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The Reform of Pre-Service Teacher Education in Turkey Hasan
Simsek & Ali Yildirim Introduction Observers
of world educational systems would quickly acknowledge that the last
decade has been, in many respects, one marked by reform and restructuring.
Such major political figures as Bill Clinton and Tony Blair have declared
education as the most pressing priority on their national agenda. Among
the many issues and challenges that several governments have identified in
the field of education, the training of tomorrow’s teachers features
highly, connecting as it does with so many concerns and aspirations of
both policy-makers and clients. Nations are aware that the quality of
education that can be offered to future generations very much depends on
the quality of the teachers that are being formed to facilitate learning
in a world characterized by change. In this chapter we will attempt to
draw a picture of a recent initial teacher training reform in Turkey,
taking care to locate the changes within their socio-political context, as
well as to highlight the issues, expectations and aspirations that marked
the reform process. In doing so, we felt that it was important to locate
initial teacher education initiatives in Turkey within the context of
world-wide trends in the field, in order to identify common trends and
patterns, and to be in a better position to understand how reform ideas
and policies ‘travel’ across national
boundaries. . . . . . . |