A Pedagogical Activity-based Model for Sustainable
Education of a Prospective Foreign Language Teacher
Elena A. Pankratova
a
Murom Institute (branch), Vladimir State University, 23, Orlovskaya Street, Murom, Vladimir region, Russia
Keywords: Competency-Based Teacher Education, Sustainable Education, Professional Competences, Professional
Activities of a Foreign Language Teacher.
Abstract: The paper is devoted to the problem of content designing teacher competency-based education for its
sustainable development. The research takes into account the tendency of knowledge-based education giving
way to competency-based education which is more beneficial for the growing economies. The research is
based on the following approaches: competency-based, communicative, axiological, task (problem)-based.
The paper gives the review on the issues related to the problems of definition, structure, development and
assessment of foreign language teacher competences. A pedagogical activity-based model for the content
development of a prospective foreign language teacher training curriculum has been developed. It is a three-
constituent model including: input requirements on the side of ideal goals and results; pedagogical activity as
a combination of profession oriented activities related to the performance of the tasks and solution of the
problems in the context of current pedagogical values; output requirements on the side of practical needs.
Three ways of the course content integration are suggested: horizontal integration of various courses by the
same activity, vertical integration of several pedagogical activities in the same course, and entire integration
of all courses through profession-oriented task and problem solving activities as the predominant teaching
and learning method. The paper concludes that the application of the proposed model will assist to train
students who are ready to enter the teaching field as confident beginning professionals capable of participating
in the sustainable development of a particular region.
1 INTRODUCTION
The introduction of new Federal State Educational
Standards of Higher Education (in the Russian
Federation) in pedagogical area involves developing
competences of prospective foreign-language
teachers that enable them to solve job tasks of various
types as part of pedagogical activity. Teacher’s
Professional Standard makes precise two generalized
teacher’s job functions including pedagogical
activities for project development and
implementation of educational process and basic
general education programs in educational
institutions. The current labour market indicates the
demand for professional staff in this area. For
example, Vladimir Region lacks 29 foreign-language
teachers as on February 2021 (On-line Portal Labour
and Employment Department of Vladimir Region).
The regulatory documents are transparent concerning
a
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4378-7224
teacher’s education content in a particular area. Each
Higher Educational Institution should define
professional competences of prospective teachers
based on Teacher’s Professional Standard, as well as
the analysis of requirements for professional
competences required from graduates in the labour
market, evaluation of domestic and foreign
experience. Hence, the need to bridge the gap
between theory and practice, to specify professional
knowledge of practical use, to identify competences
in the context of teacher’s professional activities is
quite evident. So, the research of the issues related to
effective and efficient education content designing of
prospective foreign-language teachers becomes
pressing.
Pankratova, E.
A Pedagogical Activity-based Model for Sustainable Education of a Prospective Foreign Language Teacher.
DOI: 10.5220/0010596807370742
In Proceedings of the International Scientific and Practical Conference on Sustainable Development of Regional Infrastructure (ISSDRI 2021), pages 737-742
ISBN: 978-989-758-519-7
Copyright
c
2021 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
737
2 METHODOLOGY
The research is based on the competency-based
approach which implies competency (including a list
of profession oriented competences) as the
professional readiness of a prospective foreign
language teacher to enter the working field.
Communicative approach is applied to differentiate
the related competences that are crucial for the
considered field among which are communicative
competence of a teacher and classroom interactional
competence. Axiological approach in pedagogy
presupposes the humanistic character of an education
paradigm with the pedagogic values in the core of any
educational activity. Task (problem)-based approach
focuses on the course learning through gaining
experience of doing meaningful profession oriented
tasks or solving open-ended problems related to
pedagogy.
3 LITERATURE REVIEW:
TEACHER COMPETENCES
AND PROFESSIONAL VALUES
European literature review related to teaching and
learning to teach has revealed them “as complex,
multifaceted, value-laden enterprises” (Caena, 2011).
Francesca Caena (2011) following the ideas of
Feiman-Nemser (2001), Williamson & McDiarmid
(2008) writes the following: “The continuum of
teacher learning and teacher education, which turns
out to be fundamental in a lifelong learning
perspective, implies the need for extended teacher
professionalism” (Caena, 2011). A framework to
guide teacher education is considered to comprise
teacher skills and knowledge as objectives for student
learning. Improving quality of teacher education is
associated with improvement of teacher competences
and promotion of professional values.
Various approaches to teacher competency
structure have been developed.
Among the teacher requirements according to the
Conclusions of the Education Councils (November
2007, 2008, 2009) are three groups: 1) a specialist
knowledge of subjects; 2) pedagogical skills (teach
heterogeneous classes, use Information and
Communications Technology, teach transversal
competences, create safe attractive schools); 3)
cultures/ attitudes of reflective practice, research,
innovation, collaboration, autonomous learning”
(Caena, 2011).
Cambridge matrix of competences includes stage
descriptions through which a teacher will progress in
improving a specific range of abilities (relative not
absolute) under each category. The proposed stages
include the following: Foundation Developing
Proficient Expert. The five categories of the
Cambridge English Teaching Framework: 1.
Learning and the Learner; 2. Teaching, Learning and
Assessment (2.1. Planning language learning, 2.2
Using language-learning resources and materials, 2.3
Managing language learning, 2.4 Teaching language
systems, 2.5 Teaching language skills, 2.6 Assessing
language learning); 3.Language Ability; 4. Language
Knowledge and Awareness; 5. Professional
Development and Values. “… gradual development
of teachers’ expertise over time involves growing
understanding of teaching and learning, growing
awareness of their own strengths, weaknesses and
potential as a teacher, increasing sophistication in
their planning, decision-making, teaching skills and
reflection, as well as the ability to respond to a more
complex range of classroom situations(Cambridge
English: Teaching Framework).
Based on the argument of Cochran-Smith (2006)
Francesca Caena (2011) assumes “that any teaching,
learning or training practice represents a value choice
about key issues, mediated by institutional trends and
external regulatory mechanisms; the responses to
these key issues thus imply decisions linked with
beliefs, priorities and ideals, as well as tendencies to
maintain or change the present social order” (Caena,
2011). Among the three broad areas of competence
(working with others, knowledge, society) European
Commission distinguishes two clearly related to
professional values and attitudes: working with others
(developing a student’s potential and interpersonal
and cooperative skills of a potential teacher), working
in and with society (being responsible professionals
in local educational communities, developing
students as citizens with global responsibilities,
encouraging attitudes to cooperation, intercultural
dialogue and respect (Caena, 2011).
Communication in the classroom is described in a
number of works from the viewpoint of the teacher’s
speech (Nunan, 1991) and communicative interaction
with classroom students (Walsh, 2011; Wasi'ah,
2016
). Steve Walsh introduces classroom interactive
competence which is regarded as the ability of
teachers and students to use interaction as a guidance
and assistance tool for teaching (Walsh, 2011). The
researcher emphasizes that the focus should be made
not only on what the teacher says, but also how s/he
interacts with students. Thus a lesson is proposed to
ISSDRI 2021 - International Scientific and Practical Conference on Sustainable Development of Regional Infrastructure
738
be regarded as a set of micro contexts generated by a
teacher and students during a set of interactions.
Most of the analyzed Russian works are dedicated
to the problem of developing and evaluating job
significant competences of prospective foreign
language teachers, among which are the following
groups: professional-communicative competence,
methodical competence, and Information and
Communication Technology (ICT) competence.
E. N. Solovova (2004) introduces the concept of
professional-communicative competence and
considers it as a component of communicative
competence of foreign-language teachers, alongside
with language, speech, social and cultural ones in the
light of emphasis on communicative tasks that are to
be solved by a teacher in the process of professional
activities
(Solovova, 2004). A. A. Korenev, A. M.
Mikhailova (2019) go further in research of
professional and communicative competence from
the viewpoint of teachers’ professional context and
expand this concept by including the following as
components: using language in the classroom (in
particular, interactive communicative sub-
competence as its integral part), profession-wide
socio-cultural communication aspects, and
extracurricular communicative tasks (Korenev and
Mikhailova, 2019). Professional-communicative
competence from the authors viewpoint is considered
as a pack of communicative, discourse, social,
pragmatic and socio-cultural skills enabling a teacher
to effectively interact with students and create the
atmosphere during classes that best supports
promotion of students’ active speech behavior
(Korenev and Moiseeva, 2015). A model of
interactive professional-communicative teacher’s
competence in the classroom is proposed, which
includes three constituents: the linguistic aspect
(language competence), the content component
(methodology skills), and the interactive component
(interaction skills with students) (Korenev and
Mikhailova, 2019). Key principles for the
development of these skills are as follows: situational
context, communicative orientation, step-by-step
approach and common didactic principle to link
teaching with life. Among teaching techniques there
were highlighted interactive technologies,
cooperative teaching, and project technologies. The
development of professional and communicative
competence of prospective foreign-language teacher
is to be implemented as foreign speech practicing
courses, where a number of certain exercises are
recommended to perform as well as to conduct
teaching methods’ courses in foreign language and to
include them into practical training programs
(Korenev and Mikhailova, 2019).
The second group of investigated competences is
methodical competence, which is regarded as the core
of pedagogical and training activities of a foreign-
language teacher and is defined by the authors as
follows:
a teacher’s skills related to teaching foreign
language and culture (Koryakovtseva, 2018);
the integrative property of a foreign-language
teacher’s personality, which determines her/his
readiness and ability to effectively solve
teaching problems (Yazykova and Makeeva,
2012);
the ability and readiness for project
development and implementation of teaching
process as foreign-language interpersonal and
cross-cultural communication, as well as
reflexive activities (Lubotinsky, 2014).
The structure of methodical competence is
considered by academic methodologists differently:
based on subject-matter of methodical
competence as a process of solving dominant
types of teaching tasks, taking into account the
stages of their solution and the roles performed
by a teacher and the relevant sub competences,
methodical competence includes: (1) goal-
setting stage (teacher-researcher, teacher-
technologist, solves gnostic, and constructive
tasks): gnostic, project development,
constructive technology, information
technology competences; (2) goal-attaining
stage (practicing teacher solves organizational,
communicative educational tasks): gnostic,
constructive, communicative organizational,
communicative teaching, correctional gnostic
competences; (3) goal-ascertaining stage (the
teacher-researcher solves gnostic and
constructive tasks): reflexive-gnostic
competences (Yazykova and Makeeva, 2012);
as methodical competence is of holistic nature
then it comprises technological readiness,
value orientations of a prospective teacher,
readiness for creative self-actualization in
pedagogical activity, the ability to analyze and
critically evaluate her/his own teaching
activities (Kozhukhov, 2008).
The foreign language teacher’s ICT competence
is considered as a five-component structure including
(1) value-motivational component: teacher’s
awareness of needs and interest and motivation
formation to use ICT in their professional activities,
A Pedagogical Activity-based Model for Sustainable Education of a Prospective Foreign Language Teacher
739
(2) cognitive component: theoretical knowledge of
the ICT use in foreign language teaching, (3)
operational component: ability to choose and use
modern ICT in teaching, (4) communicative
component: the teacher’s ability to share the
knowledge and skills, and to discuss with colleagues
the ICT use experience, (5) reflective component:
evaluation and self-evaluation (Sysoyev and
Evstigneev, 2014).
4 A PEDAGOGICAL ACTIVITY-
BASED MODEL
I suggest the pedagogical activity-based model for
designing professional competency-based education
of a prospective foreign language teacher which
includes three main constituents: (1) input
requirements, (2) teaching activity as a number of
types of professional activities associated with
solving corresponding types of tasks in line of today’s
pedagogical values, (3) output requirements.
State and society as a whole formulates
requirements for training prospective teachers at the
input, the first element of the system, recording them
as educational standards that determine the guideline
and curriculum content scope to achieve primary
endpoints: development of universal, general
professional and professional competences. It is
proposed for the purpose of training foreign language
teachers to extend the list of competences as a result
of mastering the main educational program by one
more competence that involves specific features of
teaching a foreign language, namely, international
cooperation competence i.e. readiness to organize and
implement international projects at the premises of an
educational institution. A foreign language is not only
a goal, but also as a teaching tool, where its cross-
curriculum nature reveals. Moreover, since the
language stores, mirrors and conveys culture then
foreign-language education implies co-studying of
languages and cultures. The subject of study focuses
on communicative competence development and thus
necessitates using it as a communication tool in the
light of interaction of cultures. All the above-
mentioned calls upon developing prospective teacher
as an organizer of cross-cultural communication and
interaction. Our successful practices of developing
this competence within the frame of international
projects based on the regional specifics (national
cultural values through local manifestation) is
described and can be recommended for applying
during training prospective foreign- language
teachers with the view of sustainable development of
a particular region
(Pankratova, 2016, 2017, 2019).
Input requirements can be described as ideal goals
and prospective results to be achieved which reflect
the society’s vision (stated in federal educational
standards) of the future development of the education
system for the benefit of the society as a whole.
The second constituent of the model correlates
with the organization of teacher education content in
view of understanding the professional competence
of a prospective teacher as readiness for pedagogical
activity, which is performed as a number of types of
professional activities associated with the solution of
respective types of tasks based on the relevant
knowledge. Pedagogical activity for job training can
be represented by foreign-language communication
activity, methodical activity, psychological and
pedagogical activities, research activity, international
activity. Preparation to implement each of them
demands mastering solution technologies for
respective tasks. For example, methodical activity
requires solving project tasks, tasks related to
conducting a lesson, reflexive tasks, etc.;
psychological and pedagogical activity deals with
solution of awareness-raising tasks in various
academic and non-academic situations, tasks related
to interactions with students, parents, colleagues, etc.;
research work involves the task of testing new
teaching methods and teaching aids and presenting
the obtained results to pedagogical community, etc.;
in regard to international activity it is necessary to
solve problems of finding foreign partners and
implementing joint projects, etc. Step-by-step action
algorithm is proposed to use as one of the tools for
teaching types of activities and it summarizes
successful practices of its implementation
considering variability of implementation methods.
For example, we have already described the
algorithm for implementing an international project
that we use as part of practical training
(Pankratova,
2019).
It seems appropriate to develop competences of
prospective foreign-language teacher through
meaningful integration not only horizontally,
combining academic disciplines separately for each
type of pedagogical activity, but also vertically,
integrating several types of pedagogical activity in
one academic discipline. For example, linguistic
disciplines on foreign language theory will be aimed
not only at the development of language constituent
of prospective teacher’s communicative competence,
but also methodical competence from the viewpoint
of teaching language aspect under study to students at
different stages of training. Entire integration means
ISSDRI 2021 - International Scientific and Practical Conference on Sustainable Development of Regional Infrastructure
740
organizing University classroom activities in any
course as the process of performing pedagogical
activities through doing profession-oriented tasks and
solving profession-based problems.
The basic element of each type of pedagogically
oriented professional activity is value-based, since
mastering pedagogical values (norms regulating
pedagogical activity) takes place in the process of
implementing pedagogical activities (Slastenin,
2002).
Market demands for teachers and practical needs
of an educational institution contributing to the
sustainable development of a particular region are
studied at the output, the third element of the system.
Requirements to a teacher are formulated in the
respective Professional Standard of a Teacher from
the viewpoint of performing generalized labor
functions, a detailed study of which enables to define
professional competences and indicators of their
maturity, which can be compared to the respective
types of pedagogical activities and types of
profession-oriented tasks with respect to pedagogical
values.
The analysis of the demand for graduates of our
Institute in 2017-2020 manifests that all graduates of
the University located in a small town are employed:
the vast majority work as foreign-language teachers
in various educational institutions. A large number of
them came back to their small homelands, which is
obviously positive, since the formed competences
will let them not only to continue professional
perfection passing through the stages of teacher’s
development from a foundation teacher to an expert
teacher, but also to raise cultural standard of the area
where they live and work, since the axiological
approach is the basis of pedagogical training.
However, the content designing teacher
competency-based education should start with the
first and third constituents as they regulate, ally with
public needs, since the second constituent relates to
the organization of teacher’s education content,
which should be necessary and sufficient to meet both
groups of requirements and be flexible for
restructuring in case of changing them.
5 CONCLUSIONS
Thus the proposed model for the content development
of prospective foreign language teacher training
curriculum, on the one hand, reflects the given
economic and professional reality in the region. On
the other, it is adaptable to the changing socio-
economic conditions, development of public and
individual needs with respect to existing pedagogical
values, social order to teacher’s training, the
education organization and content of prospective
teachers, market needs for teachers and job
requirements to a teacher. Academic performance
requirements in preparing students for teaching
foreign languages should be readjusted so as to
correspond to the prospective job functions
associated with the profession of a teacher. The
application of the proposed model will assist to train
students who are ready to enter the professional field
as confident beginning teachers capable of
participating in the sustainable development of a
particular region. The suggested approach can be
applied in different professional context training.
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