Abstract:
In Lesotho, there are no formal opportunities for professional training of teacher
educators. Consequently, the majority of teacher educators have not received a training
that could equip them with professional knowledge base that is foundational to any
profession. Therefore the question: what are the sources and application of professional
knowledge among teacher educators appeared justifiable. Arguably, the teacher
educators’ professional knowledge is intricately linked to education practice. Teacher
educators have to address the discrepancy between education policy and practice
through the training of student teachers who, in turn, have to contribute to the quality of
the Lesotho education system.
An interpretivist approach was followed in undertaking this study. Data was collected
through: narratives, observations of teacher educators and analysis of the curriculum
and assessment documents. The unit of analysis was eight teacher educators who are
based at the National University of Lesotho’s Faculty of Education. Verification of the
extent to which the topic was researchable was through undertaking a pilot study with six
teacher educators who were based in the department of Educational Foundations in the
same faculty.
The analysis of the data revealed an immersion in the teacher educators’ professional
landscape provides them ample opportunities to learn from an array of experiences.
They accumulated experienced-based professional knowledge relevant to their world of
work as they learn to teach, construct, apply and model it in the context that is uniquely
teacher education. They have learned to teach teachers mainly from existing education
practices which perpetuate what already exists. They face numerous challenges; their
teaching is biased towards conventional teaching techniques of a transmissive nature
and to a less extent interactive techniques; construction of professional knowledge
remains a complex and challenging undertaking. Opportunities to construct own
teaching research-based knowledge and supervision of student research are limited.
In practice teacher educators have to rethink their pedagogy. Engaging in research
adopting a “self-study” approach is unavoidable. Research will enhance their
professional development and the quality of the student teachers. Key words: constructing knowledge, episteme, learning, metalearning and
metacognition, modelling knowledge, phronesis, practical knowledge, propositional
knowledge, professional knowledge, student teacher, teacher educator.