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Learning to Teach in the Secondary School: A companion to school experience 7th New edition [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 658 pages, height x width: 246x189 mm, weight: 1400 g, 46 Line drawings, black and white; 42 Tables, black and white
  • Sērija : Learning to Teach Subjects in the Secondary School Series
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-Mar-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1138787701
  • ISBN-13: 9781138787704
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 658 pages, height x width: 246x189 mm, weight: 1400 g, 46 Line drawings, black and white; 42 Tables, black and white
  • Sērija : Learning to Teach Subjects in the Secondary School Series
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-Mar-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1138787701
  • ISBN-13: 9781138787704
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Learning to teach involves hard work and careful preparation. To become an effective teacher requires pedagogical and subject knowledge, an understanding of your pupils and how they learn, and the confidence to respond to dynamic classroom situations.

Learning to Teach in the Secondary School is the market leading text for all undergraduate, postgraduate and school-based routes to qualified teacher status. It offers an in-depth and practical introduction to the knowledge, skills and understanding needed to become a confident and effective teacher. With a focus on evidence-based practice, the book includes a wealth of examples to demonstrate how to successfully apply theory to practice, and how to critically analyse your practice to maximise pupil learning.

This 7th edition is fully updated in light of the latest initiatives, evidence and research in the field, offering comprehensive coverage, unit by unit, of the key concepts and skills addressed on initial teacher education courses in preparation for work in schools. The wide range of pedagogical features support both university based work - including that up to Masters Level - and school-based initial teacher education, and are designed to help you develop those qualities that lead to good practice and a successful future in education.

Written by expert practitioners, thirty-six essential units include:



adopting a positive approach to managing behaviour to support learning



ways pupils learn



planning lessons, units of work and schemes of work



motivating pupils



assessment



inclusion and special educational needs



using ICT and digital technologies



pupil grouping, progression and differentiation



managing time, workload and stress



getting your first teaching post.



Learning to Teach in the Secondary School provides practical help and guidance for many of the situations and potential challenges you are faced with in school. Supported by the Learning to Teach Subjects in the Secondary School Series, it is an essential purchase for every aspiring secondary school teacher.

Recenzijas

`The early years in the teaching profession are both challenging and rewarding. With its clear and accessible style, this book is an essential companion for everyone involved in initial teacher education. A range of well-respected education experts provide a comprehensive introductory insight to relevant and varied issues for early career teachers. There is a careful balance between scholarly input and practical approaches, including engaging tasks throughout, which will inform the reader's professional development in the early stages of teaching. This book should be at the top of every reading list for new teachers!

Anna Lise Gordon AcademicDirector and National Teaching Fellow, St Mary's University, UK









`Learning to Teach in the Secondary School has been the core text for the PGCE Secondary Course at the University of Worcester for a number of years. The contributors have a wealth of experience and expertise that helps trainees get to the root of issues in the secondary school providing a foundation for further reading and discussion. The authors have the ability to separate the salient issues so that trainees can `question the given, offering intelligent opinion and thought. Readers can look practically, and rationally, at what constitutes effective teaching in the secondary classroom proving that this is an excellent starting point for any new teacher. Every reference list I read cites this book demonstrating it as a key text in teacher education. The 7th edition is a welcome update and will appeal massively to any professional who shares the ambition to make a difference in the classroom.









Suzanne Lawson



Secondary PGCE Course Leader, University of Worcester, UK









`This book provides a useful and effective insight into being a teacher, and a pedagogical and practical understanding of the complexity of teaching. It successfully breaks down the various elements of the profession into sections, acknowledging that there might not be a template of a perfect teacher, but rather a series of skills, qualities and behaviours that inform and underpin effective teaching and learning.









With the changing landscape of ITE (initial teacher education) and the growth of school-led approaches, a comprehensive guide to support trainees across all aspects of their training (from what is a teacher and classroom behaviours to developing professional practice and securing a first post) is extremely valuable.









Martin Husbands



Head of School Direct, Newman University, UK









Learning to Teach in the Secondary School 7th ed. describes, analyses and reflects pertinently a trainees experience in a Secondary school. It gives the Secondary trainee confidence by highlighting key foci; for example, professionalism, specific curriculum pedagogy, how to observe, and why teachers want to teach. Indeed, the edition "sells" the individualism of the teaching profession and why there is no other profession like it. This is also supported by relevant tasks for the trainee to engage with which explain and consolidates key concepts such as teacher reflection, mixing the practical with the theoretical learning theories.









The 7th Edition is very accessible for all trainee teachers, full of useful tips on time management, how to manage work/life balance and how to be proactive in an ever evolving profession. Highly recommended.









Alyson Midgley



Secondary Flexible PGCE Programme Leader, Edge Hill University, UK









`This book covers the key themes affecting secondary teacher education today. The authors offer a challenging rather than a descriptive account of contemporary issues affecting Initial Teacher Education. Trainee teachers are encouraged to think about their changing professional role and to explore broader conceptions of it; they are asked to engage with current issues surrounding pedagogic knowledge, its influences and determiners, and to reflect on their actions in response.









Trainee teachers following pre- or in-service routes into teaching will find the book a useful resource. It will appeal to trainee teachers following one of a number of routes into teaching, including university-based; School Direct; school-centred (SCITTs) and the Assessment-Only routes to QTS. Whilst offering many practical ideas and suggestions for use in everyday practice, it also makes the link between initial teacher education and on-going professional, career development.









If not already included, the book will make a useful addition to programme reading lists.









Val Butcher Associate Dean and Head of Department, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK

List of illustrations xiv
List of tasks xviii
List of contributors xxiii
Acknowledgements xxvii
Introduction 1(6)
Susan Capel
Marilyn Leask
Sarah Younie
Developing your philosophy of teaching and learning
How to use this book
1 Becoming A Teacher 7(80)
1.1 What do teachers do?
9(19)
Andrew Green
Marilyn Leask
Teachers as individuals: your values and ethics
Your role as a teacher
Teacher language
The work in the classroom: the tip of the iceberg
Professional knowledge for teaching
Managing the learning environment: a key part of your general pedagogic knowledge (GPK)
Classroom rights and responsibilities
Your professional profile: what image do you want to project?
1.2 Student teachers' roles and responsibilities
28(17)
Michael Allen
Rob Toplis
Preparing for school experience
During school experience: work with other staff and pupils in school
Expectations, roles and responsibilities of school experience
Teachers as professionals
A model of student teacher development
Beyond your ITE programme
1.3 Managing your time, workload and stress, and building your resilience
45(15)
Susan Capel
Managing your time and workload
Preventing, managing and coping with stress
Building your resilience
1.4 Using information and communications technology/digital technologies for professional purposes
60(27)
Antony Stockford
The relevance of ICT for you and your pupils
Frameworks for auditing your knowledge and understanding
Ideas and examples for embedding ICT learning in your subject
Some core techniques when teaching using ICT in your subject
Planning to teach using ICT resources
2 Beginning To Teach 87(52)
2.1 Reading classrooms: how to maximise learning from classroom observation
89(19)
Ana Redondo
Preparing to observe: some general points
Who should you be observing and why?
What do classrooms look like?
How lessons begin and end
The structure of a lesson and transitions
Teacher talk and oral feedback
Pupil talk and interaction
Observing pupil management and encouraging pupil behaviours that maximise learning
Observing assessment for learning
How does the teacher use learning resources and aids during the lesson?
Subject content focused observation
Using video to support lesson observation
Collaborative teaching as a form of observation
2.2 Schemes of work, units of work and lesson planning
108(14)
Sophy Bassett
Mark Bowler
Angela Newton
Planning what to teach and how to teach it
Content of lessons
Teaching strategies
Schemes of work, units of work and lesson plans
Planning parts of a lesson
2.3 Taking responsibility for the whole lesson
122(17)
Michelle Lowe
Clyde Redfern
Persona: being the teacher
Personal attributes
Confidence
Communication
Interpersonal relationships
Routines
Classroom management
Relationships in the classroom
Expectations of and for learning
Outcomes
Planning
Subject content knowledge and pedagogy
Overview
3 Classroom Interactions And Managing Pupils 139(76)
3.1 Communicating with pupils
141(19)
Paula Zwozdiak-Myers
Susan Capel
Verbal communication
Types of communication
Non-verbal communication
Presenting yourself effectively
3.2 Motivating pupils
160(20)
Misia Gervis
Susan Capel
What is motivation?
Theories of motivation
What motivates people?
Some specific factors that influence pupils' motivation to learn
Motivating individuals and the class as a whole
3.3 Managing classroom behaviour: adopting a positive approach
180(20)
Philip Garner
The current context: official advice and guidance
What is unacceptable behaviour?
Scoping the causal factors
Key principles of a behaviour for learning approach
Getting the simple things right!
Rights, responsibilities, routines and rules
Consequences
3.4 Primary-secondary transitions
200(15)
Divya Jindal-Snape
Conceptualisation of educational transition and its impact on planning and preparation
Issues related to primary-secondary transitions
Understanding transitions through theoretical perspectives
Examples of planning and preparation for primary-secondary transition
What seems to work for pupils?
4 Meeting Individual Differences 215(110)
4.1 Pupil grouping, progression and differentiation
217(18)
Alexandra Titchmarsh
Grouping pupils across the school
Progression and differentiation
Case studies of pupils
4.2 Adolescence, health and well-being
235(13)
Ceri Magill
Barbara Walsh
About development and growth
Diet, health and well-being
Moving forward
4.3 Cognitive development
248(22)
Judy Ireson
Paul Davies
Differences between pupils
Developing cognitive abilities
Creative problem-solving
Measuring cognitive development and intelligence tests
4.4 Responding to diversity
270(14)
Stefanie Sullivan
A history of diversity in the UK
Equal opportunities and educational equity
Gender
Ethnicity
Class
School policy and classroom practice
Responding to diversity in the classroom
4.5 Values education: discussion and deliberation
284(18)
Ruth Heilbronn
Values education
Ethical deliberation through discussion
4.6 An introduction to inclusion, special educational needs and disability
302(23)
Nick Peacey
Definitions
Defining SEN and disability
Some background: the developing legislative framework
The two-stage approach to meeting needs
Additional staff in the classroom
Records from transfer between schools
The response of schools
Helping pupils with SEND to learn
Specific educational needs
The four areas 1: communication and interaction
The four areas 2: cognition and learning
The four areas 3: social, emotional and mental health difficulties
The four areas 4: sensory and/or physical needs
Medical conditions
5 Helping Pupils Learn 325(120)
5.1 Ways pupils learn
327(19)
Diana Burton
How ideas about teaching and learning interact
Psychological perspectives on learning
Cognitive developmental theory
The influence of stage theory
Metacognitive awareness
Social constructivist theory
Constructivism
Information processing theory (IP theory), including rote learning
Learning styles, strategies and approaches
5.2 Active learning
346(22)
Michelle Lowe
What do we mean by 'learning'?
What is active learning?
Active learning, discovery learning and rote learning
Active learning in the classroom: aids to recall and understanding
Lesson planning for active learning
Developing pupils' higher-order thinking skills
5.3 Teaching styles
368(17)
Chris Carpenter
Hazel Bryan
Mosston and Ashworth's continuum of teaching styles
Teaching style as an element of 'constructive alignment'
The relationship between skills, attitudes, concepts and knowledge (SACK) and teaching styles
Pedagogy and teaching styles
The 'hidden' curriculum
5.4 Improving your teaching: an introduction to practitioner research, reflective practice and evidence-informed practice
385(13)
Marilyn Leask
Tony Liversidge
Reflective practice and evidence-informed practice
Processes of reflective practice and practitioner research
Research techniques for use in the classroom
Analysing evidence about teaching and learning
5.5 Closing the achievement gap: personalising learning
398(11)
Carrie Winstanley
Closing the achievement gap
Raising achievement through self-regulation and personalised learning IN What is meant by personalising learning?
The principles and practices of personalising learning
Classroom approaches: teaching/pedagogical strategies
Self-regulated learning
Teaching for self-regulation
5.6 Neuroeducation: the emergence of the brain in education
409(8)
Paul Howard-Jones
Neuromyths to avoid
Brain development and brain plasticity
Brains, games and learning: pupil engagement
5.7 Developing critical thinking
417(14)
Hazel Bryan
The linden tree
Architecture
Icons
The learning space
Interactions
Fruits of the tree: creating a critical disposition in your pupils
5.8 Creating a language-rich classroom
431(14)
Annabel Watson
Debra Myhill
Creating an interactive classroom
Exploratory talk for learning
Creating active readers
DART: directed activities related to text
Supporting writing
6 Assessment 445(42)
6.1 Assessing pupil progress: what do we know about good practice?
447(24)
Terry Haydn
What is assessment for learning and why is it important?
Understanding the vocabulary of assessment
Context: assessment in uncertain and challenging times
Common misconceptions and problems relating to assessment and learning
How to make assessment useful
6.2 External assessment and examinations
471(16)
Bernadette Youens
Your own experience
Types of assessment II The framework of external assessment in secondary schools II The purposes of external assessment
Public accountability IN Validity and reliability
Teaching externally assessed courses
7 The School, Curriculum And Society 487(42)
7.1 Aims of education
489(12)
Graham Haydon
Ruth Heilbronn
The social and political context of aims
Thinking about aims
Recognising the diversity of aims
Comparing and justifying aims
Societal and individual aims
Equal aims for everyone?
7.2 The school curriculum
501(12)
Graham Haydon
Ruth Heilbronn
The curriculum in general and within particular subjects II The formal curriculum
The informal curriculum and the hidden curriculum
Curriculum as a selection from culture
Relating curriculum to aims
Relating curriculum subjects to wider aims
7.3 International education comparisons: understanding UK education in an international context
513(16)
Andrea Raiker
Matti Rautiainen
International comparisons
Education in Finland
Considering the advantages and disadvantages of the Finnish model
Internationalisation of classrooms
Using Bourdieu's theory to analyse the complex relationships existing in multicultural classrooms
7.4 Secondary schools in Northern Ireland: governance, policy and curriculum
Paul McFlynn
Paul McQueen
Colette Murphy
The 'distinctive' nature of education in Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland Schools
School curriculum in Northern Ireland
Initial teacher education in Northern Ireland
The teaching profession in Northern Ireland
The future of education in Northern Ireland
7.5 Secondary schools in Scotland: governance, policy and curriculum
Anna Beck
The 'distinctive' nature of Scottish education
The structure and governance of education in Scotland
The Scottish school curriculum
The teaching profession in Scotland
The future of Scottish education
7.6 Secondary schools in Wales: governance, policy and curriculum
Susan Lewis
David Grace
Susan Capel
National bodies related to education and training
Schooling in Wales
The National Curriculum in schools in Wales
Qualifications
The future of the curriculum
Initial teacher education in Wales
Review of ITE in Wales
8 Your Professional Development 529(44)
8.1 Getting your first post
531(18)
Julia Lawrence
Susan Capel
Consider why you want to enter the teaching profession
Deciding where, and in what type of school, you want to teach
Looking for suitable vacancies
Selecting a post that interests you
Making an application
methods of application
The interview
Accepting a post
If you are not offered a post
8.2 Developing further as a teacher
549(12)
Jeanne Keay
Developing further as a teacher
Planning your professional development
Transition into your first teaching post
Professional development
Teaching: a professional role
8.3 Accountability, contractual and statutory duties
561(12)
Sue Collins
Dawn Leslie
Where do teachers fit within the education system?
Accountability
Legal duties and responsibilities
Important legislation
Contractual and statutory duties
9 And Finally 573(4)
Marilyn Leask
Andrew Green
What values will you pass on?
Appendix 1: Glossary of terms 577(14)
Appendix 2: Examples of relevant websites 591(5)
Appendix 3: Guidance for writing
Susan Capel
John Moss
References 596(34)
Author index 630(8)
Subject index 638
Susan Capel is Professor of Physical Education at Brunel University, UK.

Marilyn Leask is Chair of the Education Futures Collaboration charity and was previously a teacher and Professor at Brunel University and the University of Bedfordshire, UK.

Sarah Younie is Reader in Education, Innovation and Technology at De Montfort University, UK.