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‘Letting the right one in’: Provider contexts for recruitment to initial teacher education in the United Kingdom
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

‘Letting the right one in’: Provider contexts for recruitment to initial teacher education in the United Kingdom

Peter Davies, Mark Connolly, James Nelson, Moira Hulme, John Kirkman and Celia Greenway
Teaching and Teacher Education, Vol.60, pp.291-302
11/2016

Abstract

Adverse selection Alternative routes into teaching Entry to teaching Professionalism and craft conceptions of teaching Teacher quality ‘Home international’ comparison Education
We exploit policy differences within the UK to investigate provider context and recruitment to initial teacher education (ITE). We identify three dimensions of variation: conceptions of professionalism, universal or context specific preparation and costs and benefits to providers. University-led ITE programmes used similar criteria and processes in each jurisdiction, but there were differences between university-led and school-led recruitment. Our study suggests that the current shortfall in recruitment to ITE in England may be a product of the contextual constraints which schools experience. It also suggests that school-led recruitment may tend to emphasise short-term and school-specific needs.
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