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Journal of Education for Teaching
International research and pedagogy
Volume 46, 2020 - Issue 1
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Articles

Why ‘clinical teaching’? An interdisciplinary analysis of metaphor in initial teacher preparation

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Pages 87-98 | Received 26 Nov 2018, Accepted 20 Mar 2019, Published online: 25 Dec 2019
 

ABSTRACT

The term ‘clinical’ is increasingly used to define the kind of teaching initial teacher education will produce. While affordances of this metaphor have been claimed, it has been less widely critiqued. As a teacher and a medical doctor, we bring our interdisciplinary understandings of curriculum studies and medicine to this analysis, to theorise what this discursive construct puts to work for education. In considering how ‘clinical teaching’ is used across the literatures of education and medicine, we find that claims made in relation to these affordances, such as novelty, and detachment from medical entailments, are flawed, and that instead, the word ‘clinical’ does political work as a hierarchical, gendered, normalising and de-professionalising force.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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