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…allows sharing of understanding in ways that can commonly be used within the profession and shift the intention of sharing from an over-reliance on activities that work to more informed examination of the pedagogical intent underpinning practice…[It] allows us to discuss what we know and how we know it in meaningful ways which, inevitably, are embedded in understandings of practice at a much deeper level.The reasons for generating a shared language of teaching and learning described by Loughran (2010) are argued for in a similar way by those who draw from the European tradition of didactical approaches to teaching and learning (Hudson and Meyer, 2011; Quennerstedt and Larsson, 2015), where there is an emphasis on understanding and connecting the why , what , and how of teaching. In this view of didactics (also didactique or didaktik) the why, what, and how of teaching are considered to reside in knowledge of the relationships between teachers, pupils, and subject matter, which must also take into account contextual considerations at the individual, school, and societal levels (Hudson and Meyer, 2011; Klafki, 2006). A shared language of teaching and learning may then be generated by thoughtful examination, integration, and articulation of the why, what, and how of teaching practice and the different contexts in which teaching practice occurs (Loughran, 2010).…”