STUDENT-TEACHERS’ EXPERIENCES OF OPEN ACCESS ONLINE RESOURCES FOR LESSON PLANNING

Author(s):  
William Fraser ◽  
Ronel Ferreira ◽  
Ronel Callaghan ◽  
Ruth Mampane
Author(s):  
Sunanta Klibthong ◽  
Joseph Agbenyega

This paper gives an account of a teacher preparation program in which a problem based learning approach was used to enact inclusive learning among student teachers. Taking a postmodernist perspective, the student teachers' experiences of participation in group activities on a problem-based scenario in an Australian university was documented through chat-rooms, online postings and reflective journal writings. Knowledge about peer interaction and communities of learning relationship, reflective practice and opportunity to manage difference and question the status quo are areas that were highlighted by the students. We concluded that problem-based learning is transformative and that whatever teacher educators expect their student teachers to do in their teaching contexts when they graduate, they need to give them the opportunity to practise these in their learning during training.


2018 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 227-247 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric G. Poitras ◽  
Negar Fazeli ◽  
Zachary R. Mayne

Information seeking and acquisition is fundamental to learning from hypermedia, but student teachers often fail to regulate their own learning. A total of 68 students learned with either a static or a dynamic version of nBrowser, a network-based tutor that adapted recommendations of online resources to support information seeking and acquisition. Results indicated that the student teachers’ ratings for the usefulness of online resources can be predicted with 69% accuracy and 77% accuracy on the entire data set using the fully specified model. The learner model is discussed in designing a recommender system that supports information-seeking behaviors in the context of network-based tutoring systems.


Author(s):  
Edson Zikhali ◽  
Joyce Tsungai Zikhali

In Zimbabwe, teacher training is a joint endeavor between teachers' colleges and host schools, with the latter relying on mentors in training student teachers during teaching practice (TP). This chapter explores how mentors' reflective strategies enhance students' training. It explores how mentors adopt reflective strategies to guide student teachers. Five mentors were interviewed individually while 20 were interviewed in two focus groups. Their views concentrated on key aspects of teaching, namely scheming, lesson planning, delivery, and evaluation. Findings revealed that student teachers lacked clear aims, had poor lesson introductions, superficial lesson evaluation, and unsatisfactory lesson delivery. The study highlighted that mentors reflected on these aspects and assisted the student teachers to do the same. The study recommends that teachers' colleges should prepare student teachers adequately in scheming, planning, and lesson delivery before TP. More time should be devoted to professional studies by teachers' colleges before student teachers are deployed on TP.


Author(s):  
Patrick Hart

This chapter introduces Henrietta Liston, her travels to and within the Ottoman Empire, and her journals and letters documenting these experiences. After briefly comparing Liston’s voice to that of her predecessor, Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, it sets out the editorial rationale behind the present volume, and explains its relationship to the accompanying open-access online resources hosted on the National Library of Scotland’s website. The chapter closes with a short summary of the rest of the book’s contents.


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