This paper explores the challenges of espousing a critical pedagogy within the managerial climate that presently shapes teacher education. It argues that current discourses of professionalism are incommensurate with a view of literacy as social practice and that they disregard complex semiotic ecologies in which both school and university students operate. Graduate teachers are constructed as the ‘providers’ of decontextualised literacy skills to school students whose existing communication networks are ignored. Rejecting this narrow view of professional practice, we draw on activity theory to analyse the social configuration of tertiary students’ identities and the textual resources that mediate their professional learning. This kind of research is needed to reveal the contradictions within and between activity systems in which tertiary students participate as well as to construct possible solutions to the contradictions identified.
History
Pagination
1 - 18
Location
Auckland, New Zealand
Open access
Yes
Start date
2003-11-29
End date
2003-12-03
ISSN
1176-4902
Language
eng
Notes
Reproduced with kind permission of the copyright owner.
Publication classification
E1.1 Full written paper - refereed
Copyright notice
2003, The authors
Editor/Contributor(s)
E van Til
Title of proceedings
NZARE/AARE 2003 : Educational research, risks and dilemmas : New Zealand Association for Research in Education and the Australian Association for Research in Education