scholarly journals Using video annotation to reflect on and evaluate physical education pre-service teaching practice

Author(s):  
Meg Colasante

<span>This case study examined the integration of a media annotation tool (</span><em>MAT</em><span>) into the learning and assessment activities of an undergraduate teaching (physical education) course. The media form or artefact for annotation was video recordings demonstrating individual learners' teaching practice. The learners categorised (marked sections) and annotated their videos and received peer and teacher feedback within the tool. Their use of </span><em>MAT</em><span> was analysed to determine if this learning environment was effective in the context of the case, to critically reflect upon and evaluate pre-service teaching practice. The research site was RMIT University, Melbourne, and data was collected from the pilot users of </span><em>MAT</em><span>, a third year class and their teacher/key academic, using pre- and post-surveys and interactive process interviews (combined sessions of direct observation and semi-structured interviews). The data indicated </span><em>MAT</em><span> was effective for the main learning purpose of the case, but also identified some areas for further consideration</span>

2021 ◽  
pp. 1356336X2110509
Author(s):  
Niki Tsangaridou ◽  
Ermis Kyriakides ◽  
Charalambos Y. Charalambous

Focusing on preservice classroom teachers (PCTs) with a physical education (PE) specialization, this exploratory case study aimed at investigating the teaching quality in the lessons offered by these teachers during their field placement, as well as examining their views about teaching PE. Toward this end, seven volunteer female PCTs studying at a national university in Cyprus were recruited; all had attended three PE specialization courses before their field placement. Data were gathered through systematic observations, semi-structured interviews, and document analysis. The quantitative data were analysed using SPSS and the qualitative data using case and cross-case analysis. These analyses suggested that the PCTs could effectively employ classroom and time management as well as skill demonstration; they could also provide quality student practice. In contrast, task progression, accountability of student practice, and task explicitness appeared to be more challenging for them to successfully enact. Interestingly, their lesson plans foreshadowed how effectively most of the examined practices would be employed by the PCTs. This study contributes a new understanding of PCTs’ PE teaching during field placement and their views thereof. The implications of the findings for PCTs’ education are discussed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 44 (2) ◽  
pp. 129-153
Author(s):  
Kari Sahan

Abstract As part of the trend toward internationalization of higher education, governments and universities have introduced policies to encourage the expansion of English-medium instruction (EMI). However, top-down policies do not necessarily translate to teaching and learning practices. This article provides a case study examining the implementation of undergraduate EMI engineering programs at a state university in Turkey to explore the gaps that exist between national- and institutional-level EMI policies and classroom-level practices. Data were collected through policy documents, classroom observations, semi-structured interviews with teachers, and focus group discussions with students. The findings suggest that the implementation of EMI varies across classrooms, even within the same university department. Despite policies that envision one-language-at-a-time instruction, the EMI lecturers in this study varied in terms of language preference and teaching practice in their EMI lectures. Implications are discussed with respect to policy planning, teacher training, and the expansion of EMI across university contexts.


2020 ◽  
Vol 28 ◽  
pp. 182
Author(s):  
Rubem Barboza Ferreira Neto

This article seeks to study reports (or perceptions) of students and education professionals on sports school infrastructure in the didactic-methodological process of Physical Education classes, in five municipal public schools, for the final years of elementary school in the city of Armação dos Búzios-RJ, Brazil. Historical and dialectical materialism were the philosophical frameworks used to guide this qualitative method study in the format of multiple cases studies. Semi-structured interviews were used as a data collection technique for adult participants and questionnaires to students. Content analysis of the data led to three categories of analysis: Learning, Physical Space and Teaching Practice and Materials. The results suggest that the pedagogical practice and skills of students are severely affected in Physical Education, based on inefficient material provision and the type and quality of spaces used, including non-school environments such as outdoor courts and public squares.


2020 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 188
Author(s):  
Andre Osvaldo Furtado ◽  
Elisandro Schultz Wittizorecki ◽  
Natacha Da Silva Tavares

RESUMOEste estudo busca compreender como os professores de Educação Física atuantes na Rede Estadual de Ensino do Rio Grande do Sul percebem e reagem às políticas educacionais que lhes são demandadas pelos gestores estaduais nas ultimas três gestões do governo estadual do Rio Grande do Sul. Neste sentido foi realizada uma pesquisa qualitativa na perspectiva da etnografia. Como obtenção de informações foram realizadas: observações participantes do cotidiano dos professores de Educação Física, registrada nos diários de campo; entrevistas semiestruturadas com cinco professores de Educação Física e análise de documentos. Através da análise foi possível construir unidades de significado que agrupadas resultaram em três categorias analíticas: a indiferença, a resistência e as marcas. Compreendemos que o professorado de Educação Física participante deste estudo atua em dado momento da sua prática pedagógica com indiferença e resistências às políticas educacionais formuladas pelos gestores. É possível pensarmos que a resistência dos professores é potencializada quando eles são convidados a preterir elementos da sua história de vida que estão imbricados na sua prática pedagógica.Palavras-chave: Ensino Médio. Trabalho docente. Políticas Educacionais. Prática Pedagógica. ABSTRACTThis study aims to understand how Physical Education teachers from Rio Grande do Sul public state schools follow and react to educational policies demanded by the local and state authorities from the last three state government management of Rio Grande do Sul. In this context, a research focused on ethnography was conducted. To obtain information, there were performed observations in the daily routine of Physical Education teachers, recorded in the field journal; semi-structured interviews with five Physical Education teachers and data analyses. Because of the analyses, it was possible to build meaning units, which organized, result in three analytical categories: the indifference, the resistance, and the marks. The results suggest that the Physical Education teachers, who participated the study, act in their teaching practice indifferently and resistant to educational policies formulated by the state managers. It suggests that the resistance of the teachers is reinforced when they are led to ignore elements from their own life experience which are interwoven with their teaching practices.Keywords: High School. Teaching. Educational policies. Teaching practices.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Maria Auxiliadora Cerrato Corrales

<p>The main purpose of this comparative study was to explore how teachers of four to five year old children in New Zealand and Honduras translate their beliefs regarding children’s leadership into practice. This study has the potential to increase our understanding of beliefs and practices that will assist teachers in supporting children’s leadership. The study used a comparative case-study design in order to look at similarities and differences between the two cases, focusing on two early childhood centres from low socio-economic areas in the capital cities of each country. Two teachers from each centre were asked to be participants in the study. Data was gathered through semi-structured interviews, participant observations, and documentation. The findings suggest that both New Zealand and Honduran teachers translate their beliefs regarding children’s leadership into practice. However, the findings showed significant differences between New Zealand teachers’ child-directed and Honduran teachers’ teacher-directed beliefs and practices. The teachers in the New Zealand settings encourage leadership by empowering the children to deliberately take a leadership role, while the teachers in the Honduran settings encourage leadership by allocating opportunities for the children to take a leadership role. In addition, the teachers in New Zealand highlighted their belief and practice concerning children sharing leadership, while the concept of sharing leadership was not emphasized by the Honduran teachers. This study suggests the importance of teachers reflecting on their beliefs regarding children’s leadership and how these guide their teaching practice in order to support children’s leadership.</p>


Author(s):  
Evelyn Aguirre ◽  
Solomon Faller

The usefulness of teachers’ mentoring program cannot be underestimated. Some universities and colleges in the Philippines have been implementing this kind of program with different approaches, content, and scope. The extent of mentoring programs to improve teaching careers has been studied here and abroad. Results remain inconclusive. This case study with a phenomenological peg has explored the lived experiences of neophyte teachers through semi-structured interviews and focus group discussions. Their experiences in the first years of teaching were characterized by uncertainties, anxieties, struggles, and difficulties emanating from their lack of expertise on various aspects related to teaching practice, lack of knowledge about the culture and context of the university in which they were teaching, and lack of knowledge about the learners. With these specific inadequacies identified and the novice teachers’ implicit desire to be mentored, cues for a viable neophyte teacher’s mentoring program are drawn in the context of a teacher-training university.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Mary Ann Meri Arthur Marshall

<p>The impetus and reason for this study has been a desire to discover and capture the 'spark' that causes Māori children specifically, to have a love of reading, to be enthusiastic about reading and, in turn to be confident and competent beginning readers. Research in Maori education often focuses on problems of student underachievement. This study by contrast has aimed to highlight aspects of positive practice by recording the learning behaviours of a group of Maori children across two low decile primary schools, who are not only engaged in the beginning approach to reading but who are clearly motivated by and enjoying the process. This study explores the reasons why Māori children are engaged and motivated beginning readers and aims to see if it is possible to capture any of these attributes in order to support other Māori learners in becoming successful readers. The value of this research is in its potential to contribute to frameworks or initiatives that support Māori children achieving well, in this case, in the area of literacy. This study is a qualitative research under the tradition of a case study inquiry and is embedded within a Kaupapa Māori paradigm. A total of 17 participants (two literacy advisers, two teachers, six children and seven parents) were interviewed using flexibly structured interviews. The interviews were transcribed and analysed through themes that came from the data itself. Common themes from each participant group allowed for analysis in relation to the key research questions: What is the spark that causes Māori children to have a 'love of reading? What does this spark look like? What sparks Māori children into enjoying reading? And what are the factors and influences that contribute to reading engagement and motivation for Māori children? Classroom observations and video filming were also methods of data gathering in order to gain full and deep contexts of descriptive data of the children and teachers in their natural everyday classroom environment. The six children observed in this study were strongly engaged in classroom reading contexts and motivated to read. Both teachers and parents had a firm but relaxed approach to the reading experience. Strong and supportive home-school relationships with open communication were evident. Māori tikanga (practice) was incorporated naturally into planning. Teacher planning and practice was in line with best evidence for effective literacy practice. The practice of the two Pakeha teachers was in many ways consonant with Maori pedagogical approaches and this gave support to the children as Māori learners. The observations and interviews showed beginning readers who were comfortable and relaxed in their learning. They were making clear progress in reading, and approaching national norms in achievement. The 'spark' that leads children to be highly motivated readers, concentrating on reading tasks and clearly loving the process of learning to read is an intangible quality, hard to jmeasure in practice. But high levels of concentration, enjoyment of reading, and a desire to learn can be observed and recorded. All these things were seen in this study. It is possible to nurture and grow the enthusiasm, engagement and motivation that these children have if teachers demonstrate open hearts and minds in wanting to know their learners. The 'spark' or motivation in this study was also nurtured through the interconnected relationships the children had with their teachers and families and the effective teaching and learning practices displayed by the teachers. Using te reo (language) and tikanga Māori as a 'normal' part of daily practice contributed to the holistic wellbeing of the Māori children in this study, alongside strong home-school relationships. The combination of good teaching practice, good relationships and a firm but relaxed approach provides a model in action for success in supporting Maori children's beginning reading.</p>


Author(s):  
Alexandre Vasconcelos Mazzoni ◽  
Marcos Garcia Neira

ResumoRealizou-se uma pesquisa com o objetivo de conhecer quais elementos possam ter contribuído para a constituição de uma docência da Educação Física atenta à diversidade cultural. Como procedimento metodológico, optou-se pela pesquisa pedagógica qualitativa. O material resultante da realização de entrevistas semiestruturadas foi confrontado com a teorização cultural. Partindo da análise das concepções de professores da rede pública, que colocam em ação o currículo cultural da Educação Física, inferiram-se as possíveis relações entre a experiência pessoal, o olhar para a contemporaneidade e a atuação pedagógica. Podemos inferir que os elementos que contribuíram para a constituição de uma docência da Educação Física atenta à diversidade cultural podem ter sido gerados por uma trajetória de vida marcada pelo enfrentamento de situações socialmente adversas.Palavras-chave: Educação Física. Cultura. Currículo. Diversidade Cultural. Relationships between personal experiences and physical education sensitive to cultural diversityAbstractResearch was performed aiming to know which are the elements that must have contributed to build a Physical Education teaching practice that is concerned with the cultural diversity. As to the methodology, the pedagogical qualitative research. The material obtained from the semi-structured interviews was compared to the cultural theories. From the analysis of the conceptions of the teachers of the Public Schools, who put into action the cultural syllabus of the Physical Education teaching, were derived the possible relationships among the personal experience, the regard to the contemporaneity and the pedagogical practice. From the many analysis we could derive which are the elements that contributed to creating a teaching practice in Physical Education, which are concerned with the cultural diversity, and may have been generated by a life trajectory marked by socially difficult situations.Keywords: Physical Education. Culture. Curriculum. Cultural Diversity. Relaciones entre experiencias personales y educación física sensibles a la diversidad culturalResumenLa investigación se realizó con el objetivo de conocer cuáles son los elementos que deben haber contribuido para construir una práctica docente de Educación Física que se preocupa por la diversidad cultural. En cuanto a la metodología, se adoptó la investigación cualitativa pedagógica. El material obtenido de las entrevistas semiestructuradas se comparó con las teorías culturales. A partir del análisis de las concepciones de los docentes de las escuelas públicas que pusieron en práctica el currículo cultural de la Educación Física, se derivaron las posibles relaciones entre la experiencia personal, el respeto a la contemporaneidad y la práctica pedagógica. De los muchos análisis que pudimos deducir cuáles son los elementos que contribuyeron a la creación de una práctica docente en Educación Física, que se preocupan por la diversidad cultural y que pueden haber sido generadas por una trayectoria vital marcada por situaciones socialmente difíciles.Palabras clave: Educación Física. Cultura. Currículum. Diversidad Cultural.


Author(s):  
Alek Tarkowski

Internet applications such as Web-based blogging and instant messaging tools or social networking sites often provide their users with the possibility of displaying small graphic elements. Such “pictures” or “icons” allow users to represent and mutually identify themselves. This text is an analysis of user icons displayed on the LiveJournal blogging site. I treat such a user icon as a medium with particular characteristics and patterns of usage. LiveJournal users use such icons to participate in what John Fiske (1992) calls popular culture. A case study of user icons discloses the life cycle of the media form, during which a medium with initial characteristics coded by its creators begins over time to support a wide variety of uses, innovation in usage, and active participation in culture. In this chapter, I consider user pictures and practices that are tied to them as an example of the manner in which popular culture functions in the digital age.


2019 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 357-389
Author(s):  
Chris Kooloos ◽  
Helma Oolbekkink-Marchand ◽  
Rainer Kaenders ◽  
Gert Heckman

AbstractDeveloping and orchestrating classroom discourse about students’ different solution methods is an essential yet complex task for mathematics teachers. This study reports on the first stages of classroom discourse development of one Dutch higher secondary school mathematics teacher who had no prior experience in including classroom discourse in her teaching practice. Four lessons in analytic geometry were developed iteratively, in collaboration with the teacher. The lessons consisted of students working on a mathematical problem plus classroom discourse concerning students’ different solution methods. Classroom discourse video recordings were collected and analyzed in order to develop a framework to characterize the teacher’s actions, and to describe the change in the teacher’s role in classroom discourse. The results reveal three main changes in the teacher’s role: First, the way the teacher reacted to correct or incorrect solution methods shifted from confirming or setting aside suggestions, toward making the solution methods the subject of discussion; second, the distribution of turns changed such that more students were involved in the discourse and in reacting to each other’s solution methods; third, the teacher’s actions shifted from convergent, teacher-led actions toward divergent, student-led actions. These results show that within four lessons, an important step has been taken toward establishing a discourse community.


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