Electronic versions

  • Tanya Hathaway
    The University of New England
  • Peter Fletcher
    The University of New England
The aim of this study was to identify pre-service teachers’ ways of experiencing the teaching of diverse learners and to determine the aspects that are educationally critical in gaining a deeper understanding of teaching. We approached the question of teachers’ experiences in the context of the training of K-6 primary teachers, which takes place at university level. From survey data gathered, three dimensions of variation described the phenomenon associated with teaching and learner diversity: learner diversity in the context of the classroom; culture in the context of learner diversity; and responsive teaching actions in the context of learner diversity and culture. Each dimension comprised a continuum of awareness, and three distinctly different ways of seeing the phenomenon were identified. To the least sensitive, diversity was recognised as visible group difference and was subsequently either avoided or ignored. With an expansion of awareness, pre-service teachers recognised visible group difference that was accommodated or sustained and driven by the need to comply with curricula. At the most sensitive end of the scale, diversity was recognised as the inclusion of invisible difference and used to strengthen and enrich learning. The data revealed that pre-service teachers’ different ways of seeing and construing the teaching of diverse learners was shaped by their different ways of experiencing school-based learning. This study highlights the importance of preparing teachers with the awareness to appropriately discern difference among learners in order to negotiate the pedagogical challenges related to the impact of learner diversity.

Keywords

  • Pre-service teacher education, Learner diversity, Culture, Phenomenography, Pedagogy
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)83-104
JournalEducational Research for Policy and Practice
Volume17
Issue number2
Early online date2 Jun 2017
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2018
Externally publishedYes
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