Teaching and teacher education in the age of evidence: The case for artistry An interview with Gert Biesta by Philip Winter
Main Article Content
Abstract
In July 2022 Gert Biesta gave an invited keynote lecture at the 2022 EDULOG International Conference on Teacher Education: Building an Agenda for the 21st Century in Porto, Portugal[1]. In the following interview Gert Biesta shares key ideas from his lecture, particularly highlighting that any discussion about the future of teacher education needs to start from a meaningful understanding of education and the important role of the teacher. In his lecture Biesta made a case for understanding teaching as an art rather than an applied science, and made the interesting suggestion that we should see teaching as a double art. This suggests that teacher education that understands that teaching is an art, and not the application of rules and recipes, needs to work with students to develop their teacherly artistry. Such a future for teacher education is quite different from the idea that teaching should be a profession based upon or informed by scientific evidence about what works. The main problem with that idea, so Biesta makes clear in this interview, is that looking for evidence about what works misunderstands what education is and what the work of the teacher entails.
[1] For more information about this event see here: https://www.2022.edulog.pt
Downloads
Article Details
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Authors retain copyright, without restrictions, in their articles and grant the journal right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike Licence 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA). Readers are free to copy, display, distribute, and adapt an article, as long as the work is attributed to the author(s) and ESC, the changes are identified, and the same license applies to the derivative work. Only non-commercial uses of the work are permitted.
How to Cite
References
Biesta, Gert (2023). Reclaiming the artistry of teaching. In Robert J. Tierney, Fazal Rizvi, & Kadriye Ercikan (Eds.), The international encyclopedia of education (4th ed., pp. 648–654). Elsevier. https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-818630-5.04034-3
Biesta, Gert (2023). Reclaiming teaching for teacher education: Towards a spiral curriculum. Beijing International Review of Education, 1(2-3), 259-272. https://doi.org/10.1163/25902539-00102015
Biesta, G. (2024). Educational research and the distortion of educational practice. In Johannes Drerup, Nina Göddertz, Ruprecht Mattig, Werner Thole, & Uwe Uhlendorff (Eds.), Bildungsforschung: Erziehungswissenschaftliche Perspektiven. J. B. Metzler. https://link.springer.com/book/9783662669228