Journal Articles
The impact of philosophy for children on teachers’ professional development
- The impact of philosophy for children on teachers’ professional development
- Routledge
- 2021
-
- Hong Kong
-
- 1997.7 onwards
-
- Post-Secondary Education
- Dialogic teaching has been demonstrated to be conducive to the development of such important competencies and skills as creativity, communication skills, and critical thinking skills. However, the literature confirms that teacher-student interactions in the classroom are predominantly monologic rather than dialogic across subjects, grades, and countries. This article reports the results of a study that assesses the effectiveness of a Philosophy for Children (P4C) programme in facilitating the development of dialogic and inquiry teaching in teachers in Hong Kong. In the study, training and support were provided for teachers to enable them to teach P4C to their students during Integrated Humanities and English lessons. P4C was found to help increase the teachers’ effectiveness in the classroom in terms of their ability to engage in dialogic and inquiry teaching, to develop relevant curricular materials for such teaching, to reflect on their own teaching, to recognise their students’ capacity for constructing knowledge through dialogic inquiry, to transfer the teaching strategies learned in P4C to other non-P4C lessons, and to identify and analyse philosophical concepts in the school curriculum. The findings of this study suggest that P4C plays a significant role in promoting the professional development of teachers. Copyright © 2021 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
-
- English
- Journal Articles
-
- 13540602
- https://bibliography.lib.eduhk.hk/en/bibs/30b4b3af
- 2021-12-03
Recent Journal Articles
Researching L2 investment in EMI courses: Techno-reflective narrative interviewsJournal Articles
Technostress and English language teaching in the age of generative AIJournal Articles
Playfulness and kindergarten children's academic skills: Executive functions and creative thinking processes as mediators?Journal Articles
Teaching EFL students to write with ChatGPT: Students' motivation to learn, cognitive load, and satisfaction with the learning processJournal Articles
Revamping an English for specific academic purposes course for problem-based learning: Reflections from course developersJournal Articles
Contrasting mathematics educational values: An in-depth case study of primary and secondary teachers in Hong KongJournal Articles
Cross-disciplinary challenges: Navigating power dynamics in advocating an entrepreneurial STEM curriculumJournal Articles
An exploration of microlearning as continuous professional development for English language teachers: Initial findings and insightsJournal Articles