Who Studies Pedagogy? Trends in the Profile of Future Teachers in Latin America & the Caribbean

Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) face significant challenges regarding the quantity and quality of the teaching workforce. In a context where there is a need for more and better teachers in schools, this study examines the first step in the teaching career: initial teacher education (ITE) programs. Specifically, the study investigates the characteristics and enrollment trends in ITE programs across 16 LAC countries from 2015 to 2020. In these countries, ITE programs represent 12.4% of enrollment in higher education (compared to 8% in OECD countries and less than 1% in the US). The participation of ITE programs in higher education enrollment is lower in countries with higher accreditation and entry requirements for the teaching profession and higher in countries with less regulation of ITE programs. In general, ITE enrollment is highly feminized (73% women), and female representation declines in specialties aimed at higher levels of teaching. Compared to the rest of higher education enrollment, ITE programs are more concentrated in public institutions. Additionally, the availability of bilingual intercultural ITE programs is insufficient relative to the proportion of the population identifying as indigenous, and policies to promote such programs are scarce. Finally, compared to other professional careers, students enrolled in ITE programs are disproportionately women, indigenous, from rural areas, from medium and medium-low socioeconomic backgrounds, and with lower academic performance upon entry. Governments in the region are confronted with a short-term public policy dilemma: how to increase the quantity, quality, and relevance of future teachers.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Inter-American Development Bank
Other Authors: Gregory Elacqua
Language:English
Published: Inter-American Development Bank
Subjects:Higher Education, Teacher, Teacher Education, Learning and Teaching Program, Education, Women, Teacher Recruitment, Educational Institution, Teacher Selection, A20 - Economic Education and Teaching of Economics: General, A21 - Pre-college, A22 - Undergraduate, I23 - Higher Education • Research Institutions, I25 - Education and Economic Development, O54 - Latin America • Caribbean, Teacher policy;initial teacher education;Latin America;higher education;Teachers;bilingual intercultural programs,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0004686
https://publications.iadb.org/en/who-studies-pedagogy-trends-profile-future-teachers-latin-america-caribbean
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spelling dig-bid-node-331712023-10-12T18:09:04ZWho Studies Pedagogy? Trends in the Profile of Future Teachers in Latin America & the Caribbean 2022-12-20T00:04:00+0000 http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0004686 https://publications.iadb.org/en/who-studies-pedagogy-trends-profile-future-teachers-latin-america-caribbean Inter-American Development Bank Higher Education Teacher Teacher Education Learning and Teaching Program Education Women Teacher Recruitment Educational Institution Teacher Selection A20 - Economic Education and Teaching of Economics: General A21 - Pre-college A22 - Undergraduate I23 - Higher Education • Research Institutions I25 - Education and Economic Development O54 - Latin America • Caribbean Teacher policy;initial teacher education;Latin America;higher education;Teachers;bilingual intercultural programs Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) face significant challenges regarding the quantity and quality of the teaching workforce. In a context where there is a need for more and better teachers in schools, this study examines the first step in the teaching career: initial teacher education (ITE) programs. Specifically, the study investigates the characteristics and enrollment trends in ITE programs across 16 LAC countries from 2015 to 2020. In these countries, ITE programs represent 12.4% of enrollment in higher education (compared to 8% in OECD countries and less than 1% in the US). The participation of ITE programs in higher education enrollment is lower in countries with higher accreditation and entry requirements for the teaching profession and higher in countries with less regulation of ITE programs. In general, ITE enrollment is highly feminized (73% women), and female representation declines in specialties aimed at higher levels of teaching. Compared to the rest of higher education enrollment, ITE programs are more concentrated in public institutions. Additionally, the availability of bilingual intercultural ITE programs is insufficient relative to the proportion of the population identifying as indigenous, and policies to promote such programs are scarce. Finally, compared to other professional careers, students enrolled in ITE programs are disproportionately women, indigenous, from rural areas, from medium and medium-low socioeconomic backgrounds, and with lower academic performance upon entry. Governments in the region are confronted with a short-term public policy dilemma: how to increase the quantity, quality, and relevance of future teachers. Inter-American Development Bank Gregory Elacqua Analia Jaimovich Graciela Pérez-Nuñez Diana Hincapie Constanza Gómez María Jesús Sánchez IDB Publications Latin America and the Caribbean en
institution BID
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-bid
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca Felipe Herrera del BID
language English
topic Higher Education
Teacher
Teacher Education
Learning and Teaching Program
Education
Women
Teacher Recruitment
Educational Institution
Teacher Selection
A20 - Economic Education and Teaching of Economics: General
A21 - Pre-college
A22 - Undergraduate
I23 - Higher Education • Research Institutions
I25 - Education and Economic Development
O54 - Latin America • Caribbean
Teacher policy;initial teacher education;Latin America;higher education;Teachers;bilingual intercultural programs
Higher Education
Teacher
Teacher Education
Learning and Teaching Program
Education
Women
Teacher Recruitment
Educational Institution
Teacher Selection
A20 - Economic Education and Teaching of Economics: General
A21 - Pre-college
A22 - Undergraduate
I23 - Higher Education • Research Institutions
I25 - Education and Economic Development
O54 - Latin America • Caribbean
Teacher policy;initial teacher education;Latin America;higher education;Teachers;bilingual intercultural programs
spellingShingle Higher Education
Teacher
Teacher Education
Learning and Teaching Program
Education
Women
Teacher Recruitment
Educational Institution
Teacher Selection
A20 - Economic Education and Teaching of Economics: General
A21 - Pre-college
A22 - Undergraduate
I23 - Higher Education • Research Institutions
I25 - Education and Economic Development
O54 - Latin America • Caribbean
Teacher policy;initial teacher education;Latin America;higher education;Teachers;bilingual intercultural programs
Higher Education
Teacher
Teacher Education
Learning and Teaching Program
Education
Women
Teacher Recruitment
Educational Institution
Teacher Selection
A20 - Economic Education and Teaching of Economics: General
A21 - Pre-college
A22 - Undergraduate
I23 - Higher Education • Research Institutions
I25 - Education and Economic Development
O54 - Latin America • Caribbean
Teacher policy;initial teacher education;Latin America;higher education;Teachers;bilingual intercultural programs
Inter-American Development Bank
Who Studies Pedagogy? Trends in the Profile of Future Teachers in Latin America & the Caribbean
description Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) face significant challenges regarding the quantity and quality of the teaching workforce. In a context where there is a need for more and better teachers in schools, this study examines the first step in the teaching career: initial teacher education (ITE) programs. Specifically, the study investigates the characteristics and enrollment trends in ITE programs across 16 LAC countries from 2015 to 2020. In these countries, ITE programs represent 12.4% of enrollment in higher education (compared to 8% in OECD countries and less than 1% in the US). The participation of ITE programs in higher education enrollment is lower in countries with higher accreditation and entry requirements for the teaching profession and higher in countries with less regulation of ITE programs. In general, ITE enrollment is highly feminized (73% women), and female representation declines in specialties aimed at higher levels of teaching. Compared to the rest of higher education enrollment, ITE programs are more concentrated in public institutions. Additionally, the availability of bilingual intercultural ITE programs is insufficient relative to the proportion of the population identifying as indigenous, and policies to promote such programs are scarce. Finally, compared to other professional careers, students enrolled in ITE programs are disproportionately women, indigenous, from rural areas, from medium and medium-low socioeconomic backgrounds, and with lower academic performance upon entry. Governments in the region are confronted with a short-term public policy dilemma: how to increase the quantity, quality, and relevance of future teachers.
author2 Gregory Elacqua
author_facet Gregory Elacqua
Inter-American Development Bank
topic_facet Higher Education
Teacher
Teacher Education
Learning and Teaching Program
Education
Women
Teacher Recruitment
Educational Institution
Teacher Selection
A20 - Economic Education and Teaching of Economics: General
A21 - Pre-college
A22 - Undergraduate
I23 - Higher Education • Research Institutions
I25 - Education and Economic Development
O54 - Latin America • Caribbean
Teacher policy;initial teacher education;Latin America;higher education;Teachers;bilingual intercultural programs
author Inter-American Development Bank
author_sort Inter-American Development Bank
title Who Studies Pedagogy? Trends in the Profile of Future Teachers in Latin America & the Caribbean
title_short Who Studies Pedagogy? Trends in the Profile of Future Teachers in Latin America & the Caribbean
title_full Who Studies Pedagogy? Trends in the Profile of Future Teachers in Latin America & the Caribbean
title_fullStr Who Studies Pedagogy? Trends in the Profile of Future Teachers in Latin America & the Caribbean
title_full_unstemmed Who Studies Pedagogy? Trends in the Profile of Future Teachers in Latin America & the Caribbean
title_sort who studies pedagogy? trends in the profile of future teachers in latin america & the caribbean
publisher Inter-American Development Bank
url http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0004686
https://publications.iadb.org/en/who-studies-pedagogy-trends-profile-future-teachers-latin-america-caribbean
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