Preservice Teachers’ Reflection for the Acquisition of Practical Knowledge during the Practicum

2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 118-129
Author(s):  
Raquel Gómez ◽  
Juanjo Mena ◽  
María-Luisa García Rodríguez

Teacher reflection is widely considered as an important process that provides in-depth learning experiences to preservice teachers. Portfolios and teachers' diaries are commonly used teaching tools to funnel one's own critical thoughts about practice. It is also common to analyse the teaching practice in the practicum through the guidance of expert teachers who act as mentors. Both ways are crucial to organise preservice teachers' practical knowledge acquired in the schools. The objective is to determine under which learning situations (individual reflection vs. mentoring interaction) knowledge is better acquired and determines the differences between preservice teachers. Five preservice teachers were recorded giving a regular lesson to primary school students. Data was analysed by following the PDA model that divides the content in narrative and inferential. Main results reveal that practical knowledge is mostly elicited with the help of a mentor and mostly inferential. There were minimal significant differences among preservice teachers.


2020 ◽  
pp. 105-118
Author(s):  
Alexander Gamst Page ◽  
Elin Tronsaune Moen

In recent years, the concept of knowledge has become a fruitful analytical area within the field of teacher education. It is recognised that knowledge can take different forms, and in this regard, Aristotle’s tripartite distinction has been most influential. This consists of theoretical knowledge (episteme), practical knowledge (techne) and the wisdom necessary to combine the two and to know when and how to implement them (phronesis). Much of this research has been rather deductive, with pre-existing categories being used rather than letting categories arise from the data. This chapter attempts to capture a more emic picture of the knowledge production of preservice teachers (PSTs). The chapter is based on semi-structured interviews of 30 PSTs at various stages of their education. The interviews revolved around their experiences of being taught on campus and teaching for themselves during classroom practice. Our findings are that the PSTs experience a circular production of competence, where theoretical knowledge from the lecture hall becomes grounded in their experiences from practice. Such experiences are also brought back into the lecture hall where they may gain more theoretical context. This cyclical analysis is reminiscent of the hermeneutic circle, where deeper understanding is created through repeated oscillation between two different framings of the material.


2014 ◽  
Vol 31 (2) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caroline Payant

Unlike the observed trends in general teacher education, the use of videos as a re-flective tool with preservice English as a Second Language (ESL) teachers remains underexplored in MATESOL (Master of Arts in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages) programs. The present qualitative study examined how 5 non- native-speaking preservice teachers used the videos of their own microteaching performances to mediate their reflective practices. The results from the qualitative analysis of the participants’ post-microteaching reflective reports showed that they used videos to explore their professional and non-native identities, practical knowledge base, and pedagogical knowledge base. The results are discussed with respect to their implications for educational practice with preservice ESL teachers.Contrairement aux tendances générales observées dans la formation des en- seignants, l’emploi des vidéos comme outils de réflexion lors de la formation d’enseignants d’anglais langue seconde (ALS) n’a pas fait l’objet d’étude dans le cadre des programmes de maitrise en enseignement de l’anglais aux apprenants étrangers (MATESOL). L’étude qualitative présente porte sur l’emploi qu’ont fait 5 enseignants de langue maternelle étrangère en formation de vidéos de leur microenseignement comme outils d’intervention auprès de leurs pratiques réflex- ives. Les résultats de l’analyse qualitative des rapports réflexifs rédigés par les participants après leur microenseignement indiquent qu’ils se servent des vidéos pour explorer leurs identités comme professionnels et locuteurs étrangers, ainsi que leur base de connaissances pratiques et pédagogiques. On discute des résultats par rapport à leur incidence sur la pratique éducative des enseignants d’ALS en formation.


2006 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Bowen ◽  
Wolff-Michael Roth

In this paper, we report our efforts to improve upon the difficulties traditionally experienced by preservice teachers while they are in their first field experience, such as resolving the gap between methodological approaches discussed in their “methods” class and the practicalities of the particular classroom setting they are teaching in (often referred to as the theory-practice gap). Drawing on our interviews with preservice teachers who taught in pairs, we report on the experience that such an environment for learning to teach provides to newcomers to the teaching profession. We theorize the experiences by drawing on two related theoretical frames that were developed to explain co-teaching and practical knowledge, respectively.


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