2014
DOI: 10.1177/016146811411600407
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The Challenge and Promise of Complexity Theory for Teacher Education Research

Abstract: Background/Context In many countries, there are multiple studies intended to improve initial teacher education. These have generally focused on pieces of teacher education rather than wholes, and have used an underlying linear logic. It may be, however, that what is needed are new research questions and theoretical frameworks that account for wholes, not just parts, and take complex, rather than reductionist perspectives. Purpose This article examines the challenges and the promises of complexity theory as a f… Show more

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Cited by 146 publications
(58 citation statements)
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References 60 publications
(131 reference statements)
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“…Considering emergence, complexity theories developed in studies of biology, mathematics, and computer science offer explanations for the emergence of phenomena that cannot be predicted by their initial state (Osberg et al, 2008). Davis and Sumara (2006), who played a key role in demonstrating how these theories can be generative in education research (Cochran-Smith et al, 2014), offer complexity thinking as a set of conceptual tools for destabilizing many commonplace ideas about classroom practice. One such tool we apply analytically is an understanding of the vitality of de-centralized forms of organization that allow for group interaction to exchange information and make changes without top-down control.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Considering emergence, complexity theories developed in studies of biology, mathematics, and computer science offer explanations for the emergence of phenomena that cannot be predicted by their initial state (Osberg et al, 2008). Davis and Sumara (2006), who played a key role in demonstrating how these theories can be generative in education research (Cochran-Smith et al, 2014), offer complexity thinking as a set of conceptual tools for destabilizing many commonplace ideas about classroom practice. One such tool we apply analytically is an understanding of the vitality of de-centralized forms of organization that allow for group interaction to exchange information and make changes without top-down control.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The social role of educators as catalysts of change and agents of critical development has been conscientiously eroded over the last forty years, as they have been repositioned as mere operators in the service of predefined market standards (Rudd & Goodson, 2016). Teaching is too often approached as a technical skill, based solely on psychological and pedagogical procedures, but ideally devoid of aesthetic or moral dimensions and ostensibly detached from social engagement (Martínez Bonafé, 2001), as well as from familiar or community links (Cochran-Smith et al, 2014;Zeichner et al, 2016); indifferent to what Castañeda (2021) was called "the social commitment" by Castañeda et al (2021). This bare-bones technical conception of the teachers' role is clearly reflected in how the 'new' teacher's competences for the digital world have traditionally been understood.…”
Section: / 17mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We propose that the inherently complex and interactive nature of PSTs’ learning to enact CRP in programs, practicum schools, and classrooms calls for a different lens to conceptualize research on teacher education. Cochran-Smith et al (2014), along with Strom and Martin (2017), powerfully illustrate the possibilities of conceptualizing the process of learning to teach as nonlinear, complex, and contingent causal processes with human and nonhuman factors. Furthermore, the work by Indigenous scholars, as described earlier, has always attended to complexity and is informative here (e.g., Simpson, 2017).…”
Section: Implications and Conclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%