ABSTRACT
This study investigated how student teachers on a Scottish teacher education programme learn by reflecting on professional dialogue experiences. Reflection on one’s own experiences and practices is at the heart of all activities that teachers do. By linking professional dialogue with reflective practice, we examined factors that contribute to student teachers’ general approaches to professional learning on the programme and the way in which meaning is (co-)constructed and (re-)negotiated in professional dialogue. The results showed that the thought, discourse and social-affective dimensions of professional dialogue are inter-related. Furthermore, both student teachers’ personal background and their learning context may be related to the approaches to professional learning. The results also showed that student teachers' reflection tended to be descriptive with little or no consideration of the underlying educational issues or theories. In terms of discursive patterns, there was a tendency for one speaker to dominate professional dialogue or rather ‘professional monologue’. Therefore, we argue that there is a need for teacher education institutions to develop student teachers’ awareness of the value of professional dialogue and of the dialogic space it creates which has the potential to enhance and transform the opportunities for teacher professional learning.
Acknowledgments
This paper was presented at the European Educational Research Association annual conference in Copenhagen, August 2017. The authors were grateful to the students who participated in this study, and to Kate Wall and the anonymous reviewers who offered their feedback on various drafts of this manuscript.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.