Classroom Management in a Dutch Teacher Education Program: A Realistic Approach

From Section:
Instruction in Teacher Training
Countries:
Netherlands
Published:
May. 01, 2011

Source: Teaching Education, Volume 22, Issue 2, 2011, pages 169-184.

A solid knowledge base that can function as a frame of reference can help the teachers to organize their thinking.
However, theoretical knowledge is easily ‘washed out’ during the first confrontations with practice.
Therefore, several Dutch university‐based teacher education programs use a realistic approach to teacher education.

In realistic teacher education, the integration of theory and practice is promoted by combining learning at the university and the school from the very start of the program, by tailoring the program to the individual students' needs, and by cooperation between university‐based teacher educators and supervisors in the schools.

In the university‐based part of the program, students' concerns are taken as the starting point for teaching and theory is introduced as a means to enrich students' reflections on their experiences in their classrooms and schools.

In this article, the authors describe the teacher education program of the Leiden University Graduate School of Teaching, which has recently made a shift towards a realistic approach to teacher education, and how classroom management is taught in this program.

Evaluation data are presented showing the success of this approach.


Updated: Dec. 01, 2019
Keywords:
Beginning teachers | Classroom techniques | Teacher education programs | Teacher educators | Teaching methods | University - school collaboration