Understanding the career intentions of pre-service teachers

Teacher attrition, which remains a concern in many countries, has been linked to the quality and context of teacher education, praxis shock, heavy workloads, isolation, occupational commitment, and the working conditions of teachers. Less understood are the motivations and intentions of pre-service...

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Main Author: Bennett, Dawn
Format: Conference Paper
Published: 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/63299
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author Bennett, Dawn
author_facet Bennett, Dawn
author_sort Bennett, Dawn
building Curtin Institutional Repository
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description Teacher attrition, which remains a concern in many countries, has been linked to the quality and context of teacher education, praxis shock, heavy workloads, isolation, occupational commitment, and the working conditions of teachers. Less understood are the motivations and intentions of pre-service teachers as they relate to teaching. This short paper reports from a project in which graduate-level, pre-service teachers considered their future work and career. Using text-based narratives, the paper highlights pre-service teachers’ thinking, with a particular focus on intended context, location and duration of career. The study employed Richardson and Watt’s FIT-choice model and found that analysis of presage and aspirational thinking together with the practical aspects of context, location and intended career duration, revealed sub-dimensions of the model not otherwise evident. Recommendations include evaluating the efficacy of storying techniques and guided reflections on teachers’ emerging teacher identities, and the use of written and visual narratives in longitudinal studies.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-632992018-02-06T06:16:26Z Understanding the career intentions of pre-service teachers Bennett, Dawn Teacher attrition, which remains a concern in many countries, has been linked to the quality and context of teacher education, praxis shock, heavy workloads, isolation, occupational commitment, and the working conditions of teachers. Less understood are the motivations and intentions of pre-service teachers as they relate to teaching. This short paper reports from a project in which graduate-level, pre-service teachers considered their future work and career. Using text-based narratives, the paper highlights pre-service teachers’ thinking, with a particular focus on intended context, location and duration of career. The study employed Richardson and Watt’s FIT-choice model and found that analysis of presage and aspirational thinking together with the practical aspects of context, location and intended career duration, revealed sub-dimensions of the model not otherwise evident. Recommendations include evaluating the efficacy of storying techniques and guided reflections on teachers’ emerging teacher identities, and the use of written and visual narratives in longitudinal studies. 2017 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/63299 restricted
spellingShingle Bennett, Dawn
Understanding the career intentions of pre-service teachers
title Understanding the career intentions of pre-service teachers
title_full Understanding the career intentions of pre-service teachers
title_fullStr Understanding the career intentions of pre-service teachers
title_full_unstemmed Understanding the career intentions of pre-service teachers
title_short Understanding the career intentions of pre-service teachers
title_sort understanding the career intentions of pre-service teachers
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/63299