“…Scholarship on teacher beliefs makes a strong case for the links between beliefs, identities and practice (Ashton, 2014;Pajares, 1992), not least when it comes to teacher beliefs about diversity, influenced by teachers' backgrounds, experiences and identities, and how these beliefs manifest themselves in how a teacher behaves in diverse classrooms (Osler and Starkey, 2010;Pohan, 1996;Rodríguez-Izquierdo et al, 2020;Silverman, 2010). Studies in this area highlight not only the risk of negative or stereotypical beliefs among student teachers detrimentally impacting on learners (Chan and Gao, 2014), but also the value of exploring the underlying, contextually based influences on teachers' identities, as well as their biographies in terms of migration (Haim and Tannenbaum, 2022), which, it has been argued, should be discussed within teacher education programmes (Cochran-Smith, 2003;Devine, 2005). Inevitably, then, the role of teacher education in developing and influencing teachers' beliefs is a focus in scholarship, identifying teacher educators as holding the potential to help or hinder student teachers to develop through their openness towards learning (Ell et al, 2017), and highlighting the importance of the teacher practicum experience, in-school mentoring and opportunities for critical reflection on teaching practice (Gay and Howard, 2000).…”