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Journal of Teacher Education | 1997

Long-Term PDS Development in Research Universities and the Clinicalization of Teacher Education.

Robert V. Bullough; Sharon F. Hobbs; Donald P. Kauchak; Nedra Crow; David Stokes

In the past decade, educational reformers have created professional development schools (PDSs) similar to those the Holmes Group (1986) and the Carnegie Forum (1986) advocated. PDSs aims are now commonplace: provide exemplary education for preservice teachers, support continuing professional development of experienced teachers, and involve schools and universities in collaborative research. Underpinning this work is the assumption that school reform and the reform of teacher education require simultaneous renewal (Goodlad, 1994, p. 236). Collaboration should transform the school and university cultures (Case, Norlander, & Reagan, 1993; Stoddart, 1993) and result in improved teacher education and increased learning in schools. For this reason, Robinson and Darling-Hammond (1994) conclude, PDSs are much more than a fashionable new idea. They are an imperative of professional responsibility in education (p. 217). Creating PDSs has resulted in new staffing patterns. In research-oriented universities, clinical faculty are assuming increasingly important roles in teacher education (Fullan, Galluzzo, Morris, & Watson, 1996). The place and role of non-tenure-track faculty undoubtedly will expand as programs increase and enrich connections between schools and universities. The American Association of University Professors has expressed concern that increased use of non-tenure-line faculty for university instruction will result in lower educational quality (American Association of University Professors, Committee G, 1993). However, the most recent Holmes Group report (1995) argues that clinical faculty should form a living bridge between campus and practice as they share with colleagues on campus responsibilities associated with the Professional Development School agenda and with the development and operation of professional studies programs. Differentiated roles will be developed, where faculty having their tenure with the schools collaborate with faculty tenured with the university in making significant contributions to programs of teaching and inquiry (p. 62). The Department of Educational Studies at the University of Utah is experimenting with a variety of staffing patterns that include clinical faculty (Ellsworth & Albers, 1995; Fullan et al., 1996). The department, centrally responsible for secondary and elementary school certification programs, is large and diverse, combining undergraduate, masters, and doctoral programs and specialty areas in teaching and learning strategies; and cultural, critical, and curriculum studies. Members of the department have been involved in PDS-related work since the late 1970s (Nutting, 1982). We conducted a study of seven current and former PDS sites and interviewed more than 60 informants to identify program strengths, weaknesses, and issues requiring attention (Bullough, Kauchak, Crow, Hobbs, & Stokes, 1996). The place of clinical faculty in teacher education emerged as a critical issue, resulting in a second, descriptive case study (Yin, 1989), which we report in this article. In this article, we explore through the eyes of clinical, non-tenure-track, and tenure-line university faculty the increased use of clinical faculty in teacher education programs, a shift resulting in what we call the clinicalization of teacher education. Four sections follow. First, we present a brief institutional history of our PDS work and the staffing patterns that evolved. Second, we describe the study. Third, we present themes emerging from our data. Finally, we consider implications of our findings for future PDS development. PDS: A Brief History In the late 1970s, University of Utah faculty and staff, anticipating PDSs, created elementary Professional Development Centers (PDCs) as sites for pre- and inservice teacher education and research (Nutting, 1982). In the late 1980s, the Department of Educational Studies restructured elementary and secondary teacher preparation programs to include extensive field components and extended coursework and was thus in a strong position to respond to the Holmes Group (1986) agenda to establish Professional Development Schools, despite no external funding. …


Archive | 1992

Emerging as a teacher

Robert V. Bullough; J. G. Knowles; Nedra Crow; Gerald Grace; Martin Lawn


Teaching and Teacher Education | 1997

Professional development schools: Cataylsts for teacher and school change

Robert V. Bullough; Don Kauchak; Nedra Crow; Sharon F. Hobbs; David Stokes


Journal of Teacher Education | 1995

Interdisiplinary Collaboration: Variations on a Theme:

Nancy Winitzky; Susan M. Sheridan; Nedra Crow; Marshall Welch; Colleen Kennedy


Archive | 1995

Interdisciplinary Collaboration: Variations on a Theme

Nancy Winitzky; Susan M. Sheridan; Nedra Crow; Marshall Welch; Colleen Kennedy


The Clearing House | 1998

Professional Development Schools: Catalysts for Collaboration and Change

Sharon F. Hobbs; Robert V. Bullough; Don Kauchak; Nedra Crow; David Stokes


EdMedia: World Conference on Educational Media and Technology | 2009

Using video for supervision of special education teacher candidates: A promising practice

Joan Sebastian; Glee Shaddock; Nedra Crow


Society for Information Technology & Teacher Education International Conference | 2002

A Distance Education ESL Endorsement Program: Failures and Successes

Joan Sebastian; Peter Serdyukov; Nedra Crow


world conference on www and internet | 2000

DEEEP - Distance Professional Development Program for Teachers: Evolutionary Transformation

Nedra Crow; Joan Sebastian; Peter Serdiukov


Society for Information Technology & Teacher Education International Conference | 2000

Delivering a Distance Education Graduate and Professional Development Program: Integrating Multiple Technologies

Nedra Crow; Joan Sebastian

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Susan M. Sheridan

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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