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Michele Caracappa's avatar

This is so well-said spot on: “The big radical ideas get digested by the teaching profession until all that’s left are those catnip practices. In thirty years, BTC will be unknown, but there will still be schools that swear by vertical non-permanent surfaces. It’s just how it goes.” So is it that teachers love theories or that the grand theoretical claim is what’s necessary for the practical hacks to get adopted?

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Tom Gething's avatar

We have a number of pathologies as a profession that get us into trouble over time. It's why you see so many ideas that are simply reframed, reworded or re-legislated ideas from previous decades. Of course, all that revision is often rolled into the discourse as a way of justifying the resurrection of these ideas. Partly that's a natural consequence of the way education works, but it is not necessary always beneficial :)

Earlier this week on twitter Ben Newmark made a point very similar to yours. He suggested that most educational books were a lot of padding and that the valuable ideas for a jobbing teacher are really only a blogpost long. I have sympathy for that viewpoint and I think it ties in to what you are saying. I also wonder if part of the issue is a mismatch behind why most people write edbooks and what teachers are capable of applying. Most authors have worked hard on developing an idea and all the mechanisms that go with it. Their new silver bullet needs to be implemented with complete fidelity and all these strategies and tips are connected. Problem is as a teacher we are not often in aa position to implement everything. Time gets in the way; administration gets in the way; lack of resources and competing priorities. So we jump at the mircro-strategies and stick them in. We have made it better, even if not completely, haven't we? And if it starts to work we are of course happy and so it becomes part of the repetoire. We probably get better and better at it, understand it more deeply, more intuitively and so are more comfortable with it. Then when somebody else later on says 'hold on, this is better' we naturally, and quite logically, dig our metaphorical heals in.

It's hard being a teacher, isn't it? Then why am I so pumped to start work next week?!

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