Assumption of convergence?
Themes
• Policy context
• Implications of policy context on
teacher identity.
• Possibilities for professional learning
Continuing professional development; emancipation or constraint.
Bruner on thought
Story
• Narrator privileges
the hypothetical.
• Trafficking in human
possibilities
• Tentative
• Divergent
• Discursive
• Exploratory
Argument
• Privileges the
‘factual’.
• Settled certainties
• ‘Truth’ seeking.
Bruner 1986
Continuing professional development; emancipation or constraint.
Judith Sachs (2001)
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Activist Identity.
The open flow of ideas, regardless of
their popularity, that enables people to
be as fully informed as possible.
Faith in the individual and collective
capacity of peoples to create
possibilities for resolving problems.
The use of critical reflection and
analysis to evaluate the ideas, problems
and policies.
Concern for the welfare of others and
the ‘common good’.
Concern for the dignity and rights of
individuals and minorities.
An understanding that democracy is not
so much and ‘ideal’ to be persuaded as
an ‘idealised’ set of values that we must
live and that guide our life as people.
The organisation of social institutions
to promote and extend the democratic
way of life.
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Entrepreneurial identity.
Individualistic
Competitive
Controlling and regulative
Externally defined.
Designer employee (teacher) (Logical
chain).
•Self and self narrative
•Self narrative has no currency.
•Democratic discourses give rise
to the development of
communities of practice.
Continuing professional development; emancipation or constraint.
• The allegory of the cave – From ‘The
Republic.’
• Meno’s paradox.
Continuing professional development; emancipation or constraint.
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