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What is Teacher Professionalism

Handbook of Research on Nurturing Industrial Economy for Africa’s Development
How teachers integrate their roles with knowledge and skills in order to enhance effective teaching and learning.
Published in Chapter:
Educational Changes and Teacher Identity in Tanzania: Implications for Industrial Development
Godlove Lawrent (University of Dodoma, Tanzania)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-6471-4.ch001
Abstract
This chapter highlights the extent to which the Tanzanian secondary education expansion policy shaped teacher identity and thereby affecting the country's industrial economy. The study approach was ‘qualitative', and social ‘cognitive theory' was adopted. The participants' lived experiences were gathered through interviews and document analysis. Findings revealed that the objectives stated in the policy were inconsistent with the actual enactment of strategies in relation to the improvement of teaching career. This has resulted in eroding teacher identity, particularly teacher efficacy. Teachers of this category would not (the author argues) help students to develop their capabilities of crucial to fully engage in industrial development. This chapter, therefore, supports a view that taking into account the social positioning of teachers when educational policies are developed and enacted would enhance their level of professional standards. These teachers may prepare competent school graduates, and hence be able to realise the set country's industrial development goals.
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Role Teacher: Teaching/Learning Competencies in a European Scenario
In the context of teachers’ professional life cycle, there are at least three stages of learning and shaping teachers’ professionalism: the years of initial training, where formal academic training should be provided; the induction to the role, where specific supervision and support are necessary as part of training; continuing professional development as new academic, formal advanced training opportunities are gradually introduced.
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