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CURRICULUM FRAMEWORK:
TWO-YEAR B.ED. PROGRAMME
December 2014
This document presents the course structure for the NCTE Two-year B.Ed. Programme
and outlines the nature of experiences to be offered to the student-teachers to make them
reflective practitioners. The course structure offers a comprehensive coverage of themes
and rigorous field engagement with the child, school and community. The programme is
comprised of three broad inter-related curricular areas I) Perspectives in Education, II)
Curriculum and Pedagogic Studies, and III) Engagement with the Field. All the courses
include in-built field-based units of study and projects along with theoretical inputs from
an interdisciplinary perspective. Engagement with the Field is the curricular component
that is meant to holistically link all the courses across the programme, while it also
includes special courses for Enhancing Professional Capacities (EPC) of the student
teachers. Transaction of the courses is to be done using a variety of approaches, such as,
case studies, group presentations, projects, discussions on reflective journals,
observations of children, and interactions with the community in multiple socio cultural
environments.
CURRICULAR AREAS
The programme shall comprise three broad curricular areas Perspectives in Education,
Curriculum and Pedagogic Studies, and Engagement with the Field. The courses under
each of these areas are as follows:
Perspectives in Education
I.
Perspectives in Education
Perspectives in Education includes courses in the study of childhood, child
development and adolescence, contemporary India and education, theoretical
foundations of knowledge and curriculum, teaching and learning, gender in the
context of school and society, and inclusive education. The following are the six
courses to be transacted in the two year period, under the curricular area of
Perspectives in Education:
Course 1
Course 2
Course 3
Course 6
Course 8
Course 10
II.
Course 5
Course 9
Course 11
Optional Course*(1/2)
additional pedagogy course (in another subject at the secondary level or the same
subject at the higher secondary level).
III.
Engagement with the Field the Self, the Child, Community and School
This curricular area would have three components
Tasks and Assignments that run through all the courses as indicated in the year
wise distribution of the syllabus
School Internship
Courses on Enhancing Professional Capacities (EPC)
Course EPC 1:
Course EPC 2:
Course EPC 3:
Course EPC 4:
Year 1
Course 1
100 marks
Course 2
100 marks
Course 3
100 marks
Course 4
50 marks
Course 5
50 marks
Course 6
50 marks
Course 7a
50 marks
Course EPC 1
50 marks
Course EPC 2
50 marks
Course EPC 3
50 marks
Engagement with the Field: Tasks and Assignments for Courses 1-6 & 7a
________
Year 2
Course 7b
50 marks
Course 8
100 marks
Course 9
100 marks
Course 10
50 marks
Course 11
50 marks
Course EPC 4
50 marks
School Internship
250 marks
Engagement with the Field: Tasks and Assignments for Courses 7b & 8-10 _________
Total- 650 marks
Note:
a).
1/2 indicates a half paper which is allocated both half the time of effective hours per week and
also half the marks assigned to a full paper.
b).* Optional Courses can be from among the following Vocational/Work Education, Health and
Physical Education, Peace Education, Guidance and Counseling, etc. and can also be an
Additional Pedagogy Course**(for a school subject other than that chosen for Course 7 (a&b)
at the secondary level, or the same school subject at the higher secondary level).
**Teacher education institutes/university departments can make arrangements to offer an
additional pedagogy course for (i) a second school subject at the secondary level for interested
student-teachers who have undertaken adequate number of courses in that subject during their
graduation or (ii) the same school subject as in Course 7 but at the higher secondary level for
student-teachers with a post-graduate degree in that subject.
Tasks and Assignments that run through all the courses as indicated in the
structure and its year wise distribution
on
Contemporary
India
and
Education
or
Pedagogy
of
Social
School Internship
Having gained some experience with the child, the community and schools in Year 1,
the second year would offer intensive engagement with the school in the form of
School Internship. During the first year, to support better understanding of schools
and in preparation of Internship, teacher education institutes shall make provisions
for visits to innovative centres of pedagogy and learning - innovative schools,
educational resource centres, etc.
During the Internship, a student-teacher shall work as a regular teacher and
participate in all the school activities, including planning, teaching and assessment,
interacting with school teachers, community members and children. Before teaching
in a classroom, the student-teachers will observe the school and its classrooms for a
week, to understand the school in totality, its philosophy and aims, organisation and
management; the life of a teacher; needs of the physical, mental, emotional
development of children; aspects of curriculum and its transaction; quality,
transaction, and assessment of teachinglearning.
School Internship shall be designed to lead to the development of a broad repertoire
of perspectives, professional capacities, teacher dispositions, sensibilities and skills.
Student teachers shall be equipped to cater to diverse needs of learners in schools.
Student-teachers are to be actively engaged in teaching at two levels, namely, upper
primary and secondary. They should be provided opportunities to teach in
government and private schools with systematic supervisory support and feedback
from faculty. Internship in schools is to be done for a minimum duration of 15 weeks.
This should include an initial phase of one week for observing a regular classroom
with a regular teacher and would also include peer observations, teacher
observations and observations of interns lessons by faculty. It is important that the
student-teachers consolidate and reflect on their teaching experience during and
after the school internship. Therefore, along with writing reflective journals during
the internship programme, there shall be space for extended discussions and
presentations on different aspects of the teaching experience after the internship.
For each student-teacher, internship should be conducted preferably in one school for
the entire 15 weeks. However, if the institute wants to provide an opportunity to
understand the context of teaching in a government and private school or the
dynamics of teaching at elementary and senior secondary levels, this period can be
divided into two blocks. Internship may be arranged in two blocks in such a way that
teaching in one school at a particular level (for example elementary or senior
secondary) during one block, is followed by the teaching in another school or the
same school at another level during the second block. Under any circumstances, the
student-teacher should not be sent to more than two schools during her/his
internship period. Internship should not be reduced to the delivery of a certain
number of lesson plans, but should aim for meaningful and holistic engagement with
learners and the school. Moreover, teaching should not be practiced through the
reductionist approach of microteaching of isolated skills and simulated lessons.
c)
resources,
and
promoting
constructivist
approaches
that
privilege
participation and co-creation over mere access to ICTs. Courses that would focus on
developing the professional and personal self of a teacher will be designed to
integrate theoretical and practical components, transacted through focused
workshops with specific inputs on art, music, drama and yoga. These courses shall
offer opportunities to self-reflect, study issues of identity, interpersonal relations,
while viewing schools as sites for social change; developing social sensitivity and the
capacity to listen and empathise.
COURSE DETAILS
Course 1: Childhood and Growing Up
This course offers an introduction to the study of childhood, child development and
adolescence (Sharma, 2003). It aims to develop understanding about children of different
age groups, through close observation and interaction with children from diverse
socioeconomic and cultural backgrounds (Saraswathi, 1999). The main focus in the
course would be to enable student teachers to arrive at an understanding of how different
socio-political realities construct different childhoods, within childrens lived contexts:
family, schools, neighbourhoods and community.
The course builds an interdisciplinary framework to interpret and analyse observations
and interactions. The theoretical frames would be drawn from cross-cultural psychology,
sociology and anthropology to bring together theories of child development and crucial
aspects from the construct of childhood, which has political, social and cultural
dimensions.
The students would read about theories of child development, childhoods and
adolescence as constructed in different social-economic and cultural settings. The course
would importantly include perspective building on the issues of marginalization, of
difference and diversity, and stereotyping. These ideas would be revisited in other courses
too; but are posited here to essentially underline childrens lived experiences; for
instance, living in an urban slum, growing up as a girl and growing up in a dalit household
(Mishra, 2007; Nambissan, 2009; Parry, 2005; Rampal & Mander, 2013).
The concept of adolescence would be situated in realistic and contextual frames. Do
children across different cultures experience adolescence similarly? How does
urbanisation
and
economic
change
impact
its
construction
and
experience?
Representations of gender, class and poverty in media can be brought to the classroom to
understand lived realities, assumptions of notions of childhood and stereotypes. This
course also may provide windows into looking at ideas of work and childhood; children in
difficult circumstances and an understanding of them; with a critical deconstruction of
significant events that media highlights and creates.
The pedagogy draws from student teachers themselves, readings about childhood from
diverse contexts, and engaging with children. The course posits the student-teachers as a
resource themselves, as they bring their own experiences to the classroom discussions.
Opportunities would be provided to engage with childrens lived realities in many ways:
through biographies, stories, narrations of growing up in different cultures, observations
about children by parents and teachers, childrens diaries, testimonies and the media.
The two important field based components would be to observe children in their natural
settings, especially at play (or in a community setting), and to interact with children using
activities as a base to establish rapport. These would help student-teachers to critically
understand how their observations relate to the theories they have learnt and also to
situate their learnings in realistic frames.
The assessment of the paper could be organized around student-teachers developing
capacities to look at, understand, interpret notions about children and childhood, about
growing up in realistic contexts and arriving at a critique of the universalistic normative
notions of childhood and children and adolescents; to be able to interpret how gender,
caste and social class may impact the lived experiences of children.
B)
Right to Education (GOI, 2009; Raina, 2010), Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan and the thrust
towards enrolling and retaining hitherto marginalized children; the role and agency
of teachers in the context of universal and inclusive education (Batra, 2005; R.
Govinda & Josephine, 2004); earlier policies for universal elementary education;
Nayee Taleem (Hindustani Talimi Sangh, 1938; Sykes, 1987) to integrate life, work
and education, in the context of community participation and development; the
response of diverse social groups of India to the spread of modern education in the
colonial and post-independence periods; education of marginalized groups like
women, dalits and tribal people (Chakravarti, 1998) ; nationalist critique of colonial
education and experiments with alternatives (Kumar, 2013; Ghosh, 2007; Zastoupil
& Moir, 1999).
Similarly, in the context of language policies, the course will connect with Course 4
(Language across the Curriculum) and span current research on multilingual
education, debates on the medium of schooling, from the present to the preceding
developments of the Three Language Formula, the constitutional provisions, and the
colonial debates on school language policies (Naik, 1982; Naik & Nurullah, 1974;
Scrase, 2002).
The course will also look at the Kothari Commission (GOI, 1966) recommendations
and their implementation in the context of planned industrialization; National Policy
on Education 1986, its review (GOI, 1992), the subsequent context of liberalization
and globalization of the Indian economy; pedagogic and curricular shifts of 1990s
and 2000s. It will review the Mid Day Meal programme and the role of legislative
action to ensure nutrition and a public space where children eat together,
transcending caste, religion, class and gender, as stressed by the order of the
Supreme Court (More details on http://www.righttofoodcampaign.in/). Current
concerns relating to plebianisation, privatization, and stratification of education will
be located in the larger context of what is happening across the world (Hill &
Rosskam, 2009).
with the notion of learning as construction of knowledge (NCERT, 2005; Phillips, 1995).
They will also investigate the differences and connections between learning in school and
learning outside school (Rampal, 2003; Rogoff, Baker-Sennett, Lacasa, & Goldsmith,
1995). Finally, they will form strong images of what powerful learning in a classroom can
be, its relationship with learners motivation, and develop analytical tools to understand
such learning.
Reflection on learning will therefore have the following broad components:
Student-teachers will appreciate that all teaching is directed at learning, and that the
learner is at the heart of teaching (Holt, 1964). They will critically question the
widespread belief that teaching is telling (informing/demonstrating), and understand
culturally responsive teaching approaches that support learning (Ladson-Billings, 1995;
Plato, 2009). They will explore the activity of teaching in a formal setting, and appreciate
it as a contextually located, highly complex enterprise, that cannot be reduced to
techniques (Carr, 2005 Chapter 2; Lampert, 2001).
Values, personal relationships between teacher and learners, relationships among the
learners themselves, autonomy, self-esteem and freedom experienced by learners, all
shape and are shaped by the work of teaching. Student-teachers will analyse teaching as a
profession, reflect on their beliefs and practices, multiple responsibilities located in an
institutionalized setting, and the need and opportunities for professional growth
(Shulman, 1986; Kosnick and Beck, 2009). Reflection on teaching will hence have the
following broad components:
Teaching as a profession
Modes of transaction: The course will involve students integrating the study of academic
texts with visits to schools and other field sites, and the analysis of a variety of records of
learning and teaching. These should include videos of lessons, examples of childrens
work, records that capture a variety of images of learning and teaching. Student
participation will be in an inquiry mode, involving planning exploration, sharing and
reflecting, analytical writing, and studying teachers diaries (Badheka, 2006; Bhatt, n.d.).
oral and written language can be used in the classroom to ensure optimal learning of the
subject area. Several studies have shown that Indian students perform weakly in reading
comprehension (Sinha, 2000). This in itself should be a crucial concern of all teachers.
Therefore student-teachers will need to be familiar with theoretical issues, and to develop
competence in analysing current school practices and coming up with appropriate
alternatives.
The focus of the course will be under three broad areas:
1) Understanding the language background of students, as first or second language
users of the language used in teaching the subject. The aim will be to create sensitivity
to the language diversity that exists in the classrooms.
This will be based on theoretical understanding of multilingualism in the classroom
(Agnihotri, 1995); the home language and school language; the power dynamics of
the standard language as the school language vs home language or dialects; Deficit
theory (Eller, 1989); Discontinuity theory.
2) To understand the nature of classroom discourse and develop strategies for using oral
language in the classroom in a manner that promotes learning in the subject area.
The nature of classroom discourse; oral language in the classroom; discussion as a
tool for learning; the nature of questioning in the classroom types of questions and
teacher control (Thwaite & Rivalland, 2009).
3) To understand the nature of reading comprehension in the content areas
(informational reading). Writing in specific content areas with familiarity of different
registers should also receive attention.
Reading in the content areas social sciences, science, mathematics; nature of
expository texts vs. narrative texts; transactional vs. reflexive texts; schema theory;
text structures; examining content area textbooks; reading strategies for children
note-making, summarizing; making reading-writing connections; process writing;
analyzing childrens writings to understand their conceptions; writing with a sense of
purpose writing to learn and understand.
last two centuries, and have been constantly redefined and reformulated (Goodson &
Marsh, 2005). During the last fifty years or so most disciplinary areas, especially social
science, natural science and linguistics have undergone a sea change. The questions that
were asked, the methods of study and validation of knowledge etc. have changed
substantially. The notion of knowledge as being firm and objective, impersonal and with a
coherent structure is a product of particular social and political contexts and is now seen
in a more diverse, dialogical, subjective, fluid and porous frame. Even those areas of
disciplinary knowledge such as mathematics, earlier considered culture free and
universal, are now seen through socio-cultural perspectives, and there have been
attempts towards redefinitions of the school subject, also with concern for social justice.
It is increasingly recognised that for teachers to know a school subject they must know the
theory of content how the content was selected, framed in the syllabus, and how it can
be transformed so that learners construct their own knowledge through it. The inclusion
or exclusion of a subject area from the school curriculum too has had a social history. For
instance, the introduction of primary science in the British school system in the late
nineteenth century privileged a decontextualised abstract curriculum over the prevailing
alternative of Science of the Common things for the working classes, owing to pressure
from dominant social groups (Hodson, 1987). In India, modernist thinkers like
Rammohun Roy hoped that western Science and Math and Philosophy would be taught in
schools and colleges so that Indians could learn about recent developments in these areas.
In contrast the actual school curriculum as it developed emphasised the teaching of
language, history and civics instead, as they were better vehicles of colonial
indoctrination. In contrast in the post- Independence era the government placed
importance on the teaching of science and math, which are now internationally being
considered the vehicles of national development. However, the content as developed by
subject experts is usually considered worth teaching and very little attention is paid to
drawing upon the experience of children, their communities, their natural curiosities or
even to the methods of study of the subjects. Thus there is a particular imagination of the
subject, content and children implicit in the way curriculum and syllabus and text books
are designed, which teachers will learn to examine.
Current discourses on school curricula challenge the notion of the disciplinarity doctrine
where school subjects are designed in a purely discipline-oriented, not learner-oriented
manner, even though students may not pursue those after school. This design of school
subjects also leaves out other kinds of knowledge, such as practical knowledge,
community knowledge, intuitive or tacit knowledge, etc. and does not address issues of
social reconstruction (Deng, 2013). With a focus on interdisciplinarity the nature of
school subjects has to change. Moreover, work related subjects, such as, horticulture or
hospitality, need to be creatively developed, which are not looked down upon as nonacademic.
these gendered roles in society, through a variety of institutions such as the family, caste,
religion, culture, the media and popular culture (films, advertisements, songs etc.), law
and the state (Menon, 2012).
Unequal access of education to girls is a well-documented reality. But the concerns of
gender-just education go beyond access to schools; gender identity construction is
influenced by forces at home and in society. The seat of power and authority in the Indian
societal context is more often than not, firmly rooted in patriarchy. It is important to
understand how socialisation into a specific gender influences how we and others look at
ourselves and others, and what opportunities for education we get. As future teachers, we
should understand and examine the role of schools, peers, teachers, curriculum and
textbooks, etc. in challenging gender inequalities or reinforcing gender parity. With this
purpose, B.Ed. students will be expected to observe and study the distribution of roles
and responsibilities in schools and classrooms, rituals and school routines, processes of
disciplining distinctly as for girls and boys, and in classroom interaction. Take for
example, studying the everyday activities where the majority of girls constitute the
assembly choir group and the boys form the inter-school cricket team; girls partnered to
be seated with other girl students and boys with boys; sciences associated with boys and
humanities with girls; art and craft considered to be the domain of the girls and physical
education that of the boys; etc. Teachers need to question such stereotypes and help
students rethink their beliefs.
This course will also study representation of gendered roles, relationships and ideas in
textbooks and curricula (Nirantar, 2010), examining how schools nurture or challenge
creation of young people as masculine and feminine selves. Teachers' need help to
develop abilities to handle notions of gender and sexuality, often addressing the issues
under diverse cultural constraints, their own and their students, instead of shying away
from the same. The formulation of positive notions of sexuality among young people
impact larger issues perceptions of safety at school, home and beyond, identification of
sexual abuse/violence and its verbalisation, combating the dominant societal outlook of
objectification of the female body, and so on. The course will undertake critical reading of
the media which propagates popular beliefs, reinforcing gender roles in the popular
culture and by implication, at school.
Though how these are conducted is in itself open to scrutiny, Life Skills courses in school
seem to include provisions to deal with some issues of gender identity roles and
performativity for the development of positive notions of body and self. Why these issues
are delineated only for supplementary extra-curricular periods in school and not
integrated into subjects of study need to be discussed. This course will encourage
prospective teachers to attend and themselves undertake sessions of open verbalisation
with school students, voluntary cum friendly involvement in discussions, group work,
brainstorming, audio-visual engagements, together with the co-participation of school
(teachers, counsellors and other resources), home (parents and siblings) and society
(NGOs, other expert groups, etc.).
Student-teachers will be exposed and trained to prepare pedagogic material and practice
a pedagogy which can develop abilities and confidence in their students to critically
evaluate and challenge gender inequalities, while being sensitive to social groups and
regions and exploring the roles of the said institutions (family, caste, religion, culture,
media and popular culture, law and the state).
Assessment of childrens learning in a subject area would follow the perspectives and
practices delineated through Course 9. Student-teachers would be encouraged to develop
diverse processes throughout the year to ensure better motivation and learning, and also
help children for self- assessment with insights about meta-learning.
daily
relationship between power, ideology and the curriculum is traced (Apple, 2008). The
student-teachers learn to critically analyse various samples of textbooks, childrens
literature, and teachers handbooks etc. The ways in which the curriculum is driven by
assessment, which in turn is motivated by market interests is debated.
traditional notion of
assessment within a
or
mainstreaming
into
normal
schools,
confuse
the
popular
understandings of inclusion, this course will require students to interrogate their own
beliefs and also of school teachers, to see how those influence the implementation of
inclusion.
The course will significantly highlight that inclusion involves: a) The conviction that all
children can learn and grow; b) A firm belief in positive and varied outcomes; c) A
pedagogy that is ever evolving and constantly responding to the changing needs of
learners; d) An assessment policy that assesses skills and knowledge rather than content
and that is open to a variety of assessment methods and time frames; e) An environment
that functions with the support and active participation of all - children, parents,
community, teachers, administrators and policy makers (Policy Guidelines on Inclusion
in Education, UNESCO, 2009).
As part of their field tasks, student-teachers would be required to engage with: i) Popular
narratives of disability and ability so as to track the changing definitions; ii) To track
how learning/achievement is perceived and understood in policy/state documents. What
power equations exist between the different notions?; iii) To visit educational institutions
to attempt an identification of the barriers to learning and participation and to help
schools move towards positive practices, cultures and policies.
analyse various text structures to see how these contribute to the comprehension of a text.
These readings will also provide the context for writing. Combining reading and writing
leads to the development of critical skills. Student-teachers will get opportunities to write
with a sense of purpose and audience, through tasks such as, responding to a text with
ones own opinions or writing within the context of others ideas.
develop aesthetic sensibilities in student-teachers and learn the use of art in teachinglearning (Prasad, 1998). Student teachers will visit places of art, exhibitions and cultural
festivals. Encouragement needs to be given to understand local culture and art forms and
interpret art works, movies and other Media. Likewise other activities can be used to
build trust and cooperation, the sense of responsibility, pursuing tasks collectively and
exploring varied perspectives.
Be it visual or performing, the practice of art deepens childrens ability for perception,
reflection and expression, providing them with alternative languages to experience and
communicate subtle, diverse and unfamiliar territories, from human to the larger
consciousness of nature (Armstrong, 1980; Davis, 2008). The challenge of teachereducators lies not only in expanding the landscapes of childrens art, but in also
perceiving their world, their artistic processes and then from that sense of understanding,
explore ways of assessing their work (Carini, 2001).
economic spheres (Castells, 2011). The course will help student-teachers to develop an
understanding of the shift from an 'industrial society' to a 'post industrial information
society', where the production and consumption of information is both easier/ simpler as
well as important (DSERT Karnataka, 2012). This change has positive and negative
implications and possibilities for democracy, equity and social justice, all core
components of our educational aims. The course will help student-teachers reflect
critically and act responsibly to prevent how ICTs are used to support centralisation and
proprietisation of larger knowledge structures; it will show student-teachers how ICTs
can be adapted to support decentralized structures and processes, as well as build the
'digital public' to make education a participatory and emancipatory process (Benkler,
2006).
Different modes of expression can be used in each of the sessions (so that each of the
students get a chance to express herself through any of the modes that they are
comfortable in) and at the end of the year, the resource person and the coordinating
faculty can reflect back on whether all modes of expression were included through
the sessions of not.
Broad areas
Introduction
Values and
Individual
Connecting -
Social
self image
and collective
self-society
interface
selves
Main
Trust
Opening
Team
Understanding
Becoming
objectives
building, for
self,
building,
social
the change
future
reflection,
respecting,
structures
agent
exercises,
culture for
tasks, sharing
(stereotypes/
designing
laying
listening
responsibility.
diversity /
and
ground
and
addressing
gender) and
leading
rules,
accepting
conflicts
role of the
change /
individual
social action
energizing
Broad
Games,
Reflections,
Nature walk/
Films, meeting
Participate
methodologies
theatre
story
field visit ,
people, small
or lead in
activities,
making, self
adventure.
group tasks,
real life
discussions
disclosure
Simulation
theatre
intervention
through
exercises,
exercises
(within
art, dance
collective art
and theatre
families/
college or
community)
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APPENDIX 1
Course Structure for the NCTE Two-Year B.Ed. Programme
Semester Wise Distribution of the Courses
Semester 1
Course 1
100 marks
Course 2
100 marks
Course 4
50 marks
Course 5
50 marks
50 marks
Semester 2
Course 3
Course 7a
50 marks
Course 8a
50 marks
Course 9
100 marks
100 marks
50 marks
Engagement with the Field: Tasks and Assignments for Courses 3, 7a, 8a & 9
Semester 3
Course 7b
School Internship
50 marks
250 marks
Semester 4
Course 6
50 marks
Course 8b
50 marks
Course 10
50 marks
Course 11
50 marks
50 marks
50 marks
Engagement with the Field: Tasks and Assignments for Courses 6, 8b, 10 & 11
Note:
a).
1/2 indicates a half paper which is allocated both half the time of effective hours per week and
also half the marks assigned to a full paper.
b).* Optional Courses can be from among the following Vocational/Work Education, Health and
Physical Education, Peace Education, Guidance and Counseling, etc. and can also be an
Additional Pedagogy Course**(for a school subject other than that chosen for Course 7 (a&b)
at the secondary level, or the same school subject at the higher secondary level).
**Teacher education institutes/university departments can make arrangements to offer an
additional pedagogy course for (i) a second school subject at the secondary level for interested
student-teachers who have undertaken adequate number of courses in that subject during their
graduation or (ii) the same school subject as in Course 7 but at the higher secondary level for
student-teachers with a post-graduate degree in that subject.