Pre-service Teachers’ Appropriation of Conceptual Tools

Authors

  • Honorine Nocon
  • Ellen H. Robinson

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7146/ocps.v15i2.16833

Keywords:

Conceptual tools, appropriation, tertiary artifacts, methodology

Abstract

Teachers and teacher educators in the US struggle with conflicting needs. They must think
critically and adaptively in response to the rapidly changing demographics of their students and
adjust to a policy climate that emphasizes standardization, measurement, and disregard for
teachers as professionals. Embattled pre-service teacher education programs in institutions of
higher education have traditionally sought to develop teacher candidates’ knowledge, skills, and
dispositions. The authors argue that in the current climate pre-service teachers also must
appropriate conceptual frameworks to support their development as responsive professionals.
While dispositions are beliefs and attitudes the origin and teaching of which remain in dispute,
concepts like social justice, political-economic equity, and formative assessment are abstract ideas
or concepts that inform practice. Conceptual tools, i.e., concepts, theories, and frameworks, guide
novice teachers in making decisions in response to the growing and rapidly changing student
populations they will teach as well as the policy contexts that constrain their teaching practice.
The appropriation of conceptual tools contributes to development of vision and adaptive expertise
required by responsive teacher professionals.
Using an activity theory framework developed by Wartofsky (1973/1979) that draws in particular
on the classification of artifacts, or tools, this article frames and critically examines teachers’
need for conceptual tools, the appropriation of those tools, and a mixed methods study of that
appropriation. The study demonstrates that teacher candidates do appropriate conceptual tools,
but that measurement of that process, though desirable in the current policy context, requires the
development of a systematic and replicable methodology.

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Published

2014-04-14

How to Cite

Nocon, H., & Robinson, E. H. (2014). Pre-service Teachers’ Appropriation of Conceptual Tools. Outlines. Critical Practice Studies, 15(2), 93–118. https://doi.org/10.7146/ocps.v15i2.16833

Issue

Section

Articles