Kuinka koulutamme inklusiivisia opettajia?

I will discuss the teacher education program at the University of Lapland. There is a need for teachers who are familiar with inclusive education and the indigenous pedagogy in the Nordic area, and education must be locally bounded and culturally relevant. This requires educating reflective practiti...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kyrö-Ämmälä, Outi
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.ulapland.fi/fi/publications/5fcfd1a5-b709-4cb1-9687-c82bef81b289
Description
Summary:I will discuss the teacher education program at the University of Lapland. There is a need for teachers who are familiar with inclusive education and the indigenous pedagogy in the Nordic area, and education must be locally bounded and culturally relevant. This requires educating reflective practitioners who consciously construct professional knowledge and practice through inquiry, observation, documentation, analysis and reflection in inclusive learning contexts. The aim of my presentation is also to turn attention to the future: Arctic Inclusive Teacher Education – Is it dream or reality? All Finnish teachers complete a master’s degree in education studies, which includes both academic studies and practical experience at schools. Research-based teacher education has a long tradition in Finland. However, the students’ motivation and commitment to research activities has been low; students have considered research and pedagogical studies unconnected. They have also regarded research studies as irrelevant to teachers’ work; they have not seen the connection between research and their teaching practices (Hakala 1992; McKenzie & Santiago, 2005). To fill this gap, the aim of the University of Lapland’s teacher education program is for students to come to consider pedagogical studies, research studies and teaching practices as interlinked (cf. Kolb’s experimental learning theory). This will help them to make good use of theoretical work, not only during their teaching practice, but also in the future, as qualified teachers. At University of Lapland, inclusive education is the thread running through the research-based teacher education program. When graduating, all teachers should have attitudinal and educational personal resources to engage diverse learners from different cultural backgrounds. They should also be able to recognize pupils’ individual needs and prerequisites, and have the ability to support individual and collaborative learning processes. On the grounds of previous research results, teachers’ ...