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In the Ministry of Education National Implementation Framework III: 2011-2015 there is this
to say The quality and effectiveness of the education system depend heavily on the quality
of its teachers. They are the key persons in determining success in meeting the systems
goals. In view of this, the calibre of teachers and the status of the teaching profession are of
paramount importance. The educational and personal well-being of learners in schools, thus,
hinge crucially on teachers competence, commitment and resourcefulness. This statement
notes the strategic role teachers play in the education sector which is the backbone of the
social economic development of the country yet largely the teaching profession has been met
with apathy and efforts at change and transformation met with great resistance with regards to
perceptions, social ills and other vices. The role of ensuring that the teacher education
programs in Zambia are persuasive or influential enough to turn the student teachers into
agents of change is not only imperative but critical for the current and future state of
education in Zambia. This essay therefore is an effort at suggesting a systematic way of
influencing student teachers to become agents of change in their current state and as leaders
in the field of education in the future.
Definition of concepts
Teacher education programs refer to tertiary education aimed at identifying, educating, and
placing highly qualified teacher-leaders in institutions of learning. Perraton (2010), teacher
education generally includes four elements: improving the general educational background of
the trainee teachers; increasing their knowledge and understanding of the subjects they are to
teach; pedagogy and understanding of children and learning; and the development of practical
skills and competences.
An Agent of change according to bass (1990) is a persons whose acts affect other people
more than other peoples acts affect them. And agent of change is thus an individual whose
acts, words and lifestyle influences positive change by others imitating and influencing them
or the system. Agents of change therefore operate within the given system to instil change
and transformation. In this regard therefore, student teachers become agents of change within
their teacher education programs as students hence policy advocates for the teacher training
program as well as the training programs to be provided to their learners. Further, student
teachers can be agents of change in their schools, communities and workplaces. But what is
change?
Change, as Rosa Beth Moss Kantar (1984) puts it, is the process of analysing the past to
elicit the present actions required for the future. It involves moving from a present state,
through a transitional state, to a future desired state. The process starts with an awareness of
the need for change. An analysis of this state and the factors that have created it leads to
diagnosis of the distinctive characteristics of the situation and an indication of the direction in
which action needs to be taken. Possible courses of action can then be identified and
evaluated and choice made of the preferred action It is then necessary to decide how to get
from here to there. Change is generally seen as a complex process. It is often argued that the
only constant thing in nature change. Research suggests that teachers, next to students, are
the most powerful influence on their colleagues and that the work of teacher leaders can
trump the efforts of policy makers or administrators to change practice.
Teacher education in Zambia
The ministry of education notes that there are 14 public Colleges of Education in Zambia
out of which eight train teachers for the primary school level; two train teachers for the junior
secondary level (Grades 8-9); two provide teacher training for senior secondary level (Grades
10-12); and two provide in-service training. Further, David Livingstone and Kitwe
Colleges of Education also offer Early Childhood, Care and Development Education
(ECCDE) training. In addition, two Technical and Vocational institutions namely, Luanshya
TVTC and Evelyn Hone provide teacher training. There are three public and 16 private
universities offering training at degree level. The entire education system produces an
annual output of 4,500 teachers.
Teacher education however as generally noted has great mismatches which desperately need
to be addressed hence call far and wide for its profesionalisation. The need for specialised
knowledge is greatly underscored. This knowledge base is derived from a combination of
theories bind research that professional gain through reading, reflection, observation and
experience. It includes terms facts, principles and concept that help us understand why
children behave as they do. It provides guidance regarding which intervention strategies
might be useful and which are not. Acquisition of relevant content happens as a result of
prolonged education and specialized training (Morrison, 2006; Horwitz, Darling Hammond
& Bransford, 2000).
In the teaching fraternity, it is noted that there is general lack of skill based knowledge
(Ministry of Education, 2012). Skills as noted by Gazda et al., (2005) consists of observable
actions that, when used in combination, represent mastery of certain strategies which can be
observed, learned, and evaluated. According to Pragh (2005) it is only when a person
performs the entire combination of strategies correctly that it can be said that he or she has
demonstrated that skill. The need for universalised skilling is imperative if all learners are to
benefit effectively from the teacher. Skills therefore are not the teaching methods, practices or
ethics but strategies of effectiveness in the teaching methods, practices and ethics. Student
teachers must therefore strive to be agents of change in the strive to acquire and dispatch
specialised knowledge as well as skill based knowledge and practice and as future leader and
administrators ensure these are well established within the education fraternity.
Standard of Practice is a guide to teacher professionalism and professionals perform their
duties/tasks with standards of practice generally accepted in the field (Feeney & Freeman,
1999). These standards however are set by the ministry of education and are but universal
such that they tend to be controversial in the specific fields of education such as special
education, early childhood education, adult education. The lack of adherence to professional
standards is a key mismatch which has led to poor delivery of education.
Luck of continuous development amid teachers, students and even lecturers has greatly deprofessionalised both the teacher training programs and the teaching practice itself. This is
because to keep up with the standards in their field professionals participate in continuing
education throughout their careers. They constantly upgrade their knowledge and skills by
attending workshops, conferences, participating in professional organizations, reading
professional journals, and pursuing additional schooling. Professionals treat learning as a life
long process that continues throughout the course of their careers and this should be more
pronounced in both the teacher training and teaching practices where acquisition and
impartation of knowledge is the career.
While in the current teacher training programs aspects of educational philosophy and ethics
are part and parcel, the need for adoption of standard code of ethics for teachers in Zambia is
imperative as the major ethical standards are set by the employers hence a further need for
professionalization or professional conduct in ethical terms. Generally the ethical lapse in the
teaching fraternity has resulted into child abuse, professional misconduct, unethical
behaviours and loss of confidence in the teachers, schools and the teaching practices hence
greater need for reform and change which should start with the student teachers in the teacher
training programs.
This relates directly to the practice of teaching and teaching service delivery practices,
modes, ethics, professionalism and activities. In a study conducted by Karajagi, (2012) the
following were reported finding on the roles of student teachers as school change agents:
1. There is acritical pedagogy-oriented student teaching model, where urban student
teachers challenge the conditions they find and feel empowered to change them.
2. the diversity of their environments facilitates for their demand for creative measures
in which they can use their richness in diversity backgrounds to better educate all
participants
3. Student teachers were explicitly technicians at the teaching art hence became agents
of social change in a more abstract/epistemological teaching environment, and this
commitment was manifested in their practice and interactions with their guiding
teachers and their schools.
4. The student teachers focus on grouping students and building community in the
classroom were the ways they communicated their social justice agenda in their daily
practice hence providing both the mobility skills as well as motivational atmosphere
for institutional social justice.
5. The introduction of new work ethics, emphasis on professionalism and dedication to
effective service delivery as well as introduction of new technologies and policies.
Given the above findings therefore, the student teacher can be an agent of change firstly
as a model of change by providing the practical examples of the needed institutional
reforms, bring in divergent views from new trends in the teaching profession, introduces
better and new educational technologies, skills and policies for institutional and student
benefits, help build and mobilise advocacy for greater institutional reforms due to their
greater social skills as noted in the study above.
3. Learner centred change-agents
While analyzing the spectrum of manpower development, the teacher maybe seen as the
center that permeates to all sectors. The students produced depend mainly upon the teacher.
The teacher's lifestyle reflects a pattern the students absorb and internalize consciously and
unconsciously in their association with one another.
In an examination of the societal patterns of population, it is the teacher who produces the
future professionals. It is also observed that one can trace some imprints of the teacher's
behavioral patterns, training skills, concepts, beliefs and practices among the students that
passed his tutorship. Thus, the kind of professionals manifest both in their private and
occupational lifestyles some traits that their teachers have handed down to them. A honest
and diligent teacher practicing what he preaches, both in the classroom and in the outside
world would transmit these traits in the developing child. On the other hand, a lazy teacher, a
corrupt one, tampering grades, could present unrealistic facts just to consume the scheduled
teaching hours and use stereotypical laboratory experiments not inciting the inquiry of the
student. This teacher will also transmit to the child these practices which unconsciously and
consciously become a part of the child's lifestyle. In effect, this teacher produces a student
with corrupt ideas and practices to the extent of degrading and depleting environmental
resources attributable to his ambition to amass wealth and to deprivation of his fellow men in
the enjoyment and contentment of bios.
Considering the above scenario, the teacher can be regarded as the central factor around
which the developing student revolves and looks up to, especially in his or her formative
years. Thus, the preservation of bios must be emphasised at the early stage of the learning
child. This is the teachable stage, when a child internalizes concepts and lifestyles he
associates with.
The transformation of the student does not happen all of a sudden. It involves three processes
in actualising the three domains of Education - Cognitive, Psychomotor and Affective. The
three processes are:
1. Transmission
2. Transaction
3. Transformation
1. Transmission It is a process generally formal-school based where educational
concepts and knowledge are imparted through a structured system. The main
characteristics of this process are a highly organised, rigid syllabus and methodology,
single textbook, external examinations and external discipline with little or no attention to
students' emotional life. Moreover, it is heavily teacher dominated with high expectations
for the students to acquire or accumulate knowledge after thorough rote-learning
techniques. The primary task of education at this stage is to transmit to the present
generation, bodies of information collected in the past. Further, the transmission
emphasizes the cognitive domain.
Bibliography
Bass, B.M. (1990). Bass & Stogdills Handbook of Leadership; Theory, research, and
managerial applications. (3rd ed.). New York: The Free Press.
Karajagi, G., (2012) Teachers as Change Agents, Academy for Creative Teaching, R.T Nagar,
Bangalore.
Agents of change are something or someone that causes or leads to change. Where as
change
is
to
transform
something
or
cause
it
to
be
different.
In our context, there are two categories of change, quantitative and qualitative change.
Quantitative change is a change that is measurable, such as a persons age, sizes and test
scores. Whereas qualitative change involves quality, such as personal gained through
education and interactions with others, and change in likes and dislikes, interest and
relations
with
others.
Access to an education system in which people attend schools or enroll in education
courses, would be more or less meaningless if they fail to learn and if there is no change
occurring. Conversely, it is more or less limited, if a school or education system is said to be
high achieving, if its recruitment is on a selective basis, which fails to reflect the diverse
composition
of
its
population
it
is
supposed
to
be
serving.
Change is something all societies have to deal with. Teachers often resist change mandated
or suggested by others but they do engage in change that they initiate. This is called
voluntary
change.
Changes of the mindsets of a whole society must involve all citizens. In order to bring about
change, there must be the thought leaders who define and redefine, elaborate meanings
and necessity of the desired changes. All societies have their own beliefs, attitudes,
expectations, views, concepts and norms. Schooling and success of schooling is the best
vehicle to challenge the mindsets to reflect and reform, thus setting new values and
projecting the desired attitudes towards accepting change and adapting to them so as to be
able to compete in the new era. Without doubt, teachers of quality will be the best agents of
change since they are the ones involved in the process of change and the change they are
supposed
to
bring
about
in
their
students.
TEACHERS
AS
AGENTS
OF
CHANGE
The challenge for teachers is to move the society from mere thirst for news and information
to the passion for knowledge, and to move towards the enlightened search for patterns of
knowledge principles. This principles can become the tools for thinking inculcating long life
learning, mastered by the public after they graduated out of school. With these the school,
university going population as well as population as a whole will become more enlightened,
more mindful and hopefully more rational in making decisions in daily lives and in time of
crises.
School/teacher plays the role as agents of change especially for social transformation. By
guidance and support from the MOE through educations policies, six types of the future
generation
of
students
can
be
produced:
a. Students who can contribute to the nation-building and have patriotic value,
communication
skill,
moderate
and
active
in
co-curriculum;
b. Students who are able to bring change to/in the society, instill goodwill and do not have
the
compartmentalization
attitude,
c.
Learned
students
in
the
field
of
science
and
technology
d.
Students
who
are
literate
in
information
technology
e. Student who are able to communicate in at least 2 languages.
f.
Students
who
are
able
to
think
creatively
and
critically.
Access to education is partly a matter of education supply and school mapping. The MOE, is
making sure that every citizen in Malaysia has equal access to education, as laid out in the
Malaysian Educational Plan and is seriously carried out and implemented. Access, on the
other hand , is also a matter of encouraging and stimulating demand so that the students is
motivated enough to self access the open opportunity of self acquiring knowledge. Here the
teacher plays the most important role as a change agent of attitudes of students and
community
towards
education.
In preparing students to be successful future citizens, teachers should lay foundation for life
long learning at school level and play an important part in helping children develop the ability
to learn and to think independently, cultivating the basic skills and attitudes necessary for life
long learning. The Ministry of Education Malaysia focused on the enhancement of
educational instruction in order to foster self education responsibilities, specifically the
willingness to learn independently and the skills needed to cope positively with societal
change. In this era, every student should be equipped with computer skills and the knowhow to access information. Thus many schools in Malaysia are encouraged to develop self
access centres, where students set their own pace suiting to their own style of learning.
Creativity of teachers are much depended upon, tirelessly creating contents, so as to be able
to attract, encourage and motivate students to take the opportunity to use the self access
centres. Modern schools are equipped with at least one computer laboratory, 20 computers
with internet/school net access, accessible for student use. Teachers as agents of change
must have the ability to develop generic skills in students equipping them with the ability to
be
long
life
learners.
According to Ibrahim Bajunid, in an article from an education journal, generic skills for life
long learning in the adaptive age includes the following: pg 5 Jun 2002, jld 12.
a. Developing the skills to learn how to learn different kinds of knowledge in different settings
or contexts;
b. Developing skills to understand connection between theory and practice and to use
knowledge relevantly;
c. Developing skills in managing information, including retrieving, analyzing, consolidating,
using and generating new information;
d. Developing ability to express oneself verbally and in writing using various communication
tools;
CONCLUSION
The challenge to all education is to lay the foundation for change and at the same time to
maintain the best qualities of the present. Every new generation must learn how to improve
and develop society and be able to base theses changes on the traditions and achievements
already established. Teachers have to develop the potentials of the young to their fullest
capacities, as well as providing the tools to cope with changes in their own era. Teachers
should be aware that, in this changing world, what is considered quality education today
might not meet the standard of tomorrow. This is particularly true if we take into
considerations
the
rapid
changes
created
by
technologies.
Therefore, long life education is the best equipment to provide the students as future
generation, to confront the challenges in the global market. Be a learning person.
REFERENCES
Annual
Report,
Ministry
of
Education
Malaysia.
Ibrahim A. Bajunid (2002). Changing Mindsets: Life Long Learning for All; In Educational
Journal. IAB, KPM Malaysia.