To turn "a research
report into a good read," was the challenge taken up by the
three British authors of the book, What Makes a Good Primary
School Teacher?. By painstakingly examining the teaching practices
of nearly two dozen "expert" elementary educators of Year
2 and Year 6 students, and combining numerous classroom observations
with interviews and activities that probed these teachers' value
commitments and philosophical positions, Gipps, McCallum and Hargreaves
have provided an insightful set of answers to their guiding question.
We all know that teaching
is a highly complex enterprise. Most often, experienced teachers
are less able to articulate what they know and to explain what they
do than novice and preservice teachers would like (and need) to
hear. Planning, strategizing, presenting, explaining, questioning,
reinforcing, reviewing and assessing are all instructionally related
activities that look seamless, natural, and sometimes nearly effortless
in the hands of experienced teachers. Yet these activities form
successful practice only to the extent that they are built on solid
foundations of content and pedagogical knowledge, ethical principles
related to the treatment of others who are under one's guidance,
and commitments to careful observation, clear communication, and
continual reflection. The book, What Makes a Good Primary School
Teacher?, takes what are often implicit foundations and makes
them explicit and therefore examinable. This is the book's strength
as a teaching tool and the main reason I would recommend it to teacher
educators at the elementary level, with two cautions that I will
mention shortly.
The book is divided
into seven parts that focus on various aspects of teaching from
planning through evaluation. Classroom vignettes are freshly presented
and at the same time represent instantly recognizable events and
familiar conversations. Analysis and commentary follow each scenario.
The researchers identify popular lesson patterns, highlight successful
teacher-student interactions, and describe in vivid detail the ways
in which these expert teachers communicate their expectations, respond
to individual needs, and keep lessons dynamic and purposeful. One
of the potentially useful sections for aspiring teachers concerns
formative assessments, those minute-by-minute "on the ground"
judgments, that teachers continually need to make about students'
progress and understandings.
In the main, the book
serves as a good example of the role that responsible educational
research can play in improving practice. The British educational
philosopher, John Chambers, has repeatedly called for just this
kind of close and fine-grained study of actual classrooms and teachers
in order to make sense of our educational ideals and the realization
of them in particular contexts. But here is where my two cautions
come in. The first relates to something I wanted to see and did
not, and that is an adequate and fully developed synthesis of the
many findings; a synthesis that goes beyond commonplace truisms
about learners and subject matter. The research itself revealed
more nuanced and subtle discoveries than those that are brought
together in the final chapter. The second thing I missed was a humble
acknowledgement of the limitations of this sort of research into
teaching. As painstaking as the researchers' efforts were to dissect
and examine aspects of practice, there is an element of magic and
mystery in the best teacher-student relationships, an ineffable
quality referred to by writers as diverse as Martin Buber and Maxine
Greene. Though teachers' intentions and motivating reasons for action
can and should be probed, in the final analysis the practice of
a truly inspiring teacher is even more than the sum of its parts.