[eng] Not many are happy with the products of school (Cuban, 2020; Rist, 2017),
education scholars have been arguing for long that not much seems to have
changed through the many efforts invested to reform almost all imaginable
elements of the educational system (Adamson et al., 2016). Reviewing these
efforts, it becomes apparent that they cannot be easily organized under any
single thematic focus; yet there seems to be a recognition that teacher
education is central to the task (Gordon & Ackerman, 1984; Guodong, 1997;
Rhodes, 1994)..
Although the present paper’s point of departure may sound ambitious, for it
suggests that the beliefs of teachers regarding school failure might hold the
key to some aspects of educational reform in general and to the betterment
of homeroom teacher education in particular, in reality it is very modest. All
we will suggest is that without paying attention to the language/discourse
(our access point to the assumed teachers’ beliefs) that homeroom teachers
hold, not much can be attained. We also suggest that changes in language
might help change homeroom teachers understanding of the learner and the
learning process and possible open new venues for educational practice.
When pointing at language/discourse, we position ourselves within the area
of reflection, which since the work of Donald Schön (1983), has been a
prominent theme in the literature on teacher education. The value of reflection
in teacher education has been consistently reiterated (e.g. Korthagen &
Vasalos, 2010; Loughran, 2002), for reflection is a social practice represented
in language and inscribed with warranted repertoires for action (Ottesen,
2007).