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ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Critically Adaptive Pedagogical Relations: The Relevance for Educational Policy and Practice

Morwenna Griffiths

Moray House School of Education, University of Edinburgh

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First published: 26 June 2013
Cited by: 4

Abstract

In this article Morwenna Griffiths argues that teacher education policies should be predicated on a proper and full understanding of pedagogical relations as contingent, responsive, and adaptive over the course of a career. Griffiths uses the example of the recent report on teacher education in Scotland, by Graham Donaldson, to argue that for all the report's considerable merits, it remains deficient because it does not attend to the complexity and contingency of pedagogical relations. The complexity arises from the existence of (at least) four analytically distinguishable pedagogical relations, each of which interacts with the others. These relations are contingent on the embodiment of teacher and students and on the political and sociocultural context of the class. Therefore they are also contingent on time, as teachers age and as the political and sociocultural context changes. Griffiths concludes the article with suggestions for creating a teaching profession in which teachers are reflectively and critically adaptive during the course of their careers.

Number of times cited: 4

  • , Relationships in early childhood education – beyond the professional into the personal within the teacher–child dyad: relationships ‘that ripple in the pond’, Early Child Development and Care, 188, 2, (88), (2018).
  • , References, Philosophical Perspectives on Teacher Education, (167-183), (2015).
  • , Prospective teachers development of adaptive expertise, Teaching and Teacher Education, 49, (108), (2015).
  • , Encouraging Imagination and Creativity in the Teaching Profession, European Educational Research Journal, 13, 1, (117), (2014).