2.1 Global challenges of initial teacher education
Since the late 1980s, initial teacher education has faced serious challenges related to adequately preparing pre-service teachers to work in schools as future teachers. In addition, educational systems worldwide are struggling with a shortage of teachers. This shortage may be because an increasing number of qualified teachers have been leaving the profession within their first few years of teaching, which has resulted in an ageing teacher population (OECD, 2018). This trend may result from the discrepancy between the curricula of teacher education institutes and everyday teaching practices, which could induce a sense of unpreparedness among teachers regarding their professional activity (Grossman et al., 2009; Meijer, 2010). As Feiman-Nemser (2001) argued, after decades of school reform, there is a growing consensus that the quality of schools depends on the quality of its teachers:
What students learn is directly related to what and how teachers teach, and what and how teachers teach depends on the knowledge, skills, and commitments they bring to their teaching and the opportunities they have to continue learning in and from their practice.
(p. 1013)
The relative contributions of initial teacher education programmes and schools to pre-service teachersâ professional learning have been an issue of concern in the field of teacher education (Athanases, Sanchez, & Martin, 2020; Brooks, 2021). The issue primarily pertains to the roles of the practical and theoretical aspects of initial teacher education in pre-service teachersâ professional learning. Faced with the global reform of teacher education, the most confounding and debated topic is the integration of âtheoretically based knowledge that has traditionally been taught in university classrooms with the experience-based knowledge that has traditionally been located in the practice of teachers and the realities of classrooms and schoolsâ (Darling-Hammond, 2006, p. 307). Also as Craig (2020) stated,
Teachersâ practices, reflecting their personal practical knowledge, will always be fluid and shape-shifting. Necessarily contoured by their own changing selves, teachersâ practices are contingent on the learners they teach, knowledge advances in the disciplines, innovations in the teaching field, unfurling social issues and crises (i.e. global pandemic), and the educational policies influencing the context in which their practices unfold.
(p. 14)
The theoryâpractice dichotomy has been identified as a perennial concern in initial teacher education (Korthagen, 2010). Great emphasis has been placed on bridging the gap between theory and practice when preparing pre-service teachers for their future work (Grossman et al., 2009). Researchers are constantly seeking the most relevant practices for facilitating the cultivation of well-balanced professional knowledge, reflective skills, and practical capabilities among teachers, which would enable them to manage the challenges of their profession (e.g. Athanases et al., 2020; Mulryan-Kyne, 2020). Therefore, more attention is being paid to the composition of and links between different types of knowledge, especially the practical knowledge that guides teachersâ professional practice and reveals how they re-conceptualise teaching (Wei, 2020).
Grossman et al.âs (2009) work informed the key features of the practical and conceptual aspects of initial teacher education. The practical aspects encompass multiple opportunities for practice in fieldwork and higher education settings, in addition to the practical tools introduced in teacher education coursework. The conceptual aspects â mainly delivered in higher education â include the conceptual tools that facilitate teachersâ framing and interpretations of practice, but they do not offer specific solutions for practice in classrooms and schools. Furlong (2013) framed one of the key issues as âhow much time should be devoted to examining professional issues theoretically by drawing on theory and research and how much [should be] devoted through direct practical experienceâ (p. 69). Initial teacher education in some places has transformed into more practice-oriented training in schools, and the role of the university role has been recast as one primarily concerned with the analytical dimensions of teacher education (Hodson, Smith, & Brown, 2012). However, a more balanced approach in conceptual and practical aspects characterises initial teacher education in other places.
Having enough competent teachers to impart values, knowledge, and skills to students has always been a central concern for policymakers worldwide. Consequently, teacher education has focused significantly on curricular and pedagogical matters, including the search for effective teaching for positive student learning outcomes (Darling-Hammond, 2017). Over time, teacher education has broadened its scope of interest to accommodate increasingly diverse structural, social, and professional issues. When it comes to teacher education, what happens in schools and classrooms is nested within each countryâs educational policy environments, which are governed by their distinct political system. Nations attempt to provide quality teaching and learning to students via teachers who are mostly employed by government agencies. Since teachers are professionals and social beings with distinct worldviews, they are frequently unable to implement policies that flow down the conduit to them in replicable ways. They necessarily must bring themselves, their emotions and personalities, and their relationships with students into the mix. Teachers also recognise that learners are thinking and feeling beings, not automatons. Like themselves, students require the creative licence to contribute to curriculum-making in ways that fulfil their needs and desires as learners.
Developing practical knowledge when learning to become a teacher is a highly complex and multi-faceted process that places unique demands on the cognitive, affective, and performance nature of the novice (Sancar, Atal, & Deryakulu, 2021). Prospective teachers need to learn how to act and effectively make on-the-spot judgments (Darling-Hammond, Hammerness, Grossman, Rust, & Shulman, 2005). They need to use the appropriate skills to do the right thing in a timely manner (Doyle & Carter, 1987) through careful observation and interpretation of the situation at hand (Biesta, 2015).
2.2 Initial teacher education in China
Orland-Barak and Lavrenteva (2019) summarised the six global trends of teacher education reform. They proposed that the global move towards advanced strategic, constructivist, and socio-cultural orientations to pre-service teachersâ learning is strongly reflected in the stated vision, mission, and curricula of local teacher education contexts worldwide. The following six major themes that reflect this vision appear to have become integral to initial teacher education programmes worldwide:
- the establishment of schoolâcommunityâuniversity partnerships;
- incorporating more school practice focused on pupil learning in the preparation of future teachers;
- a shift from a focus on teaching and curriculum to a focus on learning and learners;
- the inclusion of activities that promote reflective practice and the development of the teacher-as-researcher;
- academic and school spaces for fostering teacher learning that attends to social justice and inclusion; and
- preparation of teacher educators and provision of mentoring frameworks to support student teacher learning.
These six initial teacher education trends imply that pre-service teachersâ practical knowledge is integral to their professionalism and future sustainable development. Moreover, pre-service teachersâ practical knowledge inherently contains their understanding of the subject matter, context, students, and themselves.
The global trends in teacher education have also been observed in China. Over the past two decades, teacher education in China has undergone unprecedented changes, including the rapid expansion of enrolment, innovation and structural system reorganisation, mergers between institutions of higher learning, and teaching quality improvement (Xue & Li, 2021). As an important element of the system of higher education, teacher education cannot escape the formidable challenges presented by change. Initial teacher education has been shown to develop significantly within this environment.
However, teacher education in China has struggled to keep pace with changes in the countryâs education system for nearly four decades. Numerous state policies, which include government and the Chinese Communist Party policies, have shared the common goal of improving the teacher education system to support educational reform. The implemented reform measures were attempts to address issues such as system building, teacher preparation and training, the examination and certification of teachers, and recruitment and deployment of teachers for educational equality in the country.
In response to the stateâs calls for continued reform and the innovative improvement of the existing approa...