scholarly journals Collage as a Pedagogical Practice to Support Teacher Candidate Reflection

2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 329-345
Author(s):  
Gail Prasad ◽  
The Lions BEd Group

This article reports on collage as a pedagogical practice to support teacher candidate reflection. We outline a multi-step collage-based reflection workshop that was part of a required course on “Inquiries Into Learning.” The summative collage project was designed to help teacher candidates reflect on their vision of learning (hope) and their fears and doubts as beginning teachers. The process and product of their final integrated collage led students to interrogate how their hopes and fears mingle together in practice. Six teacher candidates share their series of collages and GIFs, along with their reflective personal statements. We conclude by highlighting lessons learned through collaging from the perspective of students.

2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-49
Author(s):  
Matthew P. Campbell ◽  
Erin E. Baldinger, ◽  
Foster Graif

Approximations of practice provide opportunities for teacher candidates (TCs) to engage in the work of teaching in situations of reduced complexity. A problem of practice for teacher educators relates to how to represent student voice in approximations to engage TCs with interactive practices in meaningful ways. In this article, we share an analysis of our use of “planted errors” in coached rehearsals with secondary mathematics TCs focused on the practice of responding to errors in whole-class discussion. We highlight how different iterations of the planted errors affect the authenticity of how student voice was represented in the rehearsals and the resulting opportunities for TC learning. We offer design considerations for coached rehearsals and other approximations of practice.


Author(s):  
Shannon L. Melideo

Putative in the fields of psychology, sociology, education, and neuroscience is that some degree of learning takes place in significantly new situations. Ideally, study abroad will provide a multitude of new experiences for teacher candidates to relish, revel in, relate to, and recount. Thus during the study abroad experience, emotional, psychological, and cognitive intelligences of teacher candidates will transform. Prior to departure, a teacher candidate will have intentionally or unintentionally created a version of reality in their lives. Trudging uphill through the mucky streets of a small Ugandan village between tiny homes made of thatch and mire, past this morning's decapitated steer head, and amongst friendly, dirty, children playing with machetes can quickly change a person's version of reality. Practical examples of response and succor for balancing “versions of reality” will be bestowed. Finally, lessons learned to best attempt to prime teacher candidates for potentially perplexing circumstances will be imparted.


Author(s):  
Tanya Judd Pucella

The education profession demands a great deal of our entry level “employees.” The edTPA was developed as a performance assessment that evaluates the readiness of beginning teachers to meet these high demands. On a broader scale, the information from the edTPA can be used by educator preparation programs (EPPs) to evaluate their curriculum and practice to ensure that they are adequately preparing beginning teachers for the rigors of the classroom. This chapter will discuss the formative and summative assessment possibilities that the edTPA provides for both candidates and EPPs. This summative assessment can take on a formative role for the preservice educator within their program of study prior to student teaching. The summative data can also be used by the EPPs to identify gaps in candidate knowledge. A case study of one EPP's use of the edTPA as a diagnostic tool for programmatic improvement will be discussed. This chapter will also discuss changes made to the program and specific courses in order to more fully support teacher candidates in the development of their edTPA portfolios.


Author(s):  
Shannon L. Melideo

Putative in the fields of psychology, sociology, education, and neuroscience is that some degree of learning takes place in significantly new situations. Ideally, study abroad will provide a multitude of new experiences for teacher candidates to relish, revel in, relate to, and recount. Thus during the study abroad experience, emotional, psychological, and cognitive intelligences of teacher candidates will transform. Prior to departure, a teacher candidate will have intentionally or unintentionally created a version of reality in their lives. Trudging uphill through the mucky streets of a small Ugandan village between tiny homes made of thatch and mire, past this morning's decapitated steer head, and amongst friendly, dirty, children playing with machetes can quickly change a person's version of reality. Practical examples of response and succor for balancing “versions of reality” will be bestowed. Finally, lessons learned to best attempt to prime teacher candidates for potentially perplexing circumstances will be imparted.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Meredith Moore ◽  
Kevin Ng ◽  
YJ Kim ◽  
Kevin Robinson ◽  
Meredith Thompson ◽  
...  

Teacher preparation programs are beginning to embrace new ways for teacher candidates to practice enacting complex professional activities, such as digital simulations. It can be challenging for teacher educators to support teacher candidates in learning through these experiences when the records of practice are stored in audio or video files. This article discusses a portal being developed through design-based research to allow teacher educators to access and efficiently process records of teacher candidates’ performance from a digital simulation. A pilot study was conducted to see how two teacher educators used a prototyped portal to plan and facilitate a post-simulation debriefing with five teacher candidates, and to identify additional opportunities to foster teacher candidate learning. Findings suggest that accessing short transcripts of teacher candidate performance supported teacher educators in planning a debriefing that was grounded in clear learning objectives and responsive to teacher candidates’ needs, while using the data from the portal to make practice public during the debriefing created opportunities for targeted feedback and supported meaning-making.


2016 ◽  
Vol 118 (7) ◽  
pp. 1-42
Author(s):  
Heather Hebard

Background/Context Tensions between university-based teacher preparation courses and field placements have long been identified as an obstacle to novices’ uptake of promising instructional practices. This tension is particularly salient for writing instruction, which continues to receive inadequate attention in K–12 classrooms. More scholarship is needed to develop a theory and practice of methods education that accounts for these tensions. Purpose This study investigated how opportunities to learn to teach writing in preservice preparation mediated teacher candidates’ learning. The investigation's aim was to add to our knowledge of how teachers learn and the factors that impact this learning to offer implications for improving teacher education. Participants and Settings Participants included literacy methods course instructors from two post-baccalaureate, university-based, K–8 teacher certification programs and participating candidates enrolled in these courses (N = 20). Settings included methods course meetings and participating candidates’ field placements. Research Design This comparative case study examined opportunities to learn and preservice teachers’ uptake of pedagogical tools across two programs. A cultural–historical theoretical lens helped to identify consequential differences in the nature of activity in preservice teachers’ methods courses and field placement experiences. Data included instructor interviews, methods course observations, teacher candidate focus groups, and field placement observations. Patterns of field and course activity in each program were identified and linked to patterns of appropriation within and across the two cohorts. Findings In one program, methods course activity included opportunities to make sense of the approaches to teaching writing that teacher candidates encountered across past and current experiences. The instructor leveraged points of tension and alignment across settings, prompting teacher candidates to consider affordances and variations of pedagogical tools for particular contexts and goals. This permeable setting supported candidates to develop habits of thinking about pedagogical tools, habits that facilitated uptake of integrated instructional frameworks. In the other program, methods activity focused almost exclusively on the tools and tasks presented in that setting. This circumscribed approach did not support sense-making across settings, which was refected in the fragmented nature of teacher candidates’ pedagogical tool uptake. Conclusions Findings challenge the notion that contradictions in teacher education are necessarily problematic, suggesting instead that they might be leveraged as entry points for sense-making. In addition, permeability is identified as a useful design principle for supporting learning across settings. Finally, a framework of pedagogical tools for subject-matter teaching may provide novices with a strong starting point for teaching and a scaffold for further learning. “I felt at the beginning of the school year that writing was not going to be a strong point for me…. Maybe part of it was the way [my cooperating teacher] modeled it for me; it was just free flowing, kind of … jumping from thing to thing [each day]…. It wasn't like the way [our methods instructor] had modeled for us … [using] four-week units.” –Sheri, teacher candidate, Madrona University


2016 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
pp. 145-159
Author(s):  
Dan Parker ◽  
Robert McGray

This research draws into question the effects that neoliberal policy reforms — with an emphasis on individual and measurable “competencies” — has on new teachers teaching sexuality education in Quebec. While we examine professional competencies that teachers can use to define their mandate for teaching sexuality education as a beginning professional, we also detail the ways in which the competencies constrain pedagogical practice. Our argument is that while there are avenues for teachers to use the professional competencies for sexuality education, neoliberal reforms atomize teachers in a search for accountability. As a result, for fear of generating controversy, potentially contentious issues like sexuality education are not readily addressed. This atomization restricts both teachers and the field — the policy circumscribes sexuality education as personal rather than cultural. As such, we are left impotent to address cultural issues of sexuality education.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 47-71
Author(s):  
Glenda L. Black

Action research has the potential to reconstruct schools into professional learning communities that are able to identify educational issues and develop appropriate solutions for 21st century learning. Increasingly, teacher education programs are providing action research experiences to encourage analytical thinking and problem-solving skills (Darling-Hammond, 2009, 2012). The purpose of this study was to critically examine the experiences of the teacher educator and teacher candidates involved in the implementation of an action research component over four years in a revised consecutive initial teacher preparation program. A case study design using action research methodology was used in the research, which provided the tools to explore a complex phenomenon within its context: the implementation of an action research assignment in a core course in a teacher preparation program. The perceptions of the faculty teaching the course and the teacher candidates (n=544) in each of the four years provided insight into challenges, benefits, and lessons learned.  The discussion centers on the implementation of action research in a compulsory course in a teacher education program; identifying opportunities and limitations settled into four main categories: structural incongruence, reflection, growth, and recommendations.


Sarwahita ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 19 (01) ◽  
pp. 21-34
Author(s):  
Etin Solihatin ◽  
Raharjo ◽  
Roby Ibnu Syarifain ◽  
Esa Aryo Kuncoro

Abstract (10pt) The purposes of devotion to the community activities are to develop teacher and teacher candidate ability to create research draft proposals, also Catfish cultivation using biofloc technique. Proposal making workshop activities consist of providing information, practice, and intensive consultation. Catfish cultivation activities consist of cultivation practice, marketing, and simple accountancy record, also evaluation. Based on those activities proposal making workshop was able to improve teacher and teacher candidates ability to create a quasi-experiment proposal final draft. Activity documentation and material were published on the YouTube platform https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ogfgRQJUE7w.While catfish cultivation with biofloc technique is able to to improve community income because catfish could be harvested after three months and sold. Catfish cultivation can increase community prosperity in the COVID-19 pandemic because it could produce alternative income through the primary sector (food). Activity documentation was published on the YouTube platform https://m.youtube. com/ watch?v=G542rOJuzrc.   Abstrak Kegiatan pengabdian ini bertujuan untuk meningkatkan kemampuan guru/ calon guru dalam membuat draft proposal penelitian quasi eksperimen dan pengenalan budidaya lele sistem bioflok. Pelaksanaan workshop pembuatan proposal dilakukan melalui pemberian informasi, praktek dan pendampingan konsultasi yang intensif.  Budidaya ikan lele sistem bioflik diaksanakan melalui berbagi pendapat dan praktik budidaya yang diikuti dengan kegiatan pemasaran, pembukuan sederhana, dan evaluasi kegiatan. Berdasarkan hasil pengabdian dapat disimpulkan bahwa workshop/ pelatihan pembuatan proposal penelitian Quasi eksperimen dapat meningkatkan kemampuan guru/ calon guru dalam membuat proposal penelitian. Dokumentasi kegiatan dan QR Code materi pembuatan proposal dapat dilihat pada platform YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ogfgRQJUE7w. Setelah itu, budidaya ikan lele teknik bioflok dapat meningkatkan pendapatan masyarakat karena dalam waktu +  tiga bulan ikan dapat dipanen, dan dijual. Hal ini akan berdampak pada peningkatan kesejahteraan di masa pandemi yang identik dengan tingginya angka PHK. Berdadarkan hal tersebut penghasilan alternatif dapat menjadi solusi menjaga kesejahteraan ekonomi di tengah masa pandemi. Dokumentasi kegiatan dan langkah budidaya lele dapat dilihat pada platform YouTube https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=G542rOJuzrc..  


2009 ◽  
Vol 111 (2) ◽  
pp. 480-510
Author(s):  
Anita M. Varrati ◽  
Mary E. Lavine ◽  
Steven L. Turner

Background/Context Beginning teachers often identify the school principal as a key figure for support and guidance. Few teacher education conceptual models exist that significantly integrate the building principal into the clinical experiences of teacher candidates. The rationale behind initiating discourse on principal involvement grows out of current policy and reform initiatives that require increased accountability for improved student performance. The call for more deliberate principal involvement in preservice also arises in regard to teacher attrition and retention concerns. Having the principal engage in active mentoring during preservice may positively address these issues by providing a more complete socialization and enculturation process into today's context of schooling. Purpose/Objective/Research Question/Focus of Study The major research questions for this study were: (1) What are the level and types of support that building principals provide for the preparation of new teachers? (2)What are the obstacles that may be preventing principals from becoming more involved with teacher preparation? (3) What are the types of activities that make sense for principal involvement with field experience and student teaching? (4) What are suggestions for more meaningful collaboration between schools and teacher/administrator preparation programs? Research Design The study was designed as an interpretive qualitative research project that attempted a measure of self-reporting through in-depth interviews. Conclusions/Recommendations M3—A new conceptual model of collaboration (three supports for preservice teacher: mentor, university supervisor, and principal) was presented to include the principal with the preservice teacher, university supervisor, and cooperating teacher in a community of practice for teacher preparation. To build on this research and continue the discourse about the principal's role, several implications and areas for future study are presented: (1) investigation of teacher preparation programs more in depth to get further information about how principals are involved in teacher education, (2) implementation of the M3 conceptual model in a pilot capacity during field and student teaching experiences to gather more data about collaboration, especially the role of the principal, (3) the collaboration of principal preparation and teacher education programs to address this aspect of supervision in course content and internships, (4) the difference in perceptions of prospective and practicing principals regarding their role with teacher candidates during preser-vice, and (5) study of professional development schools to see how the principal is involved in a supervisory and instructional leadership capacity with preservice teachers.


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