The SAGE Handbook of Research on Teacher Education offers an ambitious and international overview of the current landscape of teacher education research, as well as the imagined futures. The two volumes are divided into sub-sections: Section One: Mapping the Landscape of Teacher Education Section Two: Learning Teacher Identity in Teacher Education Section Three: Learning Teacher Agency in Teacher Education Section Four: Learning Moral & Ethical Responsibilities of Teaching in Teacher Education Section Five: Learning to Negotiate Social, Political, and Cultural Responsibilities of Teaching in Teacher Education Section Six: Learning through Pedagogies in Teacher Education Section Seven: Learning the Contents of Teaching in Teacher Education Section Eight: Learning Professional Competencies in Teacher Education and throughout the Career Section Nine: Learning with and from Assessments in Teacher Education Section Ten: The Education and Learning of Teacher Educators Section Eleven: The Evolving Social and Political Contexts of Teacher Education Section Twelve: A Reflective Turn This handbook is a landmark collection for all those interested in current research in teacher education and the possibilities for how research can influence future teacher education practices and policies. Watch handbook editors D. Jean Clandinin and Jukka Husu and handbook working editorial board members Jerry Rosiek, Mistilina Sato and Auli Toom discuss key aspects of the new handbook: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yee8cZVakfc

Mapping an International Handbook of Research in and for Teacher Education

Mapping an International Handbook of Research in and for Teacher Education

D. Jean Clandinin Jukka Husu

Faced with the daunting task of editing an international handbook of research on teacher education, we spent a great deal of time discussing ways we might conceptualize the task. We were mindful from the outset that, as Bullough (2012) pointed out, ‘a collection of articles does not a handbook make’ (p. 141). To make his point Bullough drew on what Boyer (1990) characterized as the

scholarship of integration [which] involves doing research at the boundaries where fields converge … [It] also means interpretation, fitting one's own research – or the research of others – into larger intellectual patterns. Such efforts are increasingly ...

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