This pivot considers the impact of INSET courses on EFL teachers
practicing under the national curriculum reform in China. Providing
context-specific findings on the policy and implementation of INSET as
well as its impact on teacher education initiatives in both China and
similar contexts, it explores the limitations of one off training events
such as INSET and the inconsistency between teacher learning results and
their classroom practices. The book argues that teachers, when returning
to pre-INSET teaching, are influenced by their prior deeply-rooted
beliefs largely considered more powerful than newly-learnt theories.
Addressing the rarely discussed fact that the complex and dynamic
characteristics of teacher learning change over time and support the
construct of teacher learning as a social event rather than a one-off
event, the book also offers practical solutions on how to improve
teacher education and enhance the long-term INSET impact on teacher
development, with the ambition of promoting education reform for both
teachers and students alike.