Teacher Education and the Global Impact of Teach For All
Teacher Education and the Global Impact of Teach For All
- Katherine Crawford-GarrettKatherine Crawford-GarrettUniversity of New Mexico
- , and Matthew A.M. ThomasMatthew A.M. ThomasThe University of Sydney
Summary
Over the past two decades, teacher education has been increasingly conceptualized as a policy problem in response to what school reformers, policy-makers, and philanthropists have depicted as a global education crisis necessitating national and international solutions. Teach For All (TFAll), an organization that has sought to respond to global achievement disparities by recruiting elite university graduates to teach in underperforming schools has a presence in more than 45 countries and is a key player in education reform worldwide. In enacting its vision of educational change, TFAll has reshaped notions of teaching at the classroom level by positioning teachers as saviors, leaders, and social engineers; reconfigured city school systems through promoting privatization and deregulation; and contributed to the rapid neoliberalization of education internationally by fundamentally altering educational policies and discourses on a global scale.
Keywords
Subjects
- Education, Change, and Development
- Educational Politics and Policy
- Globalization, Economics, and Education