The Character Profile of a Learner Teacher
An Integrative Review and Conceptual Framework
Dharma Kesuma, Babang Robandi, Teguh Ibrahim and Arie Rakhmat Riyadi
Faculty of Education, Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia, Bandung, Indonesia
dharma@upi.edu
Keywords: Character Education, Learner Character, Learner Teacher, Teacher Competency Development, Integrative
review.
Abstract: This paper aims to analyze and explicitly explain the concept of “learner teacher character” which supported
by several recent studies and research. The research method used is the concept analyzation with generic
analyzation design (McMillan and Schumacher, 2011) or the integrative review (Whittermore and Knafl,
2005). The results of this research concluded that the profile of learner teacher character possess some
indicators, first, epistemic curiosity; second, the desire to enhance life qualities or utopic awareness; third,
learning ability in which contains critical awareness and metacognitive ability; fourth; independency or the
autonomy of learning in which shown with contribution towards other. This research possess some
significance for the development of learner character education in which it is the flagship program of PGSD
UPI. Moreover, this research will provide theoretical contribution of the learner teacher character profile
explicitly so that it may inflict for the enhancement of the program quality of learner competence enhancement
for teachers in Indonesia.
1 INTRODUCTION
Entering 2017, Indonesian teachers’ profile does not
fully reflect the true learner. Empirical fact of the past
three year is quiet frightening, for example is the
acquisition of UKG or TCT (Teacher Competency
Test) which showed the national average score that
only hit 56.69. Several studies reported that the
Indonesian teacher performance has not yet reached
optimal point. A research conducted by Kesuma et al
(2009) about Bandung elementary school teacher
profile concluded that elementary school teachers at
partner school are lack pedagogic and professional
competency, having lack of PTK or CAR (Classroom
Action Research) and teaching materials making
skills is an essential finding in this research.
Furthermore, Ilfiandra (2012) conducted a research
on teacher burnout in Bandung. Freudenberger (in
Ilfiandra, 2012) define the termteacher
burnouteducator’s inability to work effectively as a
result of stress and excess work. Ilfiandra’s research
concluded that Bandung teacher in the age span of 30
– 50 have high level of burnout, the causes are the
high teaching stress, semi-retirement age,
overbooked class, high administrative stress, and the
lack of teacher’s will to improve teaching activity
through CAR. Those two researches on teachers
profile represent a frightening condition. It seems
there is no data for the analytic-empirical cause.
However, the authors hypothesize that one of the
causes is the unoptimal teacher professionalism
enhancement program organized by the Indonesian
government.
Research reports that teacher professionalism
development approaches in many countries usually
focus only on transmitting pre-determined knowledge
in a one-time session reflecting local policy initiatives
and changing priorities (Day and Sachs, 2004;
Schwille, Demb, Schubert, 2007;). The isolated
nature of this model encourages teachers to passively
receive information from educational experts and
then adopt a new approach without question (Darling-
Hammond and McLaughlin, 1999). In addition, the
sponsored Workshops consisted of reading through
policy documents, standard assessments, and asking
teachers to evaluate students' written exams rather
than effective pedagogical applications (Ono and
Ferreira, 2010). This approach does not provide an
evaluation of teacher’s learning and its impact on
students and their classes (Hendricks, 2013;
Mendelowitz and Davis, 2011). The research
literature concludes (egg Ball and Cohen, 1999;
Kesuma, D., Robandi, B., Ibrahim, T. and Riyadi, A.
The Character Profile of a Learner Teacher - An Integrative Review and Conceptual Framework.
In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Educational Sciences (ICES 2017) - Volume 1, pages 535-543
ISBN: 978-989-758-314-8
Copyright © 2018 by SCITEPRESS – Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
535
Desimone, Smith, and Frisvold, 2007; Opfer and
Pedder, 2011) that currently the professional
development of teachers is short, fragmented, and
isolated from real-world situations. And it has not had
an effect on teachers' willingness to change their
learning in the classroom.
Responding to the problem, the Indonesian
Ministry of Culture and Education has organized
learner teacher competency enhancement program.
This program is a strategic step to enhance teachers’
pedagogic and professional competence. Starting
from the speech of the Minister of Education and
Culture in a speech at the Commemoration of 2015’s
Hari Guru Nasional (HGN) or National Teacher's
Day; he invited all teachers to become learner teacher,
a teacher which is always present as an educator and
leader for learners, teacher who attend to sent a
message of hope, teacher which are an example of
resilience, optimism and cheerfulness. Teacher is a
learner who continually learns to improve their
quality. (Kemendikbud, 2016) Learner Teacher
Competency Enhancement Program is a process of
teaching and learning activities in order to improve
the capability and competence of teachers in
implementing the tasks of their profession. The
enhancement includes several activities aimed at the
improvement and the growth of capabilities
(abilities), attitude (attitude), and skills. This activity
is expected to produce a change in teachers’ behavior
which significantly changes the behavior impact on
improving the performance of teachers at teaching
and learning in the classroom. (Kemendikbud, 2016).
In relation to the learner teacher competence
program, International research reports that teacher
professionalism development is about teachers who
learn how to learn and transform their knowledge into
practices that enhance student learning activities
(Avalos, 2011). A review of 97 studies from the U.S.,
Canada, England, the Netherlands, New Zealand, and
Israel, Timperley, Wilson, Barrar and Fung (2007)
concluded that a variety of conditions are needed to
advance teachers’ learning. These conditions include:
a) time extension for teachers to develop, absorb,
discuss, and practice new knowledge; b) a safe space
to explore new materials and challenge previous
beliefs and practices; and c) Collaborate in the
pedagogic field that requires teachers to learn in ways
that reflect how to teach their students. Furthermore,
Ball (2009) designed a model of generative change as
a framework for the development of teacher
professionalism as a learner that aims to study how
teachers become reflective, wise, critical, and
generative thinkers. There are four stages in the
generative learning process (Ball, 2009). In the first
phase, teachers develop their metacognitive
awareness in which increases with their writing of
personal and professional experiences. In the second
phase, as teachers engage in mature discussion of
important issues related to language and literacy, they
look within themselves and their students' needs to
define their role within the teaching / learning
community. In the third phase, teachers are engaged
in action research and / or otherwise-problem-solving
questions and begin to internalize and develop
generative thinking skills. Finally, in the fourth stage,
teachers combine theories, best practices, and the
needs of their students to facilitate their own theories.
In his model, Ball identifies the importance of
narrative writing (Bruner 1994) and the four theories
that make up teacher generative change:
metacognitive awareness (Bransford, Brown and
Cocking, 2000), ideological being (Bakhtin, 1981),
internalization (Vygotsky, 1978); Self-efficacy
(Bandura, 1997). The generative learning model for
the development of teacher professionalism is also
being developed by Assaf, Ralfe, and Steinbach
(2016) through reflective journal-based learning
which implicates on the improvement of writing
process in several South African schools.
Referring to previous research, the authors found
a void in the conceptual framework regarding the
character profiles of learner teachers, this is the issue
that will be discussed in this paper, this void the
foundation of thinking for the learning teachers’
competence program considered as weak. Therefore,
this papers attempts to complement the study on
learner teacher enhancement program by displaying a
concept analysis of learner teacher’s character in the
context of teachers’ professionalism development in
Indonesia. The concept of the character is referring to
performance character and moral character concept
suggested by Davidson, Khmelkov, and Lickona,
(2010). The character of the learner teacher in this
paper possess a number of indicators that will be
explicitly stated by the author. The characters that
suggested by the author are 1) having epistemic
curiosity, 2) having emancipative will or utopic
awareness, 3) having learning skills (critical
awareness or metacognitive skills), and 4) having
learning independency or autonomy. The authors
hope this paper can be an alternative reference for
improving the quality of learner teacher programs and
can construct a further study on the learner character
education at the college level.
ICES 2017 - 1st International Conference on Educational Sciences
536
2 THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
2.1 What does ‘character’ means in the
context of teacher of a learner?
First of all, the writer would like to explain the
concept of character explicitly. Juke (2014) explained
that “essence of a character is the quality of an
individual which is shown in the form of behavior”.
The qualities represent something valuable, valued
positively, and normatively. That means a person
with character would always consist in doing things
morally and valuably in everyday life. Furthermore,
Davidson et al (2008, 2010) differentiate two
dimensions of characters: performance character and
moral character. Performance character can be
interpreted as 'the power to strive for the best', having
strong orientation in achieving victory which includes
the quality of determination or will, perseverance and
self-discipline. Performance character is self-
qualities related to achievement orientation towards
task or work. Meanwhile moral character can be
interpreted as “power to do good deeds “having
relational orientation and manifested within integrity,
good relation, concern, affection and justice; moral
qualities which related to good social behavior.
(Davidson, Khmelkov, and Lickona, 2008, 2010).
Referring to that opinion, the word “character” in
this paper is more fixed onto ‘teacher’s performance
character as a true learner’. However, performance
character does not stand alone, because every teacher
character improvement project is always involving
moral character. According to Davidson et al (2010)
“even though performance character and moral
character conceptually seems different, but both of
them complete each other and hold control in forming
someone’s personality”. Moreover, in accordance to
Lickona (1992) broadly speaking, a good character is
formed by three dimensions of moral which are moral
knowing, moral feeling, and moral action. Can be
seen explicitly on figure I:
Figure 1: A Good Character’s Component
Based on those experts opinion, it can be
concluded that character is quality of one’s
personality which is manifested in good behavior
consistently. Character is built by three moral
components which are moral knowing, moral feeling,
and moral action. Moral knowing can be interpreted
as ate ability to understand and interpret a situation or
phenomenon. Moral feeling can be interpreted as the
ability to view moral phenomenon affectively, for
instance an individual feels happy when he does a
good deed and vice versahe feels sad for doing a bad
deed. Meanwhile moral action can be interpreted as
one’s act which is based by moral knowing and moral
feeling; it also can be defined as normative act (doing
what should be done), moral act fixed on competency,
will, and habit. Those three components of moral
character would also support the functionality of
teacher’s performance characters a true learner.
Because of that the concept of ‘character’ in this
paper is constructed by theoretical study on the
meaning of character in context of performance and
moral.
2.2 How about learner teacher?
Nowadays, the profession of teacher is being
stricken by self-identity crisis, so that teachers are too
busy teaching that they are forget to learn and renew
their understanding and knowledge. In Ball’s
perspective (2003) the pressure of neo-liberalism on
education world has scraped the identity of teacher’s
professionalism; educational policy is more focused
on market request, business management, and
academicals cognitive performance. Matching Ball’s
opinion, in Indonesian context, Nafika and Al-Asyari
(2013) clearly stated “All this time, education only
focused on one centrum which is to fill new
employment as the result of modernization and
industrialization. Billions of this nation’s youth
purely shaped in a single bowl to fill technical
position in companies and factories”. Even the
Indonesian teachers are trapped in curriculum
materialism, where the quality of education only
measured by numbers (Sumardianta, 2014). Teachers
in Indonesia are more like education ‘worker’ and
curriculum operator (Ibrahim, 2016). In this situation,
teachers are truly oppressed by the Bureaucratization
of education policy (Freire, 2005).
Reflecting on this phenomenon, it is not
exaggerating if the writer concluded that teachers in
Indonesia still having conventional teaching
paradigm. Learning and teaching activity still defined
as a mechanical activity which aims to consume a
number of knowledge, memorize, and then tested
Moral
Action
Competenc
y
Will
Habbit
Moral Knowing
Moral Awarenes
Knowing Moral
Values
Perspective-
talking
Moral reasoning
Descision making
Self knowledge
Moral
Feeling
Conscience
Self-esteem
Emphaty
Loving the
good
Self-control
Humil
ity
The Character Profile of a Learner Teacher - An Integrative Review and Conceptual Framework
537
cognitively. This mechanical paradigm a potential
threat to sink teachers’ consciousness, thus making
science and technology development is not something
to be challenged to replicate or reproduce, but only a
bunch of fact that is consumed.
Related to teaching and learning paradigm, the
writer identified two learning concept which are: (1)
the learning process to master existing science (2) the
learning process to create new science.
Table 1: Learning Concept.
Learnin
g
Conce
p
t
Learning as a Science
Mastering
Learning as a Tool of
Creation
Process
(1) The process of
memorizing words as it
is, verbalism, rests on the
ability of remembering
(C1, Bloom).
(2) The process of
meaning memorization
rests exclusively on the
ability of understanding
(C2, Bloom).
The process of great
scientists creating new
science, the process of
research, the process of
answering questions
through data gathering
critically, the process of
critical problem solving.
Motivation
Motivation is extrinsic,
learning to pass the test,
or, for the benefit of
knowledge reproduction.
The motivation is intrinsic,
learning in order to fulfill
curiosity, desire to solve
problems, the desire to
emanci
p
ate life.
Utilization
(1) Study for the sake of
passing the test.
(2) Studying build
dependence towards
books and scientists.
(3) studying for the sake
of preserving existing
culture, existing social
structure, including
preserving the
oppressing social
structure because of the
critical development
failure
(1) Study for the sake of
fulfilling curiosity (as
stated by western
psychologists); but it is
better to study for the sake
of life emancipation.
(2) Studying is an act of
getting freedom, building
independencies, self-
autonomy, including
learning and thinking
independency.
(3) Studying for the sake of
social transformation;
studying potentially
p
roducin
g
innovations.
Activists
Knowledge production
done by a number of
elites in research center
and university (research
elitism); and common
people from school level
are consumer of
knowled
g
e.
Everyone has the same
chance to find or create
knowledge, or solving
problem, does not have to
be scientists (research
democratization).
Adopted from Kesuma (2016).
Adopted from table 1, it can be concluded that all
this time learning activity is focused on mastering
existing science. The first learning concept is
identical with memorization; which then tested on a
test that is focused on verbal reproduction (through
words) of science. Which is different with the second
learning concept, creating new science, is a learning
activity advised by Paulo Freire (in Kesuma and
Ibrahim, 2016), Jarvis (1992), scientific approach,
and metacognition approach (Marzano and Kendall,
2008). The creation of new science is not forever
means as the words is, it could be re-creation or re-
finding of a science, or other forms. Responding
those two paradigm, a teacher that has true learner
character would, of course, hold on to the second
paradigm, where knowledge is not only being
consumed, but more on to creation and re-creation, in
where science is used as a whip to create innovation
or a more advanced replication. One of the ways for
teacher to re-create science and knowledge is through
CAR, this process will help teacher to reflect learning
activities he ran, identify current problem, proposing
hypothesis, and answering the hypothesis through the
improvement of learning activity process.
3 METHOD
This research method is a concept of analysis method
along with generic analysis to identify the essential
meaning of a concept. The analysis isolates elements
which distinguish a concept from other words. The
result of the generic analysis is the clarity of a
concept. The indicator is the availability of
definitions and arguments which support the
meanings. (McMillan and Schumacher, 2001).
Generic analysis design could be called as integrative
review. The method is conducted in some steps
starting from problem identification, literature
searching, evaluation and data analysis, and the last is
reporting (Whittemore and Knafl, 2005; Brady and
Asselin 2016).
1. The problem is the need of conceptual
framework relates to a profile of character
learning teacher along with the indicators.
2. Literature review applies article references
which are posted in a website that provides the
variety of trusted international publications
such as sciencedirect.com, SAGE
publications, and ERIC journals. The
literature searching uses some keywords:
learners, character building, professional
development, and others which are required.
ICES 2017 - 1st International Conference on Educational Sciences
538
3. The evaluation data is being done through
article selection which supports literature
review of the learners’ character profiles, 20
out of 40 articles are selected to be the best
references.
4. Data analysis, the researchers adopt line
method by line coding (Corbin and Strauss,
2008). Researchers identify phrases, sentences
and themes relate to research review.
5. Reporting, the last product from integrative
review, is the steady-state concept concerning
the profile of learner teachers’ characters.
4 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
4.1 What are the learner teacher
indicators?
So far, it has chosen from numerous sub-dimensions
of learner character competency. The following items
are based on the writer’s perception of teachers’
learning needs in which so far to this point has been
building interpersonal-academic relationship with the
writer. Especially the teachers that participated in
PGSD UPI program and UPI partner school teacher.
Table 2: The learner teacher indicators.
Learner Character
Competencies
Competency Achievement
Indicator
H
a
b
i
t
Curiosity
Always ask significant
question.
Always seek for information
independently.
The desire of
improving life
or utopian
awareness
Always concerned upon
seeing weakness.
Always strive to contribute
upon one self and others.
Always making efforts to
improve things particularly
teachin
ractice in a class.
Learning
Competency
Always bring up specific
problem/question, idea, or
hypothesis on currently
learned phenomena.
Always strive to answer the
problems they are currently
facing.
Always discuss working
result in order to overview the
process/result of learning
activity.
Always havingskill and
knowledgeimprovement.
Independency
or learning
autonomy
Always being able to create
test for existing theory.
Always being able to test
existing theory.
Always appreciate/accept
better argumentation.
Always strive to fulfill other’s
learnin
g
needs.
As for the explanation, the authors describe as
follows:
4.1.1 Curiosity
Human curiosity is a topic of current research interest
(Powell, Nettelbeck, Burns, 2016), and has been
applied to predicting job performance (Mussel,
2013b), academic achievement (von Stumm, Hell,
and Chamorro-Premuzic, 2011), and ex- ploratory
behavior (Litman, Hutchins, and Russon, 2005).
Moreover, curiosity is human nature, an inseparable
part of human when he encounters strange things,
new things, challanges, threats, doubts, discrepancy,
and problems. Freire (in Kesuma and Ibrahim, 2016)
mentions human as a creature in a permanent search,
a creature which explores, supported by his curiosity.
Berlyne (1950, 1954) shares a note of the first concept
of curiosity, he distinguisghed perceptual curiosity,
and epistemic curiosity. In this context, researchers
applies epistemic curiosity concept to be a learner
teacher indicators.
In a context of learner teachers, by putting aside
curiosity, a teacher only does their actions without
exploits his critical mind, typically people in general
which flows and follows the culture. A life which
flows (determinism) leads to a spontaneous, reactive,
and naive type of curiosity. Teachers as learners
should have a great curiosity, an intense motivation to
develop, a high integrity and become consistent in
enhancing his work performance. The will to learn is
his natural characteristic. External factor such as
getting promotion, or allowance is his second
motivation.
4.1.2 The desire of improving life or utopian
awareness
Curiosity needs to be improved by the desire to
improve life. Freire (1974) defines it as praxis
(reflection-action-transformative). Habernas (1987)
defines it as a normative and communicative action,
Halpin mentions utopian thinking. Utopian
perception combines knowledge and the interests of
human glorification (humanization) and the ideal
creation of social life. The intention of learning leads
The Character Profile of a Learner Teacher - An Integrative Review and Conceptual Framework
539
to improve life. A valid science is the inseparable part
of activities to improve and reform. In a context of
teacher as a learner, the desire to improve life
implicates to the process of regenerate learning
practice, leads to reflection process (Ball, 2008), self-
regulation (Zimmermsn and Schunk, 2001), and
moral agency (Campbell, 2008, 2010)
In “Hope and Education (The Role of Utopian
Imagination), David Halpin states the desire of
improving education world can be called as utopian
education, Halpin explains:
Although a utopia about utopianism in the
education context, this topic does not attempt to
predict the future of schooling. Rather, it discusses
the kind of attitude educators should consider
having about its reform and about the prospect of
educational change generally. Basically, this
attitude is one that entails the adoption of a
militant optimism of the will in the course of
which a form of ultimate hope is brought to bear
on educational situations and problems through
specific applications of the utopian imagination.
(Halpin, 2003)
According to Halpin’s argument, the characters of
learner teachers certainly require utopian awareness,
involve to hopes, critical thinking, and the power of
action which stands up to reform, change, and future
education prospect. Utopian manner to education can
be illustrated by analogy with militant manner
(compassionate, high spirit, totality) in keeping
optimism to fight for education reformation in macro-
region, and learning practice’s reformation in micro-
region.
4.1.3 Learning skill (Critical Consciousness
or Metacognitive skills)
According to Freire (1974, 2001, 2008), learning
competence is a competency to problematize one’s
life, anything which human confronts in his life is his
challenge and learning. Problematization aims to the
search of knowledge, and a preferable life.
Problematization would be successfully done if the
person has critical consciousness. Critical
consciousness is consisted of some components.
Mustakova concludes in his research “which I found
most pertinent to the salient structural developmental
aspects of Freire's (1974) definition of Critical
Consciousness. Those aspects were (a) reasoning
about causality, (b) understanding of one's social
experience, (c) ways in which the self relates to social
experience, and (d) moral reasoning.’’ (Mustakova,
1998). In accordance to Mustakova’s argument, it
could be realized that people who already has critical
consciousness attempt to find the reason for being
(causal, existence)from what they have encountered,
the connectivity of other phenomenon between the
reason of their existences. The finding is done
analytic-critically, in terms to find a valid-reliable
knowledge and to transform a life into a better one.
This kind of person is a critical scientist as well as a
moral person. Critical consciousness could be
developed through scientific approach, where teacher
does their actions like a scientist. Scientific approach
demands teachers to think systematically and
critically. In order to solve problems which has no
clear solution. (Barringer, et al 2010). The scientific
approaches could be represented by some steps as
below:
Table 3: Scientific Approach.
Scientific A
pp
roach
Essential steps Learning scenarios
Observing Observing phenomenon
Questioning Bring up questions, ideas, and
h
yp
othesis
Testing Answering questions,
implementing ideas or hypothesis
in order to collect data.
Processing data Interpreting the data, finding and
formulating
meanings/patterns/themes/
concept of data; presenting it in the
form of narration, graphic, tables,
matrices, and fi
g
ures.
Communicate Presenting the results of data
p
rocessing
Adapted from curriculum 2013.
The authors think the most essential step from the
scientific approach is questioning and answering.
When a person encounters a phenomenon in order to
learn it, he has to bring up questions, ideas, or
hypothesis. Then, answering it through
implementation, practice, and observation.
Table 4: Questioning and Answering.
Observin
g
Questioning
Questionin
g
Testin
g
Answering Data
p
rocessing
Communicating
In the context of teachers as learners, teachers
learning skills could be developed through scientific
approaches which could be implemented in various
activities. Either it is a learning-teaching process,
studying pedagogy theories and executing classroom
ICES 2017 - 1st International Conference on Educational Sciences
540
action research. All actions aims to improve
education and human resources qualities.
4.1.4 Independency or Learning Autonomy
Authors presume independence as an affective side
from learning competency which has been explained
above. When a person becomes relatively competent
in learning and implements the metacognition
learning process, he will become an independent
person. He is exempted from his dependency to
another parties, he becomes independent. He
understands the way to act as a professional.
Independence also has negative side, such as being
individualistic and selfish. Independence in this
context is collaborative independence with anyone.
Authors presume few people understands about
autonomy or independence of ourselves. There are
some people who position themselves as an operator
in their work life, not a developer or learner teachers.
The meaning of learning independence starts with
a premise that an independence student is responsible
of his own learning. By doing this, they could
identify:
Their purpose of learning (what they need to
learn)
Their learning process (how they learn)
How they evaluate and apply their learning
They have a lot of approaches and learning
skills
They organize their time to learn
They have great skills of information
processing
They are motivated to learn well
(Yagcioglu,2015, Moore, 2015)
In accordance to Yagcioglu and Moore’s findings,
it coud be realized that learner teachers must have
motivation and the strong learning independence.
Through learning independence, teachers could
overcome their problems which they encounter in
class or in their professional life. Independence
learning helps teachers to cope with its dependence of
unethical things such as plagiarism. Independence
learning will help them to become scientists which
the study is to create an ideal learn in practice, assists
the students to learn and develop their potential.
These four dimensions of learners’ characters
have to be expanded through the appropriate
character education pattern. It could be the way to
awaken critical consciousness of the importance of
teachers as learners (Freire, 1974; Kesuma, 2016), to
arrange classroom action research regularly (mcNiff,
1988), to collaborate with colleagues to enhance the
quality of education (Johnson and Johnson, 2008), to
develop self-regulation skills (Zimmerman, 2008),
and learning based experience (Girvan, Conneely,
and Tangney, 2016). Some of these recommendations
are likely to improve teachers' self-efficacy. In the
context of teacher profession in education world, self-
efficacy of teachers regards to personal beliefs about
teachers capabilities to assist students learning. Self
efficacy of teachers influences actions, efforts, and
teachers’ persistence to educate students (Ashton,
1985, Ashton and Webb, 1986 in Schunk 2008).
Teachers which have lower self efficacy might not
design the actions which are beyond their capabilities,
not be able to handle the student problems, not doing
many efforts to search for materials, and not review
the lesson materials in the way that students would
understand. A teacher which has low self efficacy
tend to be more comfortable with something stagnant,
avoiding innovation.
While teachers which has higher self efficacy
tend to develop challenging actions, help the students
to become successful, and persevere in handling the
students which has learning problems. Motivational
effects towards the teacher could improve student
achievements. Teachers which have higher self
efficacy also indicate a strong commitment toward
their professions (Chan, lau, nie, lim and Hogan, 2008
in Schunk 2008). Ashton and Webb (1986) in Schunk
(2008) discovered teachers with higher self efficacy
tend to create a positive classroom environment,
supporting students’ ideas, and have the eye for
students’ needs. Regarding to the experts’ opinion, it
could be concluded that self efficacy is the first step
for a teacher to build learner characters within
themselves. Through high self efficacy, a teacher is
confident of their self potential, has a focus on their
visions. Persistence in order to achieve goals through
behaviours which are arranged by progressive self-
regulation ability.
5 CONCLUSIONS
This paper presents a conceptual framework regards
to what “learner teachers’ characters” are, and how
essential to improve teacher’s professionalism in
education life. This paper attempts to give reference
alternatives for improving the program of learner
teacher competence improvement that is being held
by the Indonesia’s Ministry of Education and Culture.
The learner teacher’s characters which are
recommended in this paper have some dimensions or
indicators require: 1) epistemic curiosity; 2) the desire
to enhance life qualities or utopian awareness; 3)
learning ability in which contains critical awareness
The Character Profile of a Learner Teacher - An Integrative Review and Conceptual Framework
541
and metacognitive ability; 4) independency or the
autonomy of learning in which shown with
contribution towards other.
These four dimensions of
learners’ characters must be built and developed in a
teacher and applied in teacher profession education
program. It requires learning based on self-regulation,
critical consciousness, metacognitive and moral
agency. This paper is not yet perfect because it is still
in the stage of building a theoretical and pedagogical
framework, it has not reached the implementation
stage. For the next research it is expected to facilitate
the concept of the dimensions of learner’s
characteristics in an applied research which has
significant validity and reliability.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Authors thank to every parties, especially to
researchers which focus on reviewing learner
characters education theories, teacher profession
development, and critical pedagogy. Their ideas
inspire the authors to finalize this paper. Authors also
thank to “The First International Conference on
Educational Sciences” (ICES) committees which
have facilitated authors to publish this paper.
Hopefully it could provide benefits for the readers
and academic society.
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