Susan Bassnettās account of the inadequacies of universitiesā contribution to initial teacher training provoked much debate among my teacher educator colleagues ā mostly about which of her assertions were the most patronising and ill-informed (āTeaching turn-offsā, Opinion, 14ĢżNovember). For me, her assumption that we have not considered canvassing the views of recent PGCE graduates about their training (together with her apparent belief that talking to two family members is a reliable sampling method) was a strong contender. For others, it was the fact that despite apparently listening to āhours ofĢżdebateā¦about how to train teachersā, Bassnett has no idea about the realities of teacher education today.
Her claim that teacher training has ābegun to move out of universitiesā is misleading: PGCEs have been delivered in partnership with schools for decades, and schools (and Ofsted) continue to be overwhelmingly positive about the quality of teachers emerging from these partnerships. As āschool-ledā reforms gather pace, there is every indication that schools value universitiesā distinctive contribution even more. They clearly understand, as Bassnett appears not to, that preparing teachers for the complexity of the classroom involves both education and training, and that the best PGCEs are the result ofĢżstrong university-school partnerships.
I feel sorry for the mathematician in Bassnettās family who has left the profession, and believe that schools of education could play a more significant role in providing early career support for their PGCE graduates. However, I have opted to work constructively on this important matter with our school partners rather than carp from the sidelines.
Chris Wilkins
Director of teacher education
School of Education
University of Leicester
Ģż
Dear Times Higher Education, please could IĢżhave a page in the magazine devoted to my analysis of comparative literature and translation studies? I read Susan Bassnettās article on teacher education and I guess that she knows as little about that subject as I do about her discipline. However, I have read some books and compared them, so perhaps Iām overqualified. I promise to refer only to the views of friends or relatives, rather than to anything about which I have first-hand knowledge.
Julian Stern
Dean of education and theology
York St John University
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