Teacher education reform in the United States has been an ongoing theme over the past 100 years, particularly since A Nation at Risk in the 1980s, when education became increasingly politicized and less of a public good with which the American public did not tinker. These reforms have four different themes: (1) strengthening the clinical component of teacher education, (2) preparing educators with the tools needed for equity and social justice, (3) participating in heightened accountability demands, and (4) expanding alternative certifi¬cation. This chapter explores these four strands of reform and concludes they are colliding forces in which the country pours time, resources, and energy. Ongoing collisions on the reform landscape produce increasingly negative consequences for teacher education, teacher recruitment, and retention and America’s public schools.
CITATION STYLE
Yendol-Hoppey, D., Tanase, M., & Jacobs, J. (2023). TEACHER EDUCATION REFORM IN THE UNITED STATES: COLLIDING FORCES? In Advances in Research on Teaching (Vol. 42, pp. 61–82). Emerald Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1479-368720230000042012
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.