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PROGRAMME

KEYNOTE SPEAKERS

Suzanne Wilson Neag Endowed Professor of Teacher Education

Suzanne WilsonNeag Endowed Professor of Teacher Education

Dr. Suzanne M. Wilson is a Neag Endowed Professor of Teacher Education at the University of Connecticut where she currently serves as Professor in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction. Wilson also served as the first director of the Teacher Assessment Project (PI, Lee Shulman), which developed prototype assessments for the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards. More about Suzanne here.

Democracy and Teacher Education Under Siege

A confluence of forces—a pandemic, disruptive and (at times) toxic politics, and heightened urgency concerning racism, inequality, and inhumanity—shape our lives worldwide. Some scholars have argued that democracy is currently under siege. Many in teacher education would argue the same of teacher preparation. How do we, as individual teacher educators and as a community, understand our role in this time?  How do we prepare teachers to participate in democratic dialogue that embraces difference and the difficult conversations those differences involve? How do we participate in that same dialogue with empathy, integrity, and understanding? What core challenges do we face?

 

Neil Selwyn  Professor, School of Education Culture and Society, Faculty of Education

Neil Selwyn  Professor, School of Education Culture and Society, Faculty of Education

Neil's research focuses on the place of digital media in everyday life, and the sociology of technology (non) use in educational settings. He's written on issues including digital exclusion, education technology policymaking and the student experience of technology-based learning. Neil is a member of Education Futures, an innovative 'think tank' that undertakes cutting edge translational research, conducts roundtables, forums and other events for educators and policy makers, and regularly publishes ‘thought leadership’ pieces in current and future priority areas of educational practice.

More about Neil here. Blog: Neil Selwyn is a distinguished professor in the Faculty of Education, Monash University (Melbourne). Recent books include: ‘Education and technology: key issues and debates’ (Bloomsbury, 2022) and ‘Should robots replace teachers?’ (Polity, 2019). Twitter:  @neil_selwyn

Education in uncertain times…the benefits of foresight and hindsight

As ATEE members will be well aware, teacher education and teaching currently face heightened levels of uncertainty and disruption. Yet, as our conference theme implies, this is not the first (nor the last) time that education seems in a state of flux and impending crisis. In this presentation, Neil Selwyn considers how the conference might engage with ideas of ‘foresight and hindsight’ in ways that can help make sense of where we might like education to be progressing next.

 In particular, Neil takes some of the key questions being addressed at the conference, and considers what can be learnt both from the history of education and the emerging area of 'futures studies'. For example, with the benefit of hindsight what does it mean to anticipate the end of the professionally-trained expert teacher? Alternately, with the benefit of foresight, what does it mean to anticipate inclusive and equitable quality education for all?

 These examples demonstrate the benefits of reframing our current educational concerns through the lenses of foresight and hindsight – offering a sense of clarity, criticality and collective consciousness that can otherwise easily be lost amidst the minutiae of our day-to-day work. These examples also highlight the need for education communities to be more proactive in telling their own histories, as well as becoming more engaged in beginning to collectively and critically anticipate their possible futures.

The presentation concludes with a call to develop spaces within teacher education and educational studies where we can continue looking to the past and to the future in order to make the best of our present situation.

 Tom-Walsh_Profile picture

Dr. Thomas Walsh, Senior Lecturer, Deputy Head of Department, School of Education
Dr Thomas Walsh is a senior lecturer and Deputy Head of Department in the Department of Education at Maynooth University. Tom joined the Department in 2014 having previously worked as a primary school teacher, an education researcher and a primary school inspector at the Department of Education and Skills. He has written a range of chapters and articles in these areas and is involved in a number of research projects (e.g., a SCoTENS project on constructions of childhood and a Teaching Council project on team teaching). His book, Primary Education in Ireland 1897-1990: Curriculum and Context, was published by Peter Lang International Academic Publishers in 2012.   More about Tom here.

Teacher Education in Ireland: Chequered Past, Contested Present, Creative Possibilities

A strong relationship between the quality of teaching and the quality of learning has long been recognised, making teacher quality a perennial issue both in Ireland and internationally. Given the many purposes, foci and functions of the education system in Ireland in both the colonial era (up to 1922) and since, teacher selection, training/education, recruitment and management have been topical and contested issues. As well as placing an emphasis on teachers’ pedagogical competencies, there has been a concomitant focus on their personal character and identity historically. These discourses, and the resulting vision of the teacher, continue to be both influenced by and resistant to international trends and developments. All of this has placed an ongoing spotlight on teacher education and teacher educator policy and practice.
 
This keynote address traces key trends in the historical evolution of teacher education policy and practice in the Irish context over the past two centuries. While the focus will be on primary teacher education policy, the analysis will be infused by lines of convergence and divergence from early childhood education, post-primary education and further education. The analysis is framed within the wider socio-political context of teacher education policy, exploring the various supranational and macro influences that have impacted on teacher education policy in Ireland. A particular emphasis will be placed on the multiplicity of developments in the past decade, most notably the embedding of a continuum of teacher education and the professional accreditation of teacher education programmes. A number of themes and issues permeate the address, including teacher identity and teacher diversity, as well as tensions between discourses of the trusted and agentic teacher educator and increasing regimes of regulation and accountability. The keynote concludes with some signposts as to the future directions of teacher education policy in Ireland in a post-Covid context given the past and current trajectories.

 

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Please see link below for provisional programme

https://www.conftool.com/ateedublin2022/sessions.php

Please note that the programme is provisional and it might be subject to change.