“There's Going To Be Community. There's Going To Be Knowledge”: Designs For Learning In A Standardised Age

From Section:
Trends in Teacher Education
Countries:
Canada
Published:
Apr. 21, 2010

This article was published in Teaching and Teacher Education, Vol. 26, Issue 3, Author(s): Allison Skerrett, '“There's Going To Be Community. There's Going To Be Knowledge”: Designs For Learning In A Standardised Age', Pages 648-655, Copyright Elsevier (April 2010).

This paper uses the case of a secondary English department in Ontario, Canada, to examine the constraints that academic departments face in transforming themselves from communities of practice into learning communities.

This distinction between a community of practice and a learning community has taken on heightened importance as increasing curriculum standardisation and high stakes assessments further narrow the historically fragile opportunities for deep and collaborative teacher learning within the traditionally structured academic department.

The article proposes theoretical considerations and concrete strategies to assist academic departments in overcoming constraints to learning within an era of increasing standardisation and accountability.

The paper further explores how the international movement of educational post-standardisation promises greater opportunities for the development of teacher learning communities within academic departments.


Updated: Jan. 17, 2017
Keywords:
Accountability | Community of practice | Cooperative learning | Educational change | Secondary schools