Show simple item record

FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorSwist, Teresa
dc.contributor.authorMarkauskaite, Lina
dc.contributor.authorGoodyear, Peter
dc.contributor.authorWrigley, Cara
dc.contributor.authorMosely, Genevieve
dc.date.accessioned2024-07-23T06:09:35Z
dc.date.available2024-07-23T06:09:35Z
dc.date.issued2024-07-23
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2123/32837
dc.description.abstractThis document presents an ecological framework to support the development of teachers' interdisciplinary expertise. It addresses the growing need for teachers to engage with the complex challenges of 21st-century teaching and work with knowledge from different fields. The framework is based on an ecological perspective that considers the complex interactions between teachers’ personal resourcefulness, their immediate environments, and the wider institutional and societal contexts. This document is constructed as a compass rather than a detailed guide or map to help readers understand and navigate the complex space of teachers’ interdisciplinary practices, expertise and learning. It acknowledges that teaching practices change—sometimes very rapidly—and there is no single pathway for developing teachers’ interdisciplinary expertise; new directions and possibilities can be opened by engaging with a range of theory, research, and practice insights when tailoring them to specific professional education needs and contexts. The document provides a detailed overview of the framework and its different aspects at micro, meso, and macro levels. At the micro level, the framework focuses on developing teachers (multi)disciplinary foundations, interdisciplinary know-how, and epistemic flexibility and interdisciplinary dispositions. At the meso level, the framework focuses on teachers’ capabilities to engage in interdisciplinary ways of working, to create tools and environments, as well as a shared language and distributed agency. At the macro level, the framework focuses on teachers’ capacities to navigate and shape interdisciplinary knowledge systems and cultures, including policies, infrastructures, institutions, networks, and communities. The document outlines research-practice insights into how this framework can be applied in practice and activities to assist teacher educators and other stakeholders in using the presented ideas in the design of pre-service and in-service teacher education courses. It discusses some key considerations for institutional and system-level policy and decision-making. The document suggests that the development of interdisciplinary expertise is everyone’s responsibility—teacher educators, institutional and system-level. While pre-service and in-service teacher educators can embrace interdisciplinary focus in specific courses, this alone cannot ensure that all teachers and, consequentially, students are benefiting. System-level decisions and changes are needed to ensure the broad reach of interdisciplinary education and equity.en
dc.language.isoenen
dc.rightsCreative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0en
dc.subjectinterdisciplinary educationen
dc.subjectteacher educationen
dc.subjectprofessional learningen
dc.subjectinterdisciplinary expertiseen
dc.subjectecological approachen
dc.subjectdesign for learningen
dc.titleDeveloping teachers’ interdisciplinary expertise: An ecological framework for professional learningen
dc.typeReport, Researchen
dc.subject.asrcANZSRC FoR code::39 EDUCATION::3903 Education systems::390307 Teacher education and professional development of educatorsen
dc.subject.asrcANZSRC FoR code::39 EDUCATION::3904 Specialist studies in education::390409 Learning sciencesen
dc.subject.asrcANZSRC FoR code::39 EDUCATION::3901 Curriculum and pedagogy::390102 Curriculum and pedagogy theory and developmenten
dc.identifier.doi10.25910/jr15-ts36
atmire.cua.enabled
dc.relation.arcDP200100376
dc.relation.otherG212673
usyd.facultySeS faculties schools::Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences::Sydney School of Education and Social Worken
workflow.metadata.onlyNoen


Show simple item record

Associated file/s

Associated collections

Show simple item record

There are no previous versions of the item available.