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How front-end loading contributes to creating and sustaining the theory-practice gap in higher education programs

journal contribution
posted on 2011-05-01, 00:00 authored by Jeanne Allen
How front-end loading contributes to creating and sustaining the theory-practice gap in higher education programs

History

Journal

Asia-Pacific education review

Volume

12

Issue

2

Pagination

289 - 299

Publisher

Springer

Location

Dordrecht, The Netherlands

ISSN

1598-1037

eISSN

1876-407X

Language

eng

Notes

In this paper, I show how Mead’s theory of emergence can prove explanatory in how the theory-practice gap is co-created and sustained in front-end loading university programs. Taking teacher education as an exemplar, I argue that trainee teachers encounter different and oft-times conflicting environmental, social and cultural conditions in the two ‘fields of interaction’ of their training program, namely, the on-campus pre-service program and the in-school experience. The argument draws on interview and focus group data collected via a study of first-year graduate teachers of an Australian pre-service teacher education program. My conclusions are two-fold. First, I argue that role taking and self-regulated behaviour within the two environmental fields of interaction in front-end loading programs inhibit the trainee professional from exercising the power of agency to implement theory learned at university in practice in the workplace. Second, I conclude that Mead’s theory of emergence proves effective in predicting the obduracy of the gap between theory and practice in front-end programs.

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, Springer

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